Call or Text us: (929) 605-4397

HomeBlog › A Boutique’s Guide to Hang Tag Margins

Retail

A Boutique’s Guide to Hang Tag Margins

04/22/2026

For a boutique building a private-label line, a hang tag is a small line item that still needs to earn its place in the landed cost of every unit. Getting the math right up front avoids surprises when you scale from a 500-unit test run to a 5,000-unit reorder.

Here’s the framework we recommend to retail customers pricing hang tags into their cost structure.

Start with landed cost per unit

Add your per-unit hang tag price to your existing landed cost (product + packaging + freight) before setting a retail price. At our lower price points, a kraft tag adds a fraction of a percent to most apparel and accessories landed costs — small enough that most boutiques don’t need to adjust retail pricing to absorb it.

Volume tiers change the math

Per-unit price drops meaningfully between our 500-unit minimum and a 2,500+ reorder. If you’re testing a new private-label line, order at minimum first; once you know it sells, a reorder at volume improves your margin on the same retail price.

Order size Relative unit price Best use
500–999 Highest tier First test run
1,000–2,499 Mid tier Confirmed seller, single SKU
2,500+ Lowest tier Multi-SKU or seasonal reorder

Choosing for your order

If you’re running several private-label SKUs, combine their volumes into a single hang tag order using the same stock and finish — the combined quantity often crosses into a better price tier even though each individual product sells in smaller numbers.

Key takeawayCombine SKUs onto one hang tag order to hit better volume pricing, even if each product sells in smaller individual quantities.

Ready to put your brand on every unit? Get a custom quote — free mockups in 24–48 hours. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

More posts