Compare up to 3 suppliers side by side on unit cost, MOQ, shipping, duties, and inspection to find the lowest landed cost per unit.
Choosing the right supplier is one of the most impactful decisions in e-commerce product sourcing. The lowest quoted unit price does not always mean the lowest total cost — differences in shipping, duties, inspection requirements, and MOQ carrying costs can dramatically change the true cost comparison.
This Sourcing Cost Comparison Calculator evaluates up to three suppliers side by side across all cost components: unit price, minimum order quantity, shipping cost, import duties, and inspection fees. It computes the fully landed cost per unit for each supplier, making it easy to identify the true lowest-cost option.
Beyond cost, the calculator also shows total investment required for each supplier's MOQ, helping you factor in cash flow constraints. A supplier with a slightly higher per-unit cost but a much lower MOQ may be the better choice when capital is limited. Whether you are a beginner or experienced professional, this free online tool provides instant, reliable results without manual computation.
Supplier quotes are not directly comparable without normalizing all cost components into a single per-unit figure. A $3.50/unit quote with $2,000 shipping on 500 units is more expensive than a $4.00/unit quote with $500 shipping on 500 units. This calculator does the math so you can compare apples to apples.
Total Order Cost = (Unit Cost × MOQ) + Shipping + (Unit Cost × MOQ × Duty Rate %) + Inspection Fee Landed Cost per Unit = Total Order Cost / MOQ Compare across suppliers to find the lowest landed cost.
Result: Supplier A: $5.97/unit — Supplier B: $5.08/unit
Supplier A: ($4.00 × 500) + $600 shipping + ($2,000 × 5% duty) + $250 inspection = $2,950 total, or $5.90/unit. Supplier B: ($3.50 × 1,000) + $1,100 + ($3,500 × 5%) + $300 = $5,075 total, or $5.08/unit. Despite the higher MOQ, Supplier B has 14% lower landed cost per unit.
The total cost of working with a supplier extends beyond direct costs. A supplier with frequent quality issues generates hidden costs: return processing, customer service time, negative reviews, and lost future sales. Factor in a quality adjustment when truly comparing suppliers.
Running this comparison creates powerful negotiation leverage. Show your current supplier that a competitor offers lower landed cost and ask them to match. Specific per-unit comparison data is much more compelling than vague claims about finding cheaper options.
Consider splitting orders between two suppliers rather than concentrating all volume with one. This provides supply chain resilience, negotiation leverage, and the ability to rapidly scale if one supplier has capacity constraints. The slightly higher per-unit cost of smaller orders is often justified by reduced risk.
Include unit price (FOB), shipping cost, customs duties, inspection fees, and any other per-order charges like bank wire fees or trade assurance costs. For a complete picture, also factor in quality differences and communication efficiency.
Duty rates depend on the product's HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) code and country of origin. Look up your product's HTS code on the USITC website for US duties. Common rates range from 0% to 25%, with most consumer goods falling in the 2–10% range.
Not necessarily. Quality consistency, communication responsiveness, willingness to customize, payment terms, and reliability also matter. A supplier that is 5% more expensive but never has quality issues or delays may be more profitable in the long run.
This calculator normalizes everything to per-unit landed cost, which accounts for different MOQs. However, also compare total investment required. If Supplier A needs $3,000 and Supplier B needs $8,000, the cash flow impact differs significantly.
If paying in a foreign currency, exchange rate fluctuations can change your effective cost by 2–5%. Consider this as an additional cost uncertainty. Some suppliers accept USD which eliminates this risk; others require CNY or local currency.
Re-run comparisons at least annually, and whenever shipping rates change significantly, new tariffs are imposed, or a new potential supplier emerges. Also reassess after any quality or delivery issues that change the true cost of working with a supplier.