Calculate quality inspection costs for e-commerce shipments. Estimate base fees, per-unit AQL costs, and cost per unit shipped for production orders.
Quality inspection is a critical gatekeeping step between production and shipment. Third-party inspections catch defects, verify specifications, and ensure compliance before goods leave the factory — preventing costly quality issues from reaching your customers and damaging your brand.
This Quality Inspection Cost Calculator estimates the total inspection cost for a production order. Standard pre-shipment inspections (PSI) have a base fee (typically $200–$400 per man-day) plus additional charges if the inspection scope is large or AQL (Acceptable Quality Level) sampling exceeds standard levels.
Enter the base inspection fee, order quantity, AQL sample size, and any additional testing charges. The calculator computes total inspection cost and the per-unit cost allocation, helping you factor inspection into your landed cost calculations. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation. By automating the calculation, you save time and reduce the risk of costly errors in your planning and decision-making process.
Skipping inspection to save $300 can result in thousands of dollars in returns, refunds, and negative reviews. Inspection costs are trivially small per unit (typically $0.10–$0.50) but provide enormous downside protection. This calculator shows exactly how little inspection costs relative to the risk it mitigates. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.
Total Inspection Cost = (Base Fee × Man-Days) + (AQL Sample Size × Per-Unit Test Fee) + Additional Charges Cost per Unit Shipped = Total Inspection Cost / Order Quantity
Result: $450 total — $0.23/unit shipped
Base fee: $300 for 1 man-day. Additional per-unit testing: 200 samples × $0.50 = $100. Plus $50 travel charges. Total: $450. Spread across 2,000 units, the inspection cost is $0.23 per unit — a small price for quality assurance.
Pre-shipment inspection (PSI) is most common, conducted when production is 80–100% complete. During-production inspection (DPI) checks quality mid-process. Initial production check verifies materials and setup before production starts. Container loading inspection ensures proper packing and loading. Each type serves a different quality control purpose.
A $300 inspection that catches a 5% defect rate in a 2,000-unit order prevents approximately 100 defective units from reaching customers. At $30 per return (refund + return shipping + restocking), that's $3,000 in avoided costs — a 10× return on the inspection investment.
As your business scales, formalize quality control with written specifications, approved product samples for reference, clear acceptance criteria, and a preferred list of inspection companies. Consistent QC processes prevent quality from degrading as you add products and suppliers.
AQL (Acceptable Quality Level) defines the maximum defect rate considered acceptable. AQL 2.5 at General Inspection Level II is the industry standard for most consumer goods. It means inspecting a statistical sample and accepting the lot if defects are below the threshold. Use tighter AQL (1.0 or 1.5) for premium or safety-critical products.
Standard third-party PSI costs $200–$400 per man-day in China. A typical inspection of a standard consumer product takes 1 man-day. Complex products, large orders, or orders split across multiple warehouses may require 2+ man-days. Travel charges may apply for remote factories.
Yes for the first 3–5 orders with any supplier. After establishing consistent quality, you can reduce inspection frequency to every other order or quarterly spot checks. Always inspect after any product change, new production batch, or if you switch raw materials.
If inspection reveals defect rates above AQL, you have options: reject the entire lot and require rework, accept only the conforming units, negotiate a price reduction, or require sorting and re-inspection. Never ship goods that fail inspection — customer returns will cost far more.
Supplier self-inspections have an inherent conflict of interest and are unreliable for quality assurance. Always use an independent third-party inspection company for objective results. Factory QC can supplement but should never replace third-party inspection.
Depending on the product: drop testing, weight verification, functionality testing, barcode scanning, packaging integrity, labeling compliance, and material safety testing. For regulated products, specific certifications (CPSC, FDA, CE) may require lab testing costing $200–$2,000.
Even for orders of 200–500 units, a $300 inspection is worthwhile. At $0.60–$1.50 per unit, it's cheap insurance against a batch of defective products that could cost thousands in returns, negative reviews, and brand damage.