The Fundamental Choice: Wholesale or DTC?

Every lash brand founder hits this fork in the road: do you sell to salons, distributors, and retail chains at wholesale prices, or do you build a direct-to-consumer storefront and sell to end-users at full retail markup? It is not a trivial decision. Your channel strategy determines your margins, your cash needs, your marketing approach, your packaging requirements, and even the kind of factory partner you need.

The truth that most successful beauty entrepreneurs eventually discover is that wholesale and DTC are not enemies โ€” they are complementary revenue engines. Wholesale gives you predictable volume and cash flow. DTC gives you brand equity, customer data, and significantly higher margins per unit. The question is not "which one?" but "which one first, and in what proportion?"

In this guide, we will break down the economics of both channels, walk through the infrastructure each requires, and give you a practical decision framework based on your budget, timeline, and goals. By the end, you will know exactly which path to take โ€” and when to add the second one.

Wholesale vs DTC: The Comparison Table

Before we dive deep into each model, here is a side-by-side look at how the two channels compare across the metrics that matter most to a lash business:

Factor Wholesale (B2B) DTC (B2C)
Gross Margin 30โ€“50% (sell 3-pair pack for $6โ€“12) 70โ€“80% (sell same pack for $22โ€“35)
Order Volume High: 500โ€“10,000+ units per PO Low to medium: 1โ€“5 units per order
Customer Acquisition Cost Low (trade shows, direct outreach, referrals) High ($10โ€“40 CAC via Meta/TikTok ads)
Cash Flow Slower: NET30โ€“60 payment terms, lumpy Fast: payment captured at checkout
Brand Control Limited: retailers control display and pricing Full: you own the entire brand experience
Infrastructure Sales team, trade show budget, large inventory E-commerce site, content creation, fulfillment
Customer Data Minimal: order history only Rich: email, behavior, preferences, LTV
Scaling Speed Slow: relationship-driven, long sales cycles Fast: ads scale overnight if unit economics work
Barrier to Entry High without factory relationships Low: Shopify store can launch in a weekend

The headline numbers are seductive: DTC margins are nearly double wholesale margins. But raw margin percentage tells only half the story. You need to look at net profit per unit after all costs, and the total profit you can generate given your available capital and bandwidth. A 75% margin on 200 units per month is not the same as 35% margin on 5,000 units per month.

Key insight: The brands that scale fastest almost always start in one channel, prove their unit economics, then expand into the second channel as a growth lever โ€” not as a replacement. Think of wholesale as your anchor and DTC as your accelerator.

Wholesale Deep Dive: Volume Is Your Friend

Wholesale is the traditional beauty industry playbook. You manufacture (or source) lashes, package them under your brand, and sell in bulk quantities to intermediaries โ€” salon chains, beauty supply distributors, retail chains, or Amazon FBA wholesalers โ€” who then sell to the end consumer. Your customer is not the person wearing the lashes; your customer is a business buyer who cares about margins, reliability, and sell-through rates.

The Margin and Volume Math

Let us run the numbers on a typical wholesale lash product. Suppose your factory cost (COGS) for a premium 3D mink-style 5-pair lash kit, including custom-branded packaging, is $2.80 per unit landed. Your wholesale price to a beauty distributor is $8.50 per unit. That gives you a gross margin of $5.70 per unit โ€” roughly 67% gross margin on COGS, which translates to about 40% net margin after freight, warehousing, sales commissions, and trade show amortization.

Now scale it: a mid-tier beauty distributor places a 3,000-unit opening order ($25,500 invoice value). That single PO nets you roughly $10,200 in contribution margin. Land three distributors like that per year, and you have a $30,000-plus contribution before you ever build a Shopify store. The trade-off is that you need the inventory capital upfront โ€” 3,000 units at $2.80 COGS means you are floating $8,400 in inventory before the invoice is even emailed.

How to Find Wholesale Buyers

Wholesale is a relationship-driven channel. Cold emails have a 1โ€“3% response rate at best. The buyers who write real purchase orders are found through:

Wholesale Terms You Need to Know

When you negotiate wholesale deals, you will encounter standard industry terms. Know them before you sit at the table:

Pro tip: When negotiating your first wholesale deal, ask for a 30% deposit with the PO and the remaining 70% NET30 after delivery. This drastically reduces your cash exposure. Once you have an established relationship, you can extend more generous terms.

DTC Deep Dive: Margins Are Your Friend

Direct-to-consumer means you sell lashes to the end-user through your own channels โ€” typically a Shopify store, Instagram/TikTok Shop, Amazon Seller Central, or Etsy. You control the entire experience: the website, the packaging, the unboxing moment, the email follow-ups, the retargeting ads. And you capture the full retail price. That same 5-pair lash kit that wholesales for $8.50 can retail for $28.95 on your own store.

The Customer Acquisition Cost Reality Check

The DTC margin advantage becomes meaningful only after you subtract customer acquisition cost (CAC). In the beauty category, Meta (Facebook/Instagram) ads for lash brands typically run a $25โ€“40 cost per purchase for a first-time customer. TikTok Shop ads can be lower โ€” $12โ€“22 โ€” but conversion rates are more volatile and creative burnout happens faster.

Let us run a realistic DTC unit economics model:

Line Item Per Unit ($28.95 retail)
Product COGS (landed, custom packaging) $2.80
Shipping & fulfillment (3PL pick-pack-ship) $4.50
Payment processing (Shopify Payments ~2.9% + $0.30) $1.14
Customer acquisition cost (Meta ads, average) $11.00
Packaging inserts, samples, thank-you card $0.80
Total cost per order $20.24
Net contribution margin $8.71 (30%)

That 30% net margin on DTC looks less dazzling than the headline 70โ€“80% gross margin, but it is still healthy โ€” especially when repeat purchases drive CAC toward zero. A customer who buys three times in their lifetime has a dramatically better unit economics profile than a one-time buyer. This is why DTC brands obsess over email capture, SMS flows, loyalty programs, and subscription models: repeat revenue is where the real profit lives.

The Content Engine Requirement

DTC lash brands live and die by content. You are competing for attention in the same feeds as Kylie Cosmetics and Huda Beauty. A static product photo is not enough. You need:

Fulfillment and Returns

DTC fulfillment is operationally more complex than wholesale. You are shipping individual orders, not pallets. You need a 3PL (third-party logistics provider) or an in-house fulfillment setup. Return rates for lashes are low (3โ€“7%) compared to apparel (20โ€“30%), but hygiene regulations in many markets mean returned lashes cannot be resold โ€” factor 100% write-off on returns into your model.

The Hybrid Model: Wholesale for Cash Flow, DTC for Brand Equity

The most resilient lash brands operate both channels simultaneously, and the playbook is surprisingly straightforward: use wholesale to generate baseline revenue that covers your fixed costs and builds factory relationships, and run DTC as your growth engine where you build a direct relationship with consumers and capture higher margins.

Wholesale cash flow funds your DTC ad spend. DTC brand awareness makes your wholesale pitch stronger: "We have 15,000 Instagram followers and a 4.8-star rating across 600 reviews" is a compelling line in a distributor meeting. The two channels feed each other in a virtuous cycle.

There is one rule you must follow in a hybrid model: never undercut your wholesale partners on price. If you wholesale to salons at $8.50 per kit and then sell the same kit on your own website for $12.99, you are competing with your own customers, and they will drop you. Maintain MAP (minimum advertised price) policies โ€” your DTC store should sell at or above the suggested retail price, never below it.

Dual-channel pricing rule: Set your DTC retail price at 2.5โ€“3x your wholesale price. If you wholesale at $8.50, retail at $24.99โ€“$28.99. This gives your wholesale buyers a healthy margin when they mark up to retail, and your DTC prices do not undercut them.

Channel Economics Calculator: Cost Structure Comparison

Here is a more granular cost comparison showing how the same product performs across both channels on a per-unit basis. Use this as a template to plug in your own numbers:

Cost Component Wholesale (per unit) DTC (per unit)
Product COGS (5-pair kit, custom box) $2.80 $2.80
Freight & inbound logistics (per unit share) $0.45 $0.45
Warehousing / 3PL storage (per unit/month) $0.15 $0.35
Pick-pack-ship / outbound freight $0.80 (bulk pallet) $4.50 (individual parcel)
Sales commission / trade show amort. $1.20 (10% commission) โ€”
Marketing / ad spend $0.30 (catalog, samples) $11.00 (CAC)
Payment processing $0.10 (wire/bank fee) $1.14 (2.9% + $0.30)
Returns & chargeback reserve $0.30 (chargebacks) $0.50 (returns + write-off)
Total cost per unit $6.10 $20.74
Selling price $8.50 $28.95
Net profit per unit $2.40 (28%) $8.21 (28%)

Notice the symmetry: the net margin percentage ends up similar (around 28%) in both channels, but the absolute profit per unit is 3.4x higher in DTC. The difference is that wholesale can move thousands of units per month while DTC might move hundreds until you scale ad spend. The winning strategy is using wholesale profit to fund DTC growth until DTC overtakes wholesale in both volume and margin.

Which Model Fits Your Starting Point?

Your starting point โ€” budget, skills, network, timeline โ€” determines which channel you should pursue first. Here is a practical decision framework:

Your pricing strategy is intimately tied to your channel strategy. If you are still working through your pricing model, our complete lash pricing guide walks through the cost-plus, value-based, and competitive pricing frameworks that work for each channel.

How Your Factory Partner Supports Each Model

Your choice of channel has direct implications for what you need from your manufacturing partner. A factory that excels at wholesale orders might not be set up for DTC requirements, and vice versa. Here is what to look for:

Whichever channel you choose, we will manufacture the product.
From small-batch DTC launches to high-volume wholesale runs โ€” Aurevia Lashes is your OEM/ODM partner for every stage of growth.
Discuss Your Business Model