Pricing Strategy

Getting Your Wholesale Pricing Right

Pricing is the most critical decision in wholesale. Get it right and you build a sustainable business. Get it wrong and you'll be working for free.

Wholesale Pricing Strategy for Fashion Brands

The Keystone Rule (and When to Break It)

The traditional wholesale pricing formula is simple: wholesale price = retail price ÷ 2 ("keystone markup"). This gives retailers a 50% margin and, assuming your COGS is ~30-40% of wholesale, gives you a healthy brand margin too.

But the keystone rule is a starting point, not a law. Here's when to adjust:

  • Luxury brands often wholesale at 40-45% of retail (giving retailers 55-60% margin) because the brand cachet justifies it
  • Value brands may need to wholesale at 55-60% of retail if retailer margins are thin
  • DTC-native brands entering wholesale need to recalculate — your retail price may need to increase to support wholesale margins

Calculating Your Margins

Before setting wholesale prices, know your costs:

  • Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) — materials, labor, manufacturing, packaging
  • Landed cost — COGS + duties, freight, warehousing
  • Overhead allocation — design, sampling, sales, marketing per unit

Minimum healthy margins:

  • Brand gross margin (wholesale price − COGS): 55-65%
  • Brand net margin (after overhead): 15-25%
  • Retailer gross margin: 50-60%

If your margins fall below these thresholds, either your pricing is too low or your costs are too high. Don't try to make it up on volume — that rarely works in fashion.

Buyer Tier Pricing

Not all buyers are equal, and your pricing can reflect that:

  • Tier 1 (Key accounts) — Major department stores, flagships. May receive 5-10% better pricing for large volume commitments.
  • Tier 2 (Growing accounts) — Multi-door independents, strong online retailers. Standard wholesale pricing.
  • Tier 3 (New accounts) — New boutiques, first-time buyers. Standard pricing with possibly higher minimums.

Tier pricing should be based on annual volume commitments, not one-time orders. Platforms like FashionFlo let you set buyer-specific pricing automatically, so the right price shows when each buyer logs in.

Setting Minimums

Minimum order quantities (MOQs) protect your profitability:

  • Per-style minimum — e.g., 6 units per style (ensures production efficiency)
  • Per-order minimum — e.g., $500 or $1,000 wholesale (ensures orders are worth processing)
  • Opening order minimum — Higher minimum for first orders (e.g., $2,000) to filter serious buyers
  • Reorder minimum — Lower minimum for repeat orders (e.g., $300) to encourage replenishment

Price Smarter with FashionFlo

Set tier pricing, minimums, and discounts that update automatically.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I offer volume discounts?+

Selectively. A small discount (3-5%) for large commitments can incentivize bigger orders. But aggressive discounting erodes your margins and trains buyers to wait for deals. Focus on value, not discounts.

How do I handle pricing for international buyers?+

Many brands set pricing in USD or EUR and let international buyers handle currency conversion. Alternatively, you can set region-specific pricing. FashionFlo supports multiple price lists per buyer group.