What Does OEM Actually Cost? A Transparent Breakdown of Custom Bottle Pricing
The most common question we receive from new brand partners is: “Why did I get three quotes for the same product and they are 40% apart?”
The honest answer is that a drinkware quote is not a price for a product — it is a price for a set of decisions about materials, processes, quality systems, and compliance infrastructure. When those decisions are different, the prices will be different. The problem is that most quotes do not tell you which decisions have been made.
This article breaks down every cost component in a custom stainless steel insulated bottle quote, explains what drives each one, and gives you a framework for comparing quotes that are not, on the surface, comparing the same thing.
Table of Contents
Toggle- The nine cost components in every custom drinkware quote
- The biggest cost driver: raw material and steel grade
- Surface finish: the most variable cost item
- Tooling cost — the line item that disappears in low-ball quotes
- Certification and compliance costs
- Packaging cost — the most underestimated line item
- Volume and its impact on unit price
- How to compare quotes that don’t specify the same thing
- Questions to ask before accepting any quote
- What Haers includes in every quote
- Frequently asked questions
The nine cost components in every custom drinkware quote
Every quote you receive contains these components — whether they are itemised or not. Understanding what each represents is the starting point for meaningful price comparison.
| Cost component | % of unit price | Negotiable? | Key variables |
| Raw material — stainless steel body | 30–45% | Low | Grade (201/304/316), wall thickness, vacuum construction quality. |
| Lid, seal, and accessories | 8–15% | Medium | Lid complexity: screw cap vs flip-straw vs push-button mechanism. Silicone seal grade. |
| Surface finish / coating | 5–20% | Medium | Zero for basic brushed. Up to 20% for multi-process finishes (PVD + screen print + packaging). |
| Logo customisation | 2–8% | Medium | Method-dependent: laser engraving lowest cost, full-wrap sublimation highest. |
| Tooling (amortised over first order) | 0–15% | Low (qty-driven) | Zero for stock model. Up to 15% per unit for full OEM new mould at MOQ. |
| Certification testing | 1–5% | Low | LFGB, FDA, Prop 65. Per-batch cost spread over order volume — higher impact at low volumes. |
| Packaging | 3–10% | Medium | Standard brown carton: minimal. Custom FSC gift box: 8–10%. |
| Factory overhead & margin | 10–18% | Not negotiable | QC system, compliance audits, account management, R&D infrastructure. |
| Freight (factory to port) | 2–5% | Low | Domestic trucking, export documentation, port handling. |
| Why quotes look identical but aren’t:
When a supplier quotes a lower price, it is almost always because one or more of the above components has been reduced in scope, quality, or specification — not because they are more efficient. The most common reductions: steel grade (201 vs 304), absent certification, and no compliance infrastructure overhead. See: why you get different quotes for the same bulk order. |
The biggest cost driver: raw material and steel grade
Raw material accounts for 30–45% of a typical custom insulated bottle quote and is the component most susceptible to substitution — with the most significant consequences for quality, safety, and compliance.
Steel grade and its cost implications
- 201 stainless steel: Lower nickel, higher manganese. Cheaper. Prone to corrosion under acidic conditions. 201 vs 304 stainless steel — full comparison.
- 304 stainless steel (18/8): Industry standard. 18% chromium, 8% nickel. Food safe. SUS304 vs 18/8 — what’s actually the same.
- 316 stainless steel: Higher molybdenum. Superior corrosion resistance under acidic conditions. Preferred for bottle interiors. Why 316 is recommended for bottle interiors.
The material cost difference between 201 and 304 steel is approximately 15–25% on the raw material line. A supplier quoting 201 versus one quoting 304 are not quoting the same product — and the price difference will be smaller than the quality and compliance difference.
How to verify: request a material declaration specifying grade by component, and an SGS test report confirming nickel and chromium content. See: how to test whether you are getting real 304 stainless steel.
Surface finish: the most variable cost item
Surface finish ranges from zero additional cost (basic brushed) to 15–20% of unit price (multi-process specialty finishes). It is also the area most frequently underspecified in initial quotes.
Finish types and relative cost impact
- Brushed / polished: No additional process cost.
- Powder coating: +3–6%. Electrostatic, oven-cured. Powder coating vs UV printing — durability comparison.
- PVD: +8–12%. Vacuum deposition, superior scratch resistance. What PVD is and how it works.
- Spray coating: +4–7%. Lower durability than powder coat. Spray painting in the water bottle industry.
- Ice crackle / specialty texture: +6–10%. Multi-process. Ice crackle surface finish explained.
- Titanium anodizing: +10–15%. Rainbow colour effect. What titanium alloy anodizing involves.
Logo customisation cost by method
- Laser engraving: +1–2%. Lowest cost, durable.
- Screen printing: +2–4%. Per-colour cost. Standard for 1–3 colour logos.
- Transfer printing: +3–6%. Full-colour. Good for gradients and photography.
- Water decal: +3–5%. Full-colour, lower durability than screen.
- Embossing / debossing: +4–8%. 3D raised or recessed logo. Requires tooling modification.
Tooling cost — the line item that disappears in low-ball quotes
Tooling is the one-time investment to create the mould for your specific product shape. Zero for stock-model orders. A significant investment for ODM and OEM projects — and one that is frequently obscured in low-ball quotes.
Typical tooling ranges at Haers:
- Stock model — no tooling: $0. Using an existing mould.
- ODM modification: $800–2,500. New cavity insert or mould modification.
- Full OEM new mould: $2,000–8,000 depending on complexity and cavity count.
A supplier that offers very low tooling cost is either using single-cavity soft tooling (lower dimensional consistency, shorter lifespan) or has hidden the cost in a higher unit price. Both need to be identified before you commit.
| Mould ownership: always in writing.
Tooling you pay for is your asset. The contract should explicitly state that the mould is buyer property, stored and maintained at the factory’s cost, and not used for any other customer’s production. For the exact language to require — and other contract terms to verify — see: how to evaluate a drinkware factory. |
Certification and compliance costs
Compliance costs are real, per-order, and frequently omitted from low-ball quotes. A supplier without LFGB, FDA, or Prop 65 documentation does not incur these costs — but you will when the product fails at customs or a retailer audit.
Indicative third-party testing costs (paid to the lab, typically amortised into unit price):
- LFGB §31 (EU): USD 300–600 per product. At 2,000 units, ~$0.15–0.30 per unit.
- FDA compliance (USA): USD 200–500 for document review + testing.
- Prop 65 (California): USD 400–800 for full metals and chemicals panel.
- REACH SVHC (EU): USD 150–400 per component screened.
The total compliance cost per unit at 2,000 units is typically $0.40–1.20 — a small fraction of unit cost, but a cost that reappears as a recall or customs detention when it is absent. For what each standard requires: LFGB, FDA, Prop 65 — what compliance documentation to require.
Packaging cost — the most underestimated line item
The same bottle in different packaging can have a unit price difference of $0.80–2.50. Packaging also has its own MOQ, often separate from the product MOQ.
- Standard brown carton: No additional cost.
- White box with product print: +$0.30–0.60 per unit. Minimum 500–1,000 units.
- Custom colour gift box (CMYK): +$0.60–1.20 per unit. Minimum 500 units.
- Custom gift box + FSC certification: +$0.80–1.60 per unit. For FSC-committed brands and Amazon Climate Pledge listings.
- Premium rigid gift box with insert: +$1.50–3.00 per unit. Corporate gift and luxury retail.
If your product MOQ is 1,000 units but your packaging minimum is 500 units, you are carrying 500 units of packaging inventory from order one. Confirm packaging MOQ at the brief stage.
Volume and its impact on unit price
Volume is the most powerful lever available to a buyer. Here is how price typically moves as volume scales at a large manufacturer like Haers:
| Volume | Price movement | What changes | Planning implication |
| At MOQ | Baseline unit cost | All fixed costs at maximum per-unit impact. | Use as your comparison benchmark. |
| 2× MOQ | ~5–8% reduction | Fixed cost dilution begins. Most impactful jump in the curve. | Sweet spot for most growing brands. |
| 5× MOQ | ~10–18% reduction | Dedicated line allocation possible. Pricing tiers unlock. | Often triggers partnership-tier terms. |
| 10× MOQ + | ~20–30% reduction | Material forward contracts. Co-investment in tooling possible. | Long-term supply agreement territory. |
The most significant jump is from MOQ to 2× MOQ — where fixed costs dilute most dramatically. Beyond 5× MOQ, savings continue at a diminishing rate.
For the relationship between volume, MOQ, and production infrastructure: why large drinkware manufacturers have higher MOQs.
How to compare quotes that don’t specify the same thing
A quote is only as useful as its specification. Here is a side-by-side of what a fully specified quote looks like versus a low-ball quote for the same apparent product:
| Line item | Fully specified quote | Low-ball quote |
| Unit price | $X.XX (fully costed) | $X.XX − 25–40% |
| Steel grade | 304 SS — confirmed in spec | “Stainless steel” — unspecified |
| Surface finish | Powder coat + laser engraving — specified | Powder coat — single step, unconfirmed |
| LFGB test report | SGS, product-specific, <12 months old | “Available on request” |
| Tooling ownership | Explicit clause: buyer owns mould | Not mentioned in contract |
| BSCI audit | Current report provided | “In progress” |
| Lead time | 35 days — confirmed at PO | “Around 3–4 weeks” — indicative only |
| What you are actually buying | A finished, sellable product | A risk at a lower stated price |
The price difference might be 25–40%. The risk difference is not 25–40% — it is the difference between a product you can sell and one that fails retail audit, customs inspection, or consumer expectations.
Questions to ask before accepting any quote
- Steel grade: Is interior and exterior grade specified? (‘Stainless steel’ is not a specification.)
- Certification: Are LFGB/FDA/Prop 65 reports included from an accredited third-party lab — or excluded?
- Finish: Is coating method, layer count, and colour match process specified?
- Tooling: Is tooling cost included, excluded, or not mentioned? Is mould ownership explicit in the contract?
- Packaging: What packaging is included? Is packaging MOQ different from product MOQ?
- Lead time: Is the quoted lead time confirmed or indicative? See: how long custom drinkware production actually takes.
- QC standard: What AQL level does the factory inspect to? Is it self-reported or independently verified?
What Haers includes in every quote
- Material declaration: Steel grade by component with certification available on request.
- Finish specification: Coating method, colour reference, layers, and durability standard (salt spray hours, cross-hatch adhesion).
- Certification status: Whether existing reports cover your product or new testing is required, with cost and lead time.
- Tooling: Itemised separately. Explicit mould ownership clause in all ODM/OEM contracts.
- Packaging options: Per-unit cost impact at your volume. FSC-certified options available.
- Volume pricing curve: Full pricing from MOQ through strategic volumes — not a single-tier quote.
For our full certification and documentation portfolio: certifications Haers can provide.
| Request an itemised quote from Haers
Tell us your product type, target volume, customisation scope, and target markets. We will return a fully itemised quote with material specifications, certification status, tooling costs where applicable, and a volume pricing curve — within 24–48 hours. → Contact the Haers sourcing team |
Frequently asked questions
Why is the same product quoted 40% cheaper by one supplier?
Almost certainly because one or more components are different. Most common differences: steel grade (201 vs 304), absent certification testing, no compliance infrastructure, and single-cavity soft tooling. A factory with no BSCI audit and no QC lab has meaningfully lower costs — but those costs are transferred to you in the form of quality risk, compliance exposure, and reorder unpredictability.
Can I negotiate on tooling cost?
Partially, in the context of total order commitment. A factory may amortise tooling over an annual volume framework or absorb a portion if you commit to a defined multi-order programme. What is not negotiable is tooling quality — a quote that halves tooling cost typically does so by using single-cavity soft tooling, which degrades dimensional consistency over time.
Should I request a cost breakdown on every quote?
Yes — specifically steel grade, certification status, finish specification, and tooling terms. A supplier that deflects detailed specification questions is either not manufacturing at the quality implied or is not the actual manufacturer. Both are problems that surface after the order is placed.
When do custom drinkware economics clearly make sense?
For stock-model orders with logo only, the economics are straightforward from minimum order. For full custom OEM, most brands find unit economics work clearly at 3,000–5,000 units per year across their range — enough to amortise tooling cost and spread certification costs to a manageable per-unit figure.
Related reading
- Why Large Drinkware Manufacturers Have Higher MOQs — And Why That’s the Point
- How Long Does It Take to Produce Custom Drinkware? Lead Time Explained
- LFGB, FDA, Prop 65: What Compliance Documentation Should You Require?
- How to Evaluate a Stainless Steel Drinkware Factory: A Sourcing Checklist
- Why You Get Different Quotes for the Same Bulk Water Bottle Order
- 201 vs 304 Stainless Steel: What’s the Difference?
- 304 vs 316 vs 430 Stainless Steel for Insulated Tumblers Explained