Why Domestic Packaging Is Faster, Cheaper, and Less Stressful Than Ordering Overseas
Most Canadian brands default to overseas packaging suppliers without running the real numbers. When you factor in lead times, customs fees, minimum order quantities, and the hidden cost of stockouts — local often wins. Here's the full picture.
Overseas packaging manufacturers — primarily in China, Vietnam, and India — compete on unit price. And on that single metric, they often win. A thousand folding cartons from Shenzhen might cost 30% less per unit than a domestic run.
But that number is only part of the equation. Here's what gets left out of the overseas quote:
- Ocean freight: $400–$1,200+ per shipment depending on volume and route, paid to a freight forwarder
- Customs brokerage: $150–$500+ to clear Canadian customs, per shipment
- Import duties: Variable by product category, typically 0–18% of goods value
- Currency risk: Orders are quoted in USD — if the CAD drops between order and delivery, you pay more
- Lead time: 6–10 weeks standard, longer during peak season or supply disruptions
- Minimum order quantities: Most overseas printers require 1,000–5,000 units minimum, forcing you to hold inventory
When you add all of that up, the per-unit cost advantage often disappears — and sometimes reverses.
The biggest hidden cost of overseas packaging isn't fees — it's time. A 6–10 week lead time means you need to forecast your packaging needs months in advance. For a growing brand, that's genuinely difficult.
What happens when you run out of stock? You either delay product shipments, lose sales, or scramble for an emergency domestic run at full rush pricing. What happens when your overseas shipment is held at port, stuck on a container ship, or delayed by a supplier backlog? You wait — and so does your business.
Domestic packaging eliminates that risk. A typical run with Magenta Depot ships in 10–15 business days. You can reorder when your stock reaches a comfortable minimum rather than projecting demand 10 weeks into the future.
Overseas MOQs force brands into a difficult position: order more than you need now to get a better unit price, and hope your forecast is right. For startups and growing brands, this creates real cash flow strain and inventory risk.
With no minimum order quantities, you can order exactly what you need. Test a new SKU with 100 boxes before committing to 5,000. Run a limited seasonal design without overproducing. Scale your packaging order in line with actual demand rather than projected demand.
The flexibility alone is worth a premium on per-unit cost — and with domestic pricing, the premium is often smaller than you'd expect.
We'll be honest: there are scenarios where overseas sourcing makes sense. If you're a mature brand with predictable, high-volume demand — 50,000+ units per SKU per year — and you have the infrastructure to manage international logistics, the unit economics of overseas manufacturing can work in your favour.
But for most Canadian brands — especially in the startup-to-scale phase — the complexity, risk, and hidden costs of overseas packaging outweigh the unit price savings. Domestic printing is faster, more flexible, and more predictable.
Before you commit to an overseas supplier, build the real cost model: unit cost + freight + customs + duties + currency risk + carrying cost of excess inventory. Compare that to a domestic quote with no minimums and a 2-week turnaround.
For most Canadian brands, the answer is closer than you think — and the reduced operational complexity is worth paying for.
Printed domestically. Shipped fast.
info@magentadepot.com
