How to set a minimum order that actually works.
A minimum order quantity or minimum order value protects you from orders that cost more to fulfil than they earn. Set it from the real cost to serve, not a round number someone picked years ago, and you stop subsidising small orders without losing the customers worth keeping. The trick is knowing where the line actually is.
Why round-number minimums fail
Most minimums are a guess that hardened into policy. Fifty euros, a hundred, one pallet, chosen because it felt about right and never revisited. The problem is that a flat threshold ignores margin. A 60-euro order of a high-margin product can be very profitable; a 60-euro order of a thin-margin one can still lose money once handling and delivery are counted. A single round number treats them the same, so it blocks good orders and waves through bad ones. The minimum has to be anchored to cost, not to a tidy figure.
FINDING THE BREAK-EVEN ORDER
Illustrative. Every order carries a fixed cost to serve, the handling, picking, packing and dispatch it triggers regardless of size. Break-even is the order value where gross margin finally covers that fixed cost. Below it, the order destroys margin.
The right minimum is not the smallest order you will accept. It is the smallest order that pays for itself.
Work it from the cost to serve. Take the fixed cost an order incurs no matter how small, then find the order value at which the gross margin on the goods covers it. That break-even point, not a round number, is where the minimum belongs. Because margin varies by product, the honest version is a small set of thresholds by category rather than one figure for everything.
Free, as now
Orders that cover their cost to serve flow through untouched. Most of your volume sits here and never feels a change.
Small-order fee or consolidation
A modest fee, or a nudge to consolidate into fewer, larger orders, recovers the cost without ending the relationship.
A hard minimum
For orders that cannot pay for themselves at any reasonable fee, a firm minimum is the right answer, kindly explained.
Common questions
- What is a minimum order quantity?
- A minimum order quantity (MOQ) is the smallest order a supplier will accept, set by units, value or weight. Its purpose is to protect against orders that cost more to receive, pick, pack and ship than they earn. Set well, it removes loss-making micro-orders. Set as a round number, it either drives away good customers or fails to cover the cost it was meant to.
- How do I set the right minimum order value?
- Start from the real cost to serve an order: the fixed handling, picking, packing and dispatch cost that an order incurs regardless of size. The break-even order value is the point where the gross margin on the order finally covers that fixed cost to serve. Set the minimum at or just above break-even, and offer alternatives such as a small-order fee or consolidated delivery for customers below it.
- Will a minimum order lose me customers?
- Some, and usually the ones you were paying to keep. The honest question is which customers fall below the line and what they are worth in full. Many small orders come from otherwise valuable customers who can simply order less often in larger quantities. A tiered approach, free over a threshold, a fee below it, keeps those relationships while ending the subsidy.
- MOQ or minimum order value, which is better?
- Minimum order value usually beats minimum quantity, because cost to serve tracks the handling of an order more than the number of units in it. A value threshold also flexes naturally across a mixed product range. Quantity minimums make sense where one product dominates and handling scales with units rather than with the order itself.
Where is your break-even order?
The Profit Check shows where small orders are costing you margin, in five minutes, with no data upload.
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