Last updated: January 2026 • By Antor Hossain (antor@antor.xyz)
Plan style/color quantities the factory way—so your program doesn’t fail on fabric, wash, trims, or dye-lot MOQs.
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If you’re sourcing from Bangladesh, MOQ problems usually don’t come from total units — they come from fragmentation. A program can look “big enough” overall, but still fail because each color, wash, fabric lot, or trim falls below workable minimums.
This MOQ planner helps you map quantity the factory way, so you can adjust your assortment before sending RFQs. It’s built for woven, denim, and outerwear programs where fabric, dye-lot, and finishing requirements often create hidden minimums.
Once your inputs are clean, you can generate a simple “Program Brief” and paste it into your RFQ.
Helpful reference:
Minimum order quantity (MOQ)
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This MOQ planner is a practical worksheet for Bangladesh production—especially woven, denim, and outerwear. Instead of guessing minimums, you map quantities the way mills and factories actually think: fabric MOQ, dye-lot MOQ, wash MOQ, trims MOQ, and packaging constraints. The output is a clean summary you can reuse as a “program brief” when you send an RFQ.
Many programs fail after sampling because the order is “big enough” in total units—but not big enough in the right places (per color, per wash, per fabric lot, per trim). A Bangladesh MOQ plan helps you spot hidden minimums early, so you don’t waste time quoting factories that can’t match your quantity reality.
Fabric minimums are often driven by mill requirements (or stock availability). Dye-lot MOQs can force higher quantities per color if you want consistent shade and repeatability. If you split one style across too many colors, the program can fail even when total units look healthy.
Denim washes and special finishes can introduce their own minimums. If you plan multiple washes across small quantities, your total order may be fine—but each wash may fall below workable production thresholds. Plan wash grouping early to keep pricing and lead time realistic.
Custom trims (branded labels, woven labels, hangtags, special buttons, custom zipper pulls) can trigger MOQ problems even when the garment quantity looks fine. When MOQ is tight, switching to stock trims or consolidating branding can save the program.
Polybag printing, size stickers, carton marks, and insert cards can also carry minimums. If you run too many variations, packaging MOQs can quietly increase cost or delay approvals.
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Note: MOQs vary by fabric type, finish, supplier setup, and whether items are stock or custom. This tool helps you plan the structure of quantities before you quote.
An MOQ planner helps you break your total order into factory-reality minimums—fabric lot, dye-lot, wash/finish, and trims—so you can spot hidden minimums before RFQ.
It’s designed around Bangladesh production workflows (especially woven, denim, and outerwear), but the MOQ logic is useful anywhere mills and trims have minimums.
Yes. The workbook is built for woven programs, denim wash planning, and outerwear components where trims and fabric minimums often drive the real MOQ.
Common fixes: reduce color count, merge similar washes, switch to stock trims, consolidate fabrics, or move a style to a different base material that’s available in-stock.
No. The tool delivers the download immediately after the form, and the workbook includes branding so it’s easy to trace if shared.