Here's the single most common pricing mistake new lash brand owners make: they take their factory cost, add a margin, and call it a day. Cost-plus pricing is simple โ but it completely ignores perceived value. A pair of lashes that costs $2.00 to manufacture from a factory in Qingdao can retail for $15 in a TikTok shop, $28 on a branded Shopify store, or $45 in a high-end salon in Riyadh. The lashes are essentially the same. The difference is positioning, packaging, and channel. This guide breaks down exactly how to price your private label lashes for maximum profit โ with real numbers, not theory.
Understanding Your Cost Structure
Before you can price anything, you need to know exactly what each unit costs you โ delivered to your door or your 3PL warehouse. This is your landed cost, and it includes every expense from factory floor to your shelf. Here's a real-world breakdown for a typical private label lash brand importing from China:
- Factory unit cost: $0.80โ3.50 per pair, depending on lash style, volume, and level of customization. A basic faux mink strip lash might cost $0.80โ1.20, while a handcrafted 10D volume lash with custom curl specifications runs $2.00โ3.50.
- Custom packaging: $0.30โ1.20 per box. This includes the printed box, tray insert, and any sleeve or card. Die-cut magnetic closure boxes push toward the top end of this range. Standard tuck-top boxes with foam-padded inserts are closer to $0.40โ0.60.
- Shipping (sea freight + DDP): ~$0.10โ0.25 per unit. Sea freight is the most economical option for orders of 500+ boxes. DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) means your freight forwarder handles everything โ customs clearance, duties, and last-mile delivery to your warehouse.
- Shipping (air express): ~$0.50โ1.50 per unit. Air freight is 4โ10x more expensive than sea, but it takes 5โ7 days instead of 25โ35 days. Worth it for sample orders, urgent restocks, or your first launch when you need inventory fast.
- Import duties: Varies by country, typically 5โ12% of CIF value (Cost + Insurance + Freight). The US typically charges 0โ6.8% on false eyelashes (classified under HTS code 6704.19). The EU averages 4โ8%. Saudi Arabia and Gulf countries apply 5% customs duty under GCC unified tariff.
Landed cost formula:
Landed Cost = Factory Unit Cost + Packaging Cost + Shipping Cost + Import Duty
Here's a concrete example for a mid-range volume lash shipped to the US via sea freight:
- Factory cost: $1.90/pair
- Custom box with insert: $0.60
- Sea freight (DDP to California warehouse): $0.20
- US import duty (~6%): $0.15
- Total landed cost: $2.85 per box
That $2.85 is your foundation. Every pricing decision you make flows from this number. Get it wrong โ by underestimating shipping, forgetting duties, or not accounting for packaging โ and you'll be selling at a loss without realizing it.
๐ก Pro tip: Always build a 15โ20% buffer into your landed cost estimate. Freight rates fluctuate โ sometimes dramatically. A $0.20/unit sea freight estimate in January might be $0.35 in October during peak season. If you set your retail price assuming the lowest possible landed cost, you'll have no margin when real-world costs hit.
Channel-Based Pricing Strategy
Different sales channels support different pricing โ and require different margins. A salon owner buying 50 boxes wholesale expects a very different price than a consumer buying one box from your Instagram shop. Here's how markup varies by channel:
| Sales Channel | Typical Markup | Retail Price Range | Gross Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| DTC (Shopify / brand site) | 5โ8x landed cost | $15โ25/box | 60โ70% |
| Salon wholesale | 2.5โ4x landed cost | $8โ12/box | 35โ50% |
| Distributor | 1.8โ2.5x landed cost | $5โ8/box | 20โ35% |
| Amazon FBA | 4โ6x landed cost | $12โ20/box | 40โ55% (after fees) |
| Subscription box | 3โ4x landed cost | $10โ15/box | 35โ45% |
DTC is where the margin lives. A $2.85 landed cost lash sold at $22 on your own Shopify store leaves roughly $13โ15 in gross profit after payment processing and basic fulfillment costs. That margin gives you budget for advertising, influencer gifting, and brand building. Distributors, by contrast, are a volume play โ lower margin per unit, but you might move 1,000+ boxes per order with zero marketing spend on your end.
Amazon FBA deserves a closer look: A $18 lash on Amazon looks like a 6.3x markup on a $2.85 landed cost โ but after Amazon's referral fee (typically 15% for beauty), FBA fulfillment fee ($3โ5/unit), and storage fees, your net margin lands closer to 40โ50%, not 70%. Factor that in before you commit to the platform.
The Psychology of Lash Pricing
Pricing is more about psychology than arithmetic. The number on your price tag sends a signal to your customer before she ever opens the box. Here's what different price points communicate in the lash market:
$12โ18 Range: Entry-Level DTC
This is TikTok brand territory. Young consumers (18โ28), impulse purchases, high trial rate. At this price, customers expect decent quality but not luxury. They'll forgive simpler packaging and shorter wear. The play here is volume โ you need to sell a lot of units because your per-unit margin is thin. Successful brands in this range often use social media virality to drive traffic, and they rely on repeat purchases and multi-packs to reach healthy average order values.
$20โ30 Range: Mid-Market Salon Brands
This is the professional perception zone. At $22โ28, customers believe they're buying something a salon professional would use. Packaging matters more here โ you need a proper box, not a plastic sleeve. The lash quality needs to be visibly better than drugstore options. This range supports healthy DTC margins (60โ70% on a $2.85 landed cost) and is where most successful independent lash brands position.
$35โ50 Range: Premium/Luxury Positioning
At this level, the lash itself is only part of the product. You're selling an experience โ magnetic closure boxes, silk-lined trays, QR codes linking to tutorial videos, possibly a lash care card. The branding must be impeccable. Your website design, your Instagram aesthetic, your packaging unboxing experience โ all of it needs to justify the luxury price. A $2.50 lash in a $1.20 box sold for $45 works, but only if the perception matches the price.
Key insight: The difference between a $15 lash and a $25 lash is rarely about the lash quality itself. It's about branding confidence. A well-branded product signals reliability, professionalism, and taste. Customers pay a premium for the confidence that they're buying something good โ they don't want to gamble on their appearance.
Price Anchoring: The Power of Three Tiers
One of the most effective pricing tactics is launching with three tiers. Here's how it works:
- Basic ($14): Your entry-level lashes. Good quality, simpler packaging. This exists mainly to make the Pro tier look like better value.
- Pro ($22): Your target product. Better packaging, slightly upgraded lash quality, and positioned as "what the professionals use." Most buyers will pick this option.
- Luxe ($35): Premium packaging, exclusive styles, limited edition. Even if few people buy it, it elevates the perceived value of your entire brand.
This is called price anchoring, and it works because humans make relative, not absolute, value judgments. Next to a $35 option, $22 looks reasonable. Next to a $14 option, $22 looks premium-but-attainable. The middle tier captures 60โ70% of sales in almost every category.
Pricing by Product Type
Different lash products have different cost structures and support different retail prices. Here's a practical cost grid showing what you should expect at each stage:
| Product | Factory Cost | Landed Cost | DTC Retail | Wholesale |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic Volume (10D) | $1.50โ2.50 | $2.20โ3.50 | $18โ28 | $9โ14 |
| Premade Fans (YY) | $0.80โ1.80 | $1.40โ2.70 | $15โ22 | $7โ11 |
| DIY Clusters (kit) | $2.00โ4.00 | $3.00โ5.50 | $25โ40 | $14โ22 |
| Colored Lash | $1.00โ2.50 | $1.70โ3.50 | $18โ28 | $9โ14 |
| Eyelash Glue | $0.50โ1.50 | $1.00โ2.30 | $12โ18 | $6โ10 |
DIY cluster kits command the highest retail prices because they're perceived as a complete system โ lashes, bond, seal, applicator, and remover bundled together. The $3.00โ5.50 landed cost supports a $25โ40 DTC retail comfortably, with healthy margins even after accounting for the extra components. For this reason, many of the fastest-growing lash brands in 2026 are built around cluster kits rather than traditional strip lashes. See our DIY cluster lash page for factory-direct options.
Eyelash glue is the hidden opportunity. At a $1.00โ2.30 landed cost with a $12โ18 retail, it carries excellent margins โ and it's a consumable. Every customer who buys your lashes needs more glue every 2โ3 months. It's the razor-and-blade model applied to beauty.
Bundle Pricing โ Increase Average Order Value
Bundles are the single most effective way to increase your average order value (AOV) without acquiring new customers. The math is compelling: if a customer buys one box at $22, that's $22 in revenue. If they buy a bundle at $55, that's 2.5x revenue โ with only marginally higher fulfillment costs.
Here are the bundle structures that work best for lash brands:
- "Starter Kit" (3 styles + glue + applicator): Price at $45โ65. If bought separately, the same items would cost $60โ85. The customer perceives ~25% savings, but your actual cost difference is minimal โ you're just packing 3 SKUs into one shipment. This is the highest-converting bundle for new brands.
- "Salon Pro Pack" (10 styles, 5 boxes each = 50 boxes): Price at $180โ250 wholesale. This is for salon owners and professional lash artists who need inventory depth. The unit price per box drops to $3.60โ5.00, but you're moving 50 boxes in a single transaction with zero marketing cost.
- "Try-Before-You-Buy" sample set (5 styles, 2 pairs each): Price at $15โ25. This is a break-even or slight-loss leader. Its real purpose is email capture โ the customer tries your lashes, and if the quality is good, they come back for full boxes. Include a QR code that links to a landing page with a 10% discount on their first full-size order.
Bundles consistently increase AOV by 30โ50%. The key is making the perceived value obvious โ show the "if bought separately" price next to the bundle price so customers can see exactly how much they're saving.
๐ก Pro tip: Your best-selling lash style should anchor every bundle. If "Style 03 โ Natural Volume" is your top seller, put it in every kit. Customers will compare the bundle price against what they'd pay for that one style alone, and the bundle will look like a deal even if they don't need the other two styles yet.
When and How to Raise Prices
Most lash brand owners are terrified of raising prices. They shouldn't be. Done correctly, a price increase strengthens your brand and increases profit with zero additional work. The key is how you do it.
Don't compete on price โ compete on brand, quality, and service. There will always be someone cheaper than you. Someone selling $3 lashes on AliExpress. Someone dropshipping from a trading company at $6.99. If you compete on price, you're in a race to the bottom โ and the factory always wins that race, because they're the ones selling to your competitors too.
When to raise prices:
- Your packaging upgrades. If you've moved from a simple box to a magnetic closure with foil stamping and a silk-lined tray, your product is genuinely worth more. Raise the price to match.
- You add a new feature. QR code tutorial videos, a lash care card, a travel case, an extra pair in the box โ anything that adds perceived value justifies a price adjustment.
- You launch a premium collection. This is the safest way to increase prices: keep your existing line at its current price, and introduce a new "premium" tier at a higher price point. Existing customers aren't affected, and new customers see the premium option as aspirational.
How to frame it (the language matters):
- Never say "we're raising prices."
- Say "Introducing our Luxe Collection" (new tier at a higher price point).
- Say "Now with upgraded packaging and a free lash applicator" (add value, then adjust price).
- Say "New and improved formula" (product upgrade justifies price increase).
A note on freight costs: Shipping rates are volatile. In the past three years we've seen sea freight swing from $1,500 to $15,000 per 40-foot container. Build a 15โ20% buffer into your pricing now so that a freight spike doesn't wipe out your margin. If shipping costs drop, that buffer becomes extra profit. If they spike, you survive without an emergency price hike.
What Aurevia Lashes Offers
At Aurevia Lashes, we believe transparent pricing is the foundation of a strong brand partnership. Here's what you get when you work with us:
- Factory-direct pricing โ no trading company markup. Most trading companies add 30โ50% on top of factory prices. Working directly with our Qingdao factory saves you that margin.
- Transparent, itemized quotes โ we break down every cost: lashes, packaging, shipping. You see exactly where your money goes.
- MOQ flexibility โ start with 100 boxes to test your price points before committing to volume. Validate your market, then scale. See our MOQ guide for details.
- Landed cost estimates for any country โ tell us your destination market, and we'll calculate your estimated landed cost including duties and freight.
- Bulk discounts at 500, 1,000, and 5,000+ boxes โ the more you order, the lower your per-unit cost, and the higher your profit margin.
- Full OEM/ODM customization โ custom lash styles, custom packaging, custom everything. Your brand, your specs. Learn more on our OEM/ODM page.
We're a factory-direct manufacturer in Pingdu, Qingdao โ the region that produces approximately 70% of the world's false eyelashes. No middlemen, no hidden fees, no surprises. Get your detailed quote โ
The Bottom Line
Pricing is the single most important โ and most overlooked โ strategic decision you'll make for your lash brand. Get it right, and you have the margin to invest in marketing, scale production, and build a lasting business. Get it wrong, and you'll be working hard for very little return.
Three principles to take away:
- Don't be the cheapest. There's always someone cheaper. Being the cheapest lash on the market is not a business strategy โ it's a slow path to burnout. Price signals quality. Underpricing hurts your brand more than overpricing ever could.
- Calculate landed cost first. Know your true cost per unit โ factory + packaging + shipping + duty โ before you set a single retail price. Work backwards from what the market will pay, not forwards from what the factory charges.
- The most profitable brands operate at 5โ8x markup (DTC) or 2.5โ4x (wholesale). This isn't greed โ it's what you need to cover advertising, photography, website costs, payment processing, customer service, returns, and still have a healthy profit left over. Anything less, and you're building a hobby, not a business.
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