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How to Reduce Packaging Costs Without Increasing MOQ

How to Reduce Packaging Costs Without Increasing MOQ

Most cost savings in packaging come from:
👉 Ordering more volume

But increasing MOQ isn’t always possible.

  • Storage is limited
  • Cash flow is constrained
  • Demand is uncertain

So the real question becomes:
👉 How do you reduce cost without ordering more?

The answer isn’t quantity—it’s efficiency.

Start with Structural Optimization

The biggest cost opportunity isn’t cheaper material—it’s better design.

Common issues:

  • Overbuilt panels where strength isn’t needed
  • Under-engineered stress points causing failure
  • Inefficient dielines creating material waste

Better approach:

  • Reinforce only high-load areas
  • Remove excess material in low-stress zones
  • Optimize structure before changing board grade

You don’t need less material—
👉 You need smarter material use

structural design concepts

Right-Size the Packaging

Oversized packaging increases:

  • Material usage
  • Freight cost
  • Storage inefficiency

Right-sizing focuses on:

  • Product fit
  • Shipping requirements
  • Dimensional efficiency

Even small size reductions can:
👉 Lower cost across production, shipping, and storage

The size of a corrugated box, chart of how to measure a corrugated box. Width, length, height or depth. Cardboard boxes size. Package dimensions.

Choose the Right Print Method

Print is often over-specified.

Common mistake:
👉 Using premium print where it doesn’t impact sales

Match print method to need:

  • Flexo → cost-efficient for high volume
  • Digital → efficient for short runs
  • Litho → premium graphics when required

Reducing print complexity:
👉 Lowers cost without affecting performance

Choose the Right Packaging Print Method

Simplify Assembly

Complex designs create hidden costs:

  • Increased labor time
  • Higher error rates
  • Slower retail execution

Simplification:

  • Reduces labor cost
  • Improves consistency
  • Speeds up deployment

A display that’s easier to assemble:
👉 Costs less to execute

Standardize Components Where Possible

Customization drives cost.

Standardization reduces:

  • Tooling expenses
  • Setup time
  • Production variability

Examples:

  • Shared box sizes across SKUs
  • Reusable inserts
  • Consistent structural formats

This improves efficiency across:
👉 Production, inventory, and reordering

custom Multi sku folding carton shelf boxes

Optimize Pack-Out and Shipping

Freight is a major cost driver.

Opportunities:

  • Increase units per pallet
  • Reduce empty space
  • Improve stacking efficiency

This lowers:

  • Freight cost per unit
  • Handling time
  • Damage risk

Shipping efficiency:
👉 Directly impacts total cost

Reduce Tooling Complexity

Tooling costs include:

  • Cutting dies
  • Printing plates

Ways to reduce:

  • Simplify dielines
  • Avoid unnecessary design variations
  • Reuse tooling across programs

Less complexity:
👉 Lower setup cost per run

Avoid Overengineering

More material ≠ better performance

Common issues:

  • Excessive reinforcement
  • Unnecessary structural features
  • Designs built beyond real-world requirements

Focus on:
👉 Performance-critical elements only

This removes cost without reducing effectiveness.

Packout and Fulfillment

Design for Lifecycle Performance

Cheap designs often fail early.

Which leads to:

  • Replacement costs
  • Lost sales
  • Retail dissatisfaction

Better approach:

  • Match durability to program duration
  • Ensure stability under real conditions

Longer-lasting packaging:
👉 Reduces total cost over time

Where Buyers Get It Wrong

  • Trying to reduce cost by cutting material only
  • Ignoring structural efficiency
  • Over-specifying print
  • Over-customizing designs
  • Overlooking freight and assembly costs

These decisions reduce price—
👉 But increase total cost

What Cost-Efficient Packaging Actually Looks Like

It:

  • Uses material efficiently—not minimally
  • Matches print quality to actual need
  • Simplifies assembly and execution
  • Optimizes shipping and handling
  • Maintains performance over time

It’s engineered—
👉 Not stripped down

custom printed rigid box with insert

How Brown Packaging Reduces Cost Without Increasing MOQ

At Brown Packaging, cost reduction comes from:
👉 design, engineering, and optimization

We focus on:

  • Structural efficiency
  • Material optimization
  • Print method alignment
  • Freight and pack-out improvement
  • Reducing failure and replacement cost

Because the goal isn’t to order more—
👉 It’s to get more from every unit.

References

Soroka, W. (2009). Fundamentals of Packaging Technology (4th ed.). IoPP.
Freedonia Group. (2023). Packaging Market Analysis.
Deloitte. (2022). Supply Chain Cost Optimization Report.
McKinsey & Company. (2021). Operational Efficiency Study.
TAPPI. (2021). Paperboard Manufacturing Guidelines.

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