SOURCING ECONOMICS PUBLISHED JUNE 10, 2026·14 MIN READ

The Factory Quote Is a Lie. Master Your True Landed Cost.

The price your supplier quotes is 50-70% of what the unit actually costs delivered. Freight, duties, tariffs, broker fees, and 3PL fill the rest. Here is how to build true landed cost per unit — and price on the real number instead of the factory fantasy.

LANDED COST BUILD-UP PER UNIT FACTORY QUOTE $6.00 EXW $6.00 TRUE LANDED COST $9.60 FACTORY $6.00 FREIGHT $1.20 DUTY $0.90 TARIFF $0.90 BROKER+3PL $0.60 +60%ILLUSTRATIVE · THE QUOTE IS 62% OF REAL COST
50-70%Share of true landed cost the factory quote represents
10-40%Freight's typical addition to per-unit cost
8 layersComponents in a complete landed-cost build
Per POHow often landed cost should be recalculated
Quick Answer

Landed cost is the total per-unit cost of a product by the time it arrives at your fulfillment center ready to sell — factory price plus freight, insurance, customs duties, tariffs, broker fees, drayage, and inbound handling. The factory quote is typically only 50-70% of true landed cost, which is why pricing on the quote systematically overstates margin. To calculate it, sum every cost to get the product delivered and divide by units in the shipment; per-unit landed cost falls as shipment size rises because freight and fixed fees are spread across more units. Always price on landed cost, never the factory quote — then layer platform fees and ads on top to find true contribution margin.

A supplier quotes you six dollars a unit and you build your whole pricing model around it. By the time that unit is sitting in a fulfillment center ready to sell, it cost you closer to ten. The four-dollar gap is landed cost — and ignoring it is how profitable-looking products quietly lose money.

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The factory quote is the most dangerous number in ecommerce sourcing because it feels like the answer when it is only the beginning. A supplier quotes the price of goods leaving their door — ex-works, in trade terms — and that price ignores everything that happens between the factory floor and your fulfillment center. International freight, cargo insurance, customs duties, additional tariffs, broker fees, port drayage, inbound trucking, and 3PL handling all stack on top, and together they routinely add 30-50% to the factory price. A seller who prices on the quote is pricing on roughly two-thirds of the real cost, which means every margin calculation downstream is wrong in the same optimistic direction. This guide builds landed cost from the ground up: the eight components, how to find your duty and tariff rates, the formula, a worked example, why the number moves with every purchase order, and the levers that actually bring it down. It pairs directly with the true-cost-of-a-sale teardown — landed cost is the product-cost line that teardown starts from.

Definition: Landed Cost

The total per-unit cost of a product by the time it reaches your fulfillment center, ready to sell — including factory price, freight, insurance, customs duties, tariffs, broker fees, drayage, and inbound handling. Landed cost is the only accurate cost-of-goods figure for pricing because the factory quote typically represents only 50-70% of what the unit actually costs delivered.

01/12SECTION ONE

Why the factory quote misleads

A factory quote answers one narrow question: what does it cost to make this product and hand it over at the factory door? That is genuinely useful information, but it is not the cost of selling the product. The quote stops exactly where the logistics begin, and the logistics are where 30-50% of the real cost lives. The danger is that the quote arrives early, looks authoritative, and gets baked into pricing before any of the downstream costs are known.

The trade term attached to the quote tells you how much is missing. An ex-works (EXW) quote includes almost nothing beyond the goods themselves. An FOB quote includes getting the goods onto the vessel but nothing after. A landed or DDP quote includes far more. Many sellers receive an EXW or FOB quote, treat it as the product cost, and never add back the freight, duties, and handling that the term explicitly excludes. The quote is not dishonest — it is just answering a different question than the seller thinks it is.

Read the Trade Term First

Before using any supplier quote in a pricing model, check the Incoterm. EXW and FOB quotes deliberately exclude most logistics costs. Treating an FOB price as landed cost is the single most common sourcing-economics error — the term itself is telling you what is missing.

02/12SECTION TWO

The 8 components of landed cost

Landed cost is the sum of eight components. Some are per-unit by nature; others are shipment-level costs allocated across units. Building the habit of listing all eight every time prevents the quiet omissions that understate cost.

The 8 Landed-Cost ComponentsSUM, THEN DIVIDE PER UNIT
Component 01
Factory Unit Price

The goods cost per unit at the supplier's quoted Incoterm. The starting point, not the answer.

Component 02
International Freight

Ocean or air transport, allocated per unit. The biggest variable and the one most sensitive to shipment size.

Component 03
Cargo Insurance

Coverage against loss or damage in transit. Small but real; frequently forgotten entirely.

Component 04
Customs Duties

Standard import tax from your product's HTS classification, calculated on customs value.

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Component 05
Additional Tariffs

Trade-policy charges layered on top of duty for certain origins. They stack with the base duty.

Component 06
Broker Fees

Customs broker charges for clearing the shipment. A fixed per-shipment cost spread across units.

Component 07
Drayage & Port

Moving the container from port, plus terminal handling and any demurrage if it sits too long.

Component 08
Inbound & 3PL

Trucking to your warehouse or Amazon, plus receiving, prep, and inbound handling.

Components 2, 6, 7, and 8 are largely fixed at the shipment level, which is why per-unit landed cost depends so heavily on how many units share the shipment. The same eight costs spread across 5,000 units produce a far lower per-unit figure than across 1,000.

03/12SECTION THREE

Freight: the biggest variable

Freight is the landed-cost component with the widest range and the most leverage. It commonly adds 10-40% to the factory cost per unit, but the figure swings dramatically with shipment mode (ocean versus air), route, fuel surcharges, season, and above all how full the shipment is. Because freight is largely a fixed cost for a given container or consignment, the per-unit number is almost entirely a function of how many units share the space.

This makes shipment efficiency a direct margin lever. A half-full container costs nearly the same to ship as a full one, so the per-unit freight on a half-full load can be close to double. Sellers who order in quantities that fill containers cleanly, consolidate shipments from multiple suppliers, or move from less-than-container-load to full-container-load as volume grows are not just simplifying logistics — they are directly lowering landed cost on every unit. The decision of how much to order is partly a freight-optimization decision.

The Half-Full Penalty

Freight is mostly fixed per shipment. A half-full container can nearly double per-unit freight versus a full one. Order quantity is therefore partly a freight decision — the difference between an efficient and an inefficient load can move landed cost by several percentage points.

04/12SECTION FOUR

Duties vs tariffs (and HTS codes)

Duties and tariffs are often used interchangeably but are worth separating because they stack. A duty is the standard import tax a country charges on a product, determined by the product's HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) classification and calculated on the declared customs value. A tariff, in common usage, refers to additional trade-policy charges layered on top — the kind that can change quickly with policy and that apply to specific origins.

Both are calculated on customs value, and both increase landed cost, but the critical practical point is that they add together. A product can owe a base duty plus an additional tariff, and a seller who budgeted only for the base duty gets a larger-than-expected bill at customs. The starting point for getting either right is the HTS code, which classifies what the product is; the duty rate flows from that classification, and the additional tariff (if any) flows from the country of origin. Getting the HTS code right is both a compliance matter and a landed-cost accuracy matter — a customs broker can confirm the classification.

Definition: Duty vs Tariff

A duty is the standard tax a country charges on an imported product, set by its tariff schedule and based on the product's HTS classification and declared value. A tariff in common usage refers to additional or special trade-policy charges layered on top of the standard duty. Both are calculated on customs value and both increase landed cost — and they stack.

05/12SECTION FIVE

Broker, drayage & inbound

Between the port and your warehouse sits a cluster of costs that individually look small and collectively get forgotten. The customs broker charges a fee to clear the shipment through customs — filing the entry, classifying the goods, handling the paperwork. Drayage is the short-haul move of the container from the port to a rail yard or warehouse, and terminal handling charges apply at the port itself. If the container sits too long before pickup, demurrage charges accrue.

Then comes the inbound leg: trucking from the port or deconsolidation point to your warehouse or to Amazon, plus the receiving and prep work to get units shelf-ready or FBA-compliant. None of these is large on its own, but a landed-cost estimate that includes only factory price, freight, and duty — skipping broker, drayage, and inbound — will understate the real number by a meaningful margin. The discipline is to list all eight components every time, even the small ones.

06/12SECTION SIX

3PL and the last leg

For brands that route inventory through a third-party logistics provider before it reaches the customer or Amazon, the 3PL adds its own layer to landed cost: receiving fees, storage, pick-and-pack, and often prep services like labeling, bundling, or FBA-compliant packaging. Whether these belong in landed cost or in fulfillment cost depends on where you draw the line — but they must be counted somewhere, and double-counting or omitting them are both common errors.

The cleanest approach is to define landed cost as everything required to get a sellable unit to its selling location, and to put any 3PL receiving and prep that happens before that point into landed cost, while ongoing per-order fulfillment goes into the cost-of-sale calculation. The decision matters less than the consistency: pick a clear boundary and apply it the same way across every SKU so comparisons stay honest. The broader fulfillment trade-offs are covered in the inventory forecasting guide.

07/12SECTION SEVEN

The landed-cost formula

The formula is straightforward; the discipline is in collecting every input. Sum all shipment-level costs, add the per-unit costs, and divide by the number of units in the shipment.

The calculation order

  1. Factory cost = unit price × number of units (the goods total)
  2. Plus freight = total international freight for the shipment
  3. Plus insurance = cargo insurance for the shipment
  4. Plus duty = duty rate × customs value
  5. Plus tariff = any additional tariff rate × customs value
  6. Plus broker + drayage + port = clearance and port-side handling totals
  7. Plus inbound + 3PL prep = trucking and receiving to get units sellable
  8. Divide the grand total by units = landed cost per unit

The result is one number per unit that you can drop straight into the contribution-margin worksheet as the true product cost. Everything before this point is sourcing logistics; everything after is platform economics. Landed cost is the hinge between the two.

08/12SECTION EIGHT

A worked example

Here is the formula applied to an illustrative shipment of 2,000 units quoted at $6.00 ex-works. The figures are illustrative; the structure is the point.

ComponentPer UnitNote
Factory price (EXW)$6.00The quote everyone anchors to
International freight$1.20Allocated across 2,000 units
Cargo insurance$0.05Small but real
Customs duty$0.90Duty rate on customs value
Additional tariff$0.90Stacks on the base duty
Broker + drayage + port$0.35Clearance and port handling
Inbound + 3PL prep$0.20Trucking and receiving
True landed cost$9.60+60% over the quote

The factory quote was $6.00; the true landed cost is $9.60 — the quote represented just 62% of the real number. A seller who priced this product assuming a $6.00 cost would have built every downstream margin calculation on a figure that was understated by 60%. Notice too that duty and tariff together ($1.80) exceed freight, and that the small forgotten items (insurance, broker, inbound) add up to $0.60 on their own. Each layer that gets skipped pushes the pricing model further from reality.

A supplier quotes six dollars and you build your model around it. By the time the unit is sitting in a fulfillment center, it cost you ten. That four-dollar gap is landed cost — and ignoring it is how profitable-looking products lose money.
— The Quote Trap
09/12SECTION NINE

Why it changes every PO

Landed cost is not a number you calculate once and carry forward. Nearly every input moves over time. Freight rates fluctuate with market conditions, fuel surcharges, and peak season. Duty and tariff rates can shift with trade policy, sometimes abruptly. Factory prices move with raw materials and currency. And the per-unit freight allocation changes with every shipment size. A landed cost that was accurate two quarters ago can be materially wrong on the next purchase order.

The practical consequence is that landed cost should be recalculated for each PO, not inherited. A brand that locks in a landed-cost figure and prices off it for a year is pricing off stale data, and the direction of the error is unpredictable — freight might have fallen, but a new tariff might have more than offset it. Building the recalculation into the purchasing process, so every PO triggers a fresh landed-cost build, keeps pricing anchored to reality rather than to a number that was true once.

10/12SECTION TEN

Levers that lower landed cost

Landed cost feels fixed but has several real levers. Pulling them is often more reliable than a price increase because it improves margin without any conversion-rate risk.

The controllable levers

  • Shipment fill — order quantities that fill containers cleanly; consolidate suppliers; move LCL to FCL as volume grows. The single biggest freight lever.
  • HTS classification — confirm the correct (and most favorable legitimate) classification with a broker; misclassification both overpays and creates compliance risk.
  • Sourcing origin — where additional tariffs apply to specific origins, an alternative origin can remove the tariff layer entirely (covered in section 12).
  • Mode and timing — ocean over air where lead time allows; avoid peak-season freight spikes by ordering ahead.
  • Packaging efficiency — tighter packaging fits more units per container, lowering per-unit freight, and can reduce dimensional fulfillment fees downstream.
  • Demurrage avoidance — clear and collect containers promptly so they do not accrue port storage charges.
11/12SECTION ELEVEN

Common landed-cost mistakes

Five mistakes recur when brands estimate landed cost. All distort pricing in the optimistic direction.

Mistake 01 — Treating the quote as landed cost

Using the EXW or FOB price as the product cost. Fix: read the Incoterm and add back everything the term excludes.

Mistake 02 — Budgeting duty but not tariff

Counting the base duty and missing the additional tariff that stacks on top. Fix: check origin-based tariffs separately from the HTS duty.

Mistake 03 — Skipping the small components

Omitting insurance, broker, drayage, and inbound because each looks trivial. Fix: list all eight components every time.

Mistake 04 — Carrying a stale number

Pricing for a year off a landed cost calculated once. Fix: recalculate landed cost on every purchase order.

Mistake 05 — Ignoring shipment-size effects

Using the same per-unit freight regardless of order quantity. Fix: re-allocate fixed freight and fees across the actual unit count.

12/12SECTION TWELVE

Sourcing flexibility & tariffs

When additional tariffs target a specific country of origin, they become one of the few landed-cost inputs that can be removed entirely rather than merely reduced — by sourcing the product from a different origin not subject to the tariff. This makes sourcing flexibility a strategic asset rather than just an operational nicety, and it is why brands heavily exposed to origin-specific tariffs increasingly diversify their supplier base across countries.

The trade-off is real: a new origin may carry a higher factory price, longer lead times, or quality-qualification costs that partly offset the tariff saving. The right analysis runs the full landed-cost build for each origin option, tariff included, and compares the all-in per-unit numbers rather than the factory prices. Sometimes the higher-quoted, lower-tariff origin wins on landed cost; sometimes it does not. The point is that the comparison should be made on landed cost, the same honest number this entire guide is built around — not on the factory quotes, which by now you know to distrust.

Compare Origins on Landed Cost, Not Quotes

When evaluating an alternative sourcing origin to escape a tariff, run the complete landed-cost build for each option and compare the all-in per-unit figures. A higher factory quote with no tariff can beat a lower quote that carries one — but only the landed-cost comparison reveals which.

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Key Takeaways

The 7 Things to Remember About Landed Cost

  • Landed cost is the all-in per-unit cost to get a product to your fulfillment center ready to sell — the factory quote is only 50-70% of it
  • There are eight components: factory price, freight, insurance, duty, tariff, broker fees, drayage/port, and inbound/3PL
  • Freight is the biggest variable (10-40%) and is mostly fixed per shipment, so per-unit freight falls sharply as shipment size rises
  • Duties and tariffs stack — a product can owe a base duty plus an additional origin-based tariff, both calculated on customs value
  • Always price on landed cost, never the factory quote; the quote understates real cost by 30-50% and corrupts every downstream margin number
  • Recalculate landed cost on every purchase order, because freight, tariffs, factory prices, and shipment size all move over time
  • The biggest controllable levers are shipment fill, HTS classification, sourcing origin, and packaging efficiency — often more reliable than a price increase

Common Questions

Landed Cost
FAQ

What is landed cost and why does it matter for pricing?

Landed cost is the total per-unit cost of a product by the time it arrives at your fulfillment center ready to sell — factory price plus freight, insurance, duties, tariffs, broker fees, drayage, and inbound handling. It matters because the factory quote is typically only 50-70% of the real delivered cost. Pricing on the factory quote instead of landed cost systematically overstates margin and is one of the most common reasons ecommerce products that look profitable on paper lose money in reality.

How do I calculate landed cost per unit?

Add every cost to get the product delivered, then divide by the number of units in the shipment. The components: factory unit price, international freight (allocated per unit), cargo insurance, customs duties (duty rate times customs value), any additional tariffs, customs broker fees, drayage and trucking from port, and inbound handling to your warehouse or Amazon. Sum these per unit. The freight and fixed fees are allocated by dividing the shipment total across all units, so landed cost per unit falls as shipment size rises.

What is the difference between a duty and a tariff?

A duty is the standard import tax a country charges based on the product's HTS classification and declared customs value. A tariff, in common usage, refers to additional trade-policy charges layered on top of the standard duty — for example Section 301 tariffs on goods from certain origins. Both are calculated on customs value and both raise landed cost. The key practical point is that they stack: a product can owe a base duty plus an additional tariff, and sellers who budget only for the base duty get surprised at customs.

How much does freight add to landed cost per unit?

It varies enormously with shipment size, mode, and route, but freight commonly adds 10-40% to the factory cost on a per-unit basis. The single biggest driver is how full the container or shipment is: freight is largely a fixed cost spread across units, so a half-full shipment can double the per-unit freight versus a full one. This is why consolidating shipments and ordering in efficient quantities is a direct landed-cost lever, not just a logistics convenience.

How do I find the duty rate for my product?

The duty rate is determined by your product's HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) code, which classifies what the product is. Find the correct HTS code for your product, look up the duty rate associated with it for your import country, then check whether any additional tariffs apply based on the country of origin. A customs broker can confirm the classification; misclassification is both a compliance risk and a source of unexpected landed-cost variance, so getting the HTS code right matters.

Does landed cost change between purchase orders?

Yes, frequently. Freight rates fluctuate with market conditions, fuel surcharges, and season; duty and tariff rates can change with trade policy; factory prices move with materials and currency; and shipment size affects per-unit freight allocation. Because of this, landed cost should be recalculated for each purchase order rather than carried forward as a static number. A landed cost that was accurate six months ago may be materially wrong today.

Should I price based on the factory quote or landed cost?

Always price on landed cost, never the factory quote. The factory quote represents only the goods leaving the factory; it ignores freight, duties, tariffs, and inbound handling that together often add 30-50% to the real cost. Pricing on the factory quote produces a margin number that looks healthy and a bank balance that disagrees. Build landed cost first, then layer the platform fees and advertising on top to find your true contribution margin and minimum viable price.

How do tariffs on imports affect ecommerce pricing strategy?

Tariffs raise landed cost directly, which compresses contribution margin unless price rises to offset them. The strategic responses are: re-run unit economics whenever tariff policy changes, evaluate alternative sourcing origins not subject to the additional tariff, consider whether the product can absorb a price increase without losing competitiveness, and prioritize the worst-affected SKUs first. Tariffs are a landed-cost input that can move quickly, so brands exposed to them benefit from sourcing flexibility and a margin buffer.

What landed-cost components do sellers most often forget?

The commonly forgotten components are: cargo insurance, customs broker fees, drayage and port handling, additional tariffs beyond the base duty, currency conversion costs and FX movement between PO and payment, inbound trucking to the warehouse or Amazon, and the cost of defective or damaged units in the shipment. Each looks small individually, but together they routinely add 5-15% to a landed cost that was estimated using only factory price plus freight.

Ian Smith
Ian Smith
Founder, Evolve Media Agency · Sourcing & Ecommerce Specialist

Ian co-founded Evolve Media Agency in 2017 with his wife Megan. Over 9 years he has worked with $1M-$10M ecommerce brands on sourcing economics, landed cost, Amazon unit economics, and channel diversification. Based in Colorado. Read Ian’s full bio →

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