Buyer guide: The lowest FOB price can look like a sourcing win, but it can become expensive when delay, rework, fabric risk, trim shortcuts, testing failure, MOQ pressure, freight changes, and missed launch dates are included. This guide helps apparel buyers compare garment quotes with margin protection in mind, not only negotiation pressure.
Many buyers ask factories the same first question: “What is your best FOB price?” That question is understandable. Price matters. But in apparel sourcing, the lowest FOB is not always the lowest real cost. A quote can look cheaper at approval stage and become expensive later if the assumptions are weak, the factory is not the right fit, the fabric is not controlled, or the delivery plan is unrealistic.
This article is written for founders, sourcing managers, merchandisers, retailers, wholesalers, and buying teams comparing garment quotes from Bangladesh or other sourcing markets. The goal is simple: compare quotes like a buyer protecting margin, not only like a negotiator chasing the lowest number.
Who this is for
- Fashion founders comparing supplier quotes for the first time.
- Sourcing managers under pressure to reduce FOB price.
- Merchandisers preparing cost approvals for buyers.
- Retailers and wholesalers sourcing from Bangladesh.
- Brands trying to understand FOB, MOQ, lead time, and real landed cost.
- Teams deciding between a cheaper quote and a safer quote.
What you will learn
- Why FOB price is only one part of the real sourcing cost.
- How delay, defect, rework, testing failure, and freight pressure damage margin.
- Why two quotes with similar product photos can carry different risk levels.
- How MOQ, trims, fabric, wash, and packing assumptions change the real cost.
- When a higher FOB quote may actually be the safer commercial decision.
- How to compare garment quotes using one practical buyer approval checklist.
TL;DR buyer checkpoints
- The lowest FOB is not always the lowest real cost.
- Compare what is included and excluded in each quote.
- Check fabric, trims, wash, testing, packing, MOQ, and lead time assumptions.
- A slightly higher FOB may be safer if it protects quality, delivery, and compliance.
- Do not compare two suppliers unless both quoted from the same RFQ brief.
- Use total cost and risk, not only FOB price, before approving a supplier.
Source discipline: This article is based on practical apparel sourcing experience and public references on Incoterms, landed cost, and inspection standards. It is buyer education, not legal, customs, freight, insurance, or financial advice. Always confirm contract terms, Incoterms, duty, insurance, and import costs with your freight forwarder, customs broker, legal team, or finance team.
Table of contents
- Why the lowest FOB can become expensive
- What FOB means and what it does not mean
- FOB vs real landed cost
- The hidden costs behind a cheap quote
- Why quote assumptions matter
- MOQ traps that make a low FOB risky
- Fabric, trims, and wash traps
- Testing and inspection risk
- When a higher quote is actually safer
- Common low-FOB risks by product category
- Buyer approval checklist before choosing a quote
- Copy-paste quote comparison template
- Final decision rule
- FAQ
- Sources and references
Why the lowest FOB can become expensive
The lowest quote often wins attention because it looks simple. If Supplier A offers USD 7.80 FOB and Supplier B offers USD 8.30 FOB, the cheaper quote looks better at first. But apparel sourcing does not end at quote approval. The real test starts during fabric booking, trim confirmation, sampling, bulk production, washing, inspection, shipping, warehouse receiving, and customer delivery.
A quote that is USD 0.50 cheaper can become expensive if it leads to late shipment, rejected goods, air freight pressure, measurement problems, color variation, poor packaging, testing failure, or retailer claims. In that situation, the buyer did not save USD 0.50. The buyer bought risk without pricing it correctly.
The better question is not only “Which FOB is lower?” The better question is “Which quote protects our margin, delivery, quality, compliance, and customer promise?”
Simple example
Imagine two woven shirt quotes:
| Supplier | FOB quote | Hidden risk | Possible result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Supplier A | USD 7.80 | Unclear fabric source, cheap buttons, no testing included, tight lead time | Lower approval price, but higher chance of delay, rework, or claim |
| Supplier B | USD 8.30 | Confirmed fabric, stronger trims, testing scope clear, realistic timeline | Higher approval price, but lower execution risk |
Supplier A may still be the right choice if the assumptions are clarified and the risk is controlled. Supplier B may still be overpriced if the value is not proven. The point is not to reject cheap quotes. The point is to compare the real cost behind each quote.
Buyer checkpoint
Do not approve a quote because it is the lowest. Approve it because the assumptions are clear, the supplier is capable, the lead time is realistic, and the product risk is controlled.
What FOB means and what it does not mean
FOB means Free on Board. Under Incoterms 2020, FOB is used for sea and inland waterway transport. In simple buyer language, FOB usually means the seller is responsible for getting the goods to the named port of loading and loading them on board the vessel nominated by the buyer. At that delivery point, risk transfers according to the agreed contract and Incoterms rule.
In apparel sourcing, buyers often say “FOB Bangladesh” or “FOB Chattogram” when discussing garment cost. That can be useful, but it must be written clearly. A proper quotation should mention the Incoterm, named port or place, currency, inclusions, exclusions, payment terms, shipment window, and whether the quote is based on approved sample, tech pack, or estimated assumptions.
FOB is not the full landed cost. It does not automatically include every cost needed to move the goods into your warehouse, store, or customer channel. Depending on the agreement, the buyer may still need to consider ocean freight, insurance, destination port charges, customs duty, VAT or sales tax, domestic transport, warehouse handling, testing, inspection, claims, markdowns, and delay cost.
FOB also does not tell you whether the fabric is correct, the trims are durable, the factory is compliant, the wash is stable, the measurements are controlled, or the shipment will arrive in time for launch. It is a trade and costing term. It is not a quality guarantee.
Buyer checkpoint
Always write the Incoterm clearly in the purchase order or contract, including the named place or port and the version of Incoterms being used. If you are not sure, confirm with your logistics team or freight forwarder before approving the order.
FOB vs real landed cost
FOB is one number inside a bigger cost picture. Real landed cost looks at what it takes to get sellable goods into your business, ready for the customer, with risk controlled.
| Cost area | FOB view | Real buyer view |
|---|---|---|
| Garment price | Factory quote per piece | Price plus assumptions, inclusions, exclusions, and risk |
| Freight | Usually outside FOB after loading, depending on contract | Ocean or air cost, schedule reliability, peak season pressure |
| Insurance | Not always included in FOB | Coverage should match cargo value and risk exposure |
| Duty and tax | Not solved by FOB alone | Depends on destination, HS code, origin rules, customs handling, and applicable rates |
| Testing | May be included or excluded | Failure can create replacement, delay, or cancellation risk |
| Inspection | May be buyer cost or supplier support | Failed inspection can create rework and missed shipment |
| Quality risk | Not visible in FOB number | Defects, measurement issues, shade variation, claims, returns |
| Time risk | Often hidden | Late delivery can cause air freight, missed launch, markdowns, or lost sales |
A buyer who only compares FOB may choose the quote that looks cheaper. A buyer who compares landed cost and risk may choose the quote that protects margin better.
Illustrative landed cost view
This is not a final landed cost formula for every buyer. It is a simple planning view to help teams stop comparing only FOB.
Estimated landed cost view FOB garment value + International freight + Insurance + Duty and taxes + Destination charges + Customs broker and clearance fees + Local transport + Testing and inspection cost + Rework or claim allowance + Delay or air freight risk allowance = Estimated landed cost and risk-adjusted sourcing cost
The final landed cost depends on destination country, HS code, origin rules, Incoterm, freight mode, duty and tax rate, insurance, and local charges. Treat early landed cost as an estimate until your freight forwarder, customs broker, and finance team confirm it.
The hidden costs behind a cheap quote
A low FOB quote can be real and workable. Not every cheap quote is dangerous. Some factories are efficient, well-planned, and commercially sharp. But a quote becomes risky when the price is low because important cost drivers are missing, downgraded, or unrealistic.
| Hidden cost | How it appears | Buyer impact |
|---|---|---|
| Delay | Late fabric, trims, sample approval, production, inspection, or booking | Missed launch, air freight pressure, or retailer penalty |
| Rework | Wrong stitching, measurement issue, shade variation, poor finishing | Extra time, extra labor, and shipment risk |
| Testing failure | Fabric or trim fails buyer standard | Retesting, replacement, delay, or cancellation risk |
| MOQ trap | Low FOB depends on higher MOQ than buyer can sell | Overstock, cash pressure, and markdown risk |
| Trim downgrade | Cheaper buttons, zippers, labels, or packaging | Lower product value and customer dissatisfaction |
| Wash variation | Shade, handfeel, or measurement changes after wash | Claims, rejections, or inconsistent store appearance |
| Weak packing | Carton, barcode, folding, or labeling mistakes | Warehouse problems, chargebacks, and retailer complaints |
| Poor communication | Supplier does not flag risk early | Late surprises and weak decision-making |
The danger is not only the cost itself. The bigger danger is that the buyer discovers the cost too late, when options are limited and the delivery date is already under pressure.
Why quote assumptions matter
A garment quote is only as reliable as the assumptions behind it. If two suppliers are quoting from different fabric qualities, trim levels, MOQ assumptions, testing requirements, and packing standards, the buyer is not comparing two prices. The buyer is comparing two different products.
This is one of the most common sourcing mistakes. A buyer sends a photo to several factories and asks for the best FOB. Each supplier fills the missing details differently. One assumes cheaper fabric. Another includes better trims. One includes wash and testing. Another excludes them. One quotes for 2,000 pieces per color. Another assumes 5,000 pieces per color. The numbers arrive, but they are not truly comparable.
| Quote assumption | What to confirm | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fabric | Composition, weight, construction, finish, color, source | Fabric often drives a large part of FOB and quality performance |
| Trims | Buttons, zippers, labels, interlining, hangtags, packaging | Small components can affect both cost and customer perception |
| MOQ | Per style, per color, per fabric, per wash, per trim | Low FOB may depend on a volume you cannot sell |
| Lead time | Sampling, fabric booking, trims, production, wash, inspection, shipment | Unrealistic timing creates hidden cost later |
| Testing | Included, excluded, buyer cost, supplier cost, retest process | Failure can delay or block shipment |
| Packing | Folding, carton quality, barcode, polybag, sticker, hanger | Retailer and warehouse errors can become expensive |
| Compliance | Factory audit, buyer manual, RSL, inspection standard | Factory mismatch can destroy the whole order plan |
Buyer checkpoint
Before comparing two FOB prices, make sure both suppliers quoted the same technical pack, same fabric quality, same trims, same MOQ, same packing, same testing requirement, and same delivery assumption.
MOQ traps that make a low FOB risky
MOQ is one of the biggest reasons a low FOB becomes expensive. A factory may offer a strong FOB price, but only if the buyer places a higher quantity, reduces color count, accepts available fabric, repeats the same trims across styles, or commits to a larger program. That may be workable for a core product. It can be risky for an untested style.
Small orders usually carry a higher unit cost because sampling, material sourcing, cutting setup, line preparation, documentation, and production management are spread across fewer pieces. That is not automatically overcharging. It is basic production economics.
| MOQ trap | What happens | Better buyer action |
|---|---|---|
| Too many colors | Each color creates fabric and trim pressure | Reduce color count or increase quantity per color |
| Custom fabric at low quantity | Mill MOQ may not support the order | Use stock fabric or plan a larger repeat program |
| Special trims for one small style | Trim MOQ and lead time become heavy | Use shared trims across multiple styles |
| Low first order with no repeat plan | Factory sees high risk and low efficiency | Show repeat potential or accept higher test cost |
| Chasing core price for test volume | Quote becomes unrealistic | Treat pilot orders as learning cost |
For more detail, read the MOQ and Pricing in Bangladesh Woven and Denim Garments guide and use the MOQ Planner before approving a quote.
Fabric, trims, and wash traps
In apparel costing, fabric, trims, and wash decisions can move the FOB strongly. A cheap quote may look attractive because one of these areas has been simplified or downgraded. Sometimes that is acceptable. Sometimes it damages the product.
Fabric traps
- Lower fabric weight than required.
- Different yarn, weave, or construction from the approved reference.
- Poor shrinkage control.
- Weak colorfastness.
- Unclear fabric source or availability.
- Substitution without buyer approval.
- No fabric test plan before bulk cutting.
Trim traps
- Cheaper buttons that do not match product positioning.
- Low-quality zippers, snaps, rivets, or drawcords.
- Weak interlining that affects collar, cuff, waistband, or placket shape.
- Incorrect labels, care symbols, barcode, or country-of-origin information.
- Packaging that does not match buyer or retailer requirements.
- Branded trims quoted without checking separate MOQ and lead time.
Wash and finishing traps
- Denim shade does not match approved standard.
- Measurement changes after wash are not controlled.
- Handfeel is different from the reference sample.
- Heavy wash creates damage or inconsistent appearance.
- Bulk wash cannot repeat the approved sample result.
- Wash cost was not included clearly in the first quote.
For woven shirts, trims and interlining can affect visible quality. For denim, wash control can decide whether the whole order passes or becomes a claim. For outerwear, zippers, lining, padding, and seam finishing can make a low quote risky very quickly.
Testing and inspection risk
Testing and inspection are often treated as extra costs, but they are also risk controls. A low FOB quote that excludes testing, inspection support, or clear quality requirements may look attractive until a shipment fails at the wrong stage.
For apparel, testing and inspection needs depend on the buyer manual, product category, destination market, fiber content, trims, print, wash, and end use. A babywear program, workwear uniform, denim wash program, and basic woven shirt do not carry the same risk profile.
| Risk area | What to confirm | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Fabric testing | Shrinkage, colorfastness, strength, pilling, composition | Failed fabric can delay or block production |
| Trim testing | Nickel, sharp points, pull strength, zipper function, button strength | Trim failure can create safety or durability claims |
| Wash testing | Shade, handfeel, shrinkage, twisting, measurement stability | Wash variation can affect every piece in the order |
| Inspection standard | AQL level, defect classification, measurement tolerance | Factory and buyer need the same pass or fail benchmark |
| Rework responsibility | Who pays, who approves, and how timing changes | Prevents conflict after failed inspection |
AQL-based inspection does not mean every garment is checked. It is a sampling method used to judge a lot against agreed acceptance criteria. That is why buyers must define the inspection standard, defect categories, and measurement tolerance before production, not after shipment pressure starts.
Buyer checkpoint
Before accepting a low FOB quote, ask whether testing, inspection support, sample approval, rework responsibility, and measurement tolerance are clearly included in the costing and production plan.
When a higher quote is actually safer
A higher quote is not automatically better. Buyers should not accept high prices without proof. But sometimes a slightly higher FOB is the better commercial decision because it reduces risk and protects the selling margin.
| Higher quote reason | Why it may be safer | What to verify |
|---|---|---|
| Better fabric source | More stable quality, shade, handfeel, and testing performance | Fabric swatch, test report, mill details, availability |
| Realistic lead time | Less risk of air freight, late delivery, or rushed production | Sampling calendar, material lead time, production plan |
| Stronger trims | Better durability and product presentation | Trim card, brand approval, test requirements |
| Better compliance fit | Lower risk of buyer rejection or audit mismatch | Audit status, buyer manual match, factory profile |
| More complete inclusion | Fewer hidden extras after approval | Written quote breakdown and exclusions |
| Better communication | Risks are flagged before they become emergencies | Response quality, documentation, sample comments |
The safest quote is not always the cheapest or the most expensive. It is the quote with the clearest assumptions, realistic execution plan, correct factory fit, and controlled risk.
Common low-FOB risks by product category
The hidden risk behind a low quote changes by product category. A woven shirt, denim jean, woven trouser, and outerwear jacket do not fail in the same way.
| Category | Common low-FOB risk | Buyer should check |
|---|---|---|
| Woven shirts | Weak interlining, poor collar shape, low-grade buttons, shrinkage | Collar and cuff standard, fabric test, trim card, measurement tolerance |
| Denim | Wash variation, shade band issue, poor recovery, measurement change after wash | Wash standard, bulk shade band, fabric stretch recovery, shrinkage control |
| Woven bottoms | Fit inconsistency, weak pocketing, poor zipper, waistband issue | Fit sample, size set, zipper quality, waistband construction |
| Outerwear | Cheap zipper, weak lining, wrong padding, poor seam finishing | Zipper test, lining quality, filling standard, seam and finishing quality |
| Uniforms | Fabric durability and colorfastness risk | Wash durability, shade continuity, fabric strength, repeat availability |
If your program is woven, denim, or outerwear, do not compare only by FOB. Compare by product risk. The category itself tells you which cost areas must be protected.
Buyer approval checklist before choosing a quote
Before approving the lowest quote, ask these questions. They can save money, time, and future conflict.
- Did every supplier quote from the same tech pack?
- Is the fabric composition, construction, weight, and finish confirmed?
- Is the fabric source realistic for the order quantity?
- Are trims included in the quote?
- Are packing, carton, barcode, and labeling requirements included?
- Is testing included or excluded?
- Is inspection included or buyer-arranged?
- Is the MOQ clear by style, color, fabric, wash, and trim?
- Is the lead time realistic from sample approval, not only from order placement?
- Is the factory suitable for the product category?
- Does the factory match the buyer’s compliance requirement?
- Are payment terms, delivery terms, and Incoterms written clearly?
- What happens if testing fails?
- What happens if shipment is delayed?
- What is the cost of rework, air freight, claim, or cancellation?
If the lowest quote cannot answer these questions clearly, it is not fully comparable yet.
Copy-paste quote comparison template
Use this template before approving a supplier. It helps compare FOB price, quote assumptions, and real sourcing risk in one place.
Quote Comparison - Apparel FOB and Risk Review Product: Style name: Buyer: Destination market: Target shipment date: Incoterm and named place: Date of review: Supplier A FOB price: MOQ: Fabric assumption: Fabric weight and construction: Trims included: Packing included: Testing included or excluded: Inspection included or excluded: Sample timeline: Bulk lead time: Compliance match: Payment terms: Main strengths: Main risks: Hidden cost risk: Final comment: Supplier B FOB price: MOQ: Fabric assumption: Fabric weight and construction: Trims included: Packing included: Testing included or excluded: Inspection included or excluded: Sample timeline: Bulk lead time: Compliance match: Payment terms: Main strengths: Main risks: Hidden cost risk: Final comment: Supplier C FOB price: MOQ: Fabric assumption: Fabric weight and construction: Trims included: Packing included: Testing included or excluded: Inspection included or excluded: Sample timeline: Bulk lead time: Compliance match: Payment terms: Main strengths: Main risks: Hidden cost risk: Final comment: Decision checklist 1. Are all quotes based on the same tech pack? 2. Are fabric, trims, packing, testing, and MOQ assumptions equal? 3. Which quote has the lowest risk of delay? 4. Which quote has the lowest risk of rework? 5. Which quote best matches compliance requirements? 6. Which quote protects the final margin best? 7. Which supplier is most likely to deliver sellable goods on time? Final decision: Approved supplier: Reason: Conditions before order confirmation: Decision owner: Approval date:
Final decision rule
Do not reward the lowest quote automatically. Reward the quote that gives the best balance of price, clarity, quality, timeline, compliance, and risk control.
In apparel sourcing, margin is not protected only at negotiation. Margin is protected when the buyer controls the brief, factory fit, material assumptions, approval process, testing, inspection, lead time, and logistics plan.
A cheap quote is useful when it is also clear, realistic, and executable. A cheap quote is dangerous when it hides the real cost until production is already moving.
The best sourcing decision is not the cheapest number on the first sheet. It is the decision that keeps the product sellable, the timeline realistic, the supplier relationship healthy, and the final margin protected.
Related Antor.xyz resources
- MOQ and Pricing in Bangladesh Woven and Denim Garments
- MOQ Planner for Bangladesh Woven and Denim
- Private Label Woven Shirts Bangladesh: Buyer Brief Checklist
- Private Label Woven Shirt Manufacturer in Bangladesh
- Free Tech Pack Checklist for Woven and Denim
- Bangladesh Woven and Denim Sourcing Guide 2026
FAQ
Is the lowest FOB always a bad choice?
No. A low FOB can be a good choice if the supplier is capable, the assumptions are clear, the material quality is correct, the MOQ is realistic, and the lead time is achievable. The risk is choosing the lowest FOB without checking what is included and excluded.
What is the difference between FOB and landed cost?
FOB is the quoted garment price under a specific trade term and named place. Landed cost looks at the wider cost to get sellable goods into your business, including freight, duty, tax, insurance, destination charges, testing, inspection, delay risk, and other costs depending on your contract and market.
Why do factories quote different prices for the same garment?
They may not be quoting the same assumptions. One supplier may assume cheaper fabric, different trims, higher MOQ, simpler packing, shorter testing scope, or a different lead time. Buyers should standardize the RFQ before comparing prices.
When is a higher FOB worth paying?
A higher FOB may be worth paying when it gives better fabric control, stronger trims, realistic lead time, lower testing risk, better compliance match, stronger communication, and fewer hidden exclusions. The key is to confirm the value, not assume it.
How can buyers reduce hidden cost risk?
Use one clear tech pack, confirm fabric and trims, share MOQ and size breakdown, define packing and testing requirements, agree on sample stages, confirm Incoterms, and compare quotes using a written approval checklist.
Should buyers share target price?
Yes, if they have a realistic target. A target price helps the supplier propose the right fabric, trims, construction, and MOQ route. Without a target, the first quote may not fit the buyer’s retail price, margin, or market position.
Does FOB include freight to my warehouse?
Usually no. Under FOB, the buyer normally needs to manage and pay for the next part of the journey after the agreed delivery point, depending on the exact contract. Always confirm the Incoterm, named port, freight responsibility, insurance, destination charges, duty, tax, and local delivery cost before approving the order.
Sources and references
This article is written for buyer education and practical sourcing preparation. It does not replace your purchase contract, buyer manual, legal review, customs advice, freight quote, insurance advice, inspection plan, or financial planning.
- International Chamber of Commerce – Incoterms rules
- ICC Academy – Incoterms 2020: FAS or FOB
- International Trade Administration – Know Your Incoterms
- International Trade Administration – Determine Total Export Price
- ISO 2859-1:2026 – Sampling procedures for inspection by attributes
Last updated
Last updated: June 8, 2026
If you spot an error or want to suggest an improvement, send feedback through the contact page. I will review and update this guide.
Which hidden cost hurts more in real life: delay, defect, rework, or freight? If you have seen a quote that looked cheap but became expensive, share the lesson with your team before approving the next supplier.