Custom packaging from China refers to boxes, bags, labels, inserts, mailers, tubes, and other retail-ready packaging solutions manufactured to your brand’s specifications at a Chinese factory, then shipped to Canada for use with your product. Unlike generic packaging purchased off-the-shelf, custom packaging is designed, printed, and produced to your exact dieline, colour profile, and regulatory requirements — including the bilingual English/French labelling mandated for most consumer goods sold in Canada.
Chinese packaging factories produce virtually every type of consumer packaging at competitive prices, with the ability to match international print standards when properly managed. Understanding what’s available — and what each type is suited for — is your first decision.
The most common packaging type for Canadian consumer products is the folding carton — the classic printed cardboard box used for everything from cosmetics to electronics accessories. Chinese factories offer these in a range of board weights, typically 250gsm, 300gsm, and 350gsm (grams per square metre). The heavier the board, the more rigid and premium the feel. Retail products on shelves in Canadian stores typically use 300–350gsm with a gloss or matte laminate finish.
Within folding cartons, you have several structure options: tuck-end boxes (most common, lowest cost), auto-bottom boxes (faster assembly for fulfillment centres), and sleeve-and-tray combinations (premium unboxing experience). Each has a slightly different dieline template and a different setup cost. Your Chinese supplier should provide the dieline once you confirm the structure.
Rigid boxes — sometimes called setup boxes or gift boxes — are the premium tier. They don’t fold flat, which means they ship in assembled or partially assembled form and occupy more container space. Chinese factories are world-class at rigid box production; they supply most of the premium brands you see at Hudson’s Bay, Indigo, and Canadian high-end retailers. Expect significantly higher per-unit costs and higher MOQs (often 1,000+ units), but the perceived value lift for your brand can be substantial.
For products sold in poly bags — apparel, accessories, small goods — Chinese suppliers offer printed poly bags with header cards. These are extremely cost-effective, with MOQs as low as 500 units for basic printed bags. If you’re selling on Amazon Canada or shipping direct-to-consumer, poly bags are often the packaging of choice for their lightweight and protective properties.
Stand-up pouches (SUPs) are the preferred format for food products, supplements, pet treats, coffee, and similar goods sold through Canadian grocery and specialty channels. Chinese factories produce high-quality flexible packaging with multiple layer structures — BOPP/VMPET/PE for moisture barrier, Kraft paper outer for natural aesthetics, and clear windows for product visibility. MOQs are typically 1,000–3,000 units for custom-printed SUPs, though digital printing runs are available at lower quantities.
Corrugated mailer boxes — the custom printed boxes used in subscription boxes and DTC shipments — are produced in enormous quantities in China. Single-wall corrugated in E-flute or B-flute is standard. Chinese factories offer full-colour printing directly on the corrugated board (litho-laminate or direct printing), though colour depth on direct-printed corrugated is more limited than on folding cartons.
Labels are perhaps the highest-volume, lowest-MOQ packaging category. Chinese label factories work with paper, BOPP, PET, and specialty substrates with hot-stamp, emboss, spot UV, and other finishing options. MOQs can be as low as 1,000 individual labels for most print runs. Hang tags for apparel are similarly accessible at low quantities. These are also the category most likely to need bilingual English/French content for Canada.
📌 Note: Even if your product itself is manufactured by one factory, your packaging may need to come from a specialist packaging supplier. Many product manufacturers in China do not operate their own packaging print facilities — they outsource packaging production themselves, adding a layer of cost. A sourcing agent can identify whether it’s more cost-effective to source packaging separately or through your product supplier.
Minimum order quantities for custom packaging from China vary by packaging type, complexity, and print method. Here’s a realistic picture of what MOQs look like across the main categories:
| Packaging Type | Typical MOQ (units) | Est. Unit Cost (CAD) at MOQ | Est. Unit Cost (CAD) at 3,000+ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Folding carton (300gsm, 4-colour) | 500–1,000 | $1.50–$3.50 | $0.60–$1.20 |
| Rigid gift box (2-piece) | 1,000–2,000 | $4.00–$8.00 | $2.00–$4.50 |
| Stand-up pouch (flexible, custom print) | 1,000–3,000 | $0.80–$2.00 | $0.35–$0.80 |
| Corrugated mailer box (E-flute) | 500–1,000 | $2.00–$5.00 | $0.90–$2.00 |
| Printed poly bag with header card | 500 | $0.30–$0.80 | $0.12–$0.35 |
| Paper label (BOPP, custom print) | 1,000–2,000 | $0.10–$0.30 | $0.04–$0.12 |
| Hang tag (350gsm, 2-colour) | 500–1,000 | $0.15–$0.40 | $0.06–$0.18 |
All costs above are FOB China in CAD equivalent (using approximate USD/CAD of 1.37). Landed costs in Canada will be higher once you add ocean freight, CBSA duties, GST/HST, and any customs broker fees. The per-unit cost drops sharply as quantity increases — typically 40–60% from MOQ to 3,000 units, and another 20–30% beyond 5,000. This is why your first order’s packaging is always your most expensive on a per-unit basis.
Yes, with caveats. For folding cartons and rigid boxes, MOQs are driven by printing setup costs — a printing plate or screen costs the same whether you run 200 or 2,000 units. Suppliers will sometimes accept lower quantities if you agree to pay the full setup cost upfront and accept a higher per-unit price. For digital-print runs, MOQs can be as low as 50–100 units — useful for product testing, but the per-unit cost is significantly higher.
💡 Pro Tip: If you’re launching a new product with uncertain demand, consider ordering a small digital-print run of labels at low MOQ to test the market, then switching to a larger offset or flexo print run once you’ve validated sales. This avoids being stuck with 3,000 units of packaging for a product that doesn’t land with Canadian consumers.
One of the most common surprises for first-time Canadian importers buying packaging from China is the setup fees charged on top of the unit price. These are one-time costs associated with creating the printing plates, screens, or digital files required to produce your specific artwork.
| Setup Item | Typical Cost (USD) | Typical Cost (CAD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Offset printing plate (per colour) | $80–$150 | $110–$205 | One-time, per job |
| Die-cutting knife/die (per structure) | $100–$300 | $137–$410 | One-time, reusable for reorders |
| Embossing/debossing die | $150–$400 | $205–$548 | One-time, reusable |
| Hot-stamp foil die | $100–$250 | $137–$342 | One-time, reusable |
| Spot UV screen | $80–$200 | $110–$274 | One-time, reusable |
| Pre-production sample (physical proof) | $50–$200 | $68–$274 | Per packaging component |
For a standard folding carton with 4-colour CMYK plus one Pantone spot colour, a gloss laminate, and a custom die-cut structure, your typical one-time setup fee total is CAD $700–$1,400. On reorders, you only pay setup fees again if your artwork changes.
⚠️ Warning: Don’t Forget the Sample Fee
Many Chinese packaging suppliers charge a physical sample fee of USD $50–$200 before producing your full order. Always request a physical sample before approving mass production — colour and finish on a monitor look very different from the printed result on your actual substrate.
Not sure how to budget your packaging development? Book a free 30-minute consultation with Epic Sourcing’s Canadian team → Book a call
Canada has mandatory bilingual (English and French) labelling requirements for most consumer products sold to the general public — and getting this wrong can result in products being pulled from shelves, rejected by retailers, or flagged by the CBSA or the Competition Bureau.
Under the federal Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act, most prepackaged consumer products sold in Canada must display the following in both official languages: product identity, net quantity, dealer name and principal place of business, and country of origin (if not obvious). Quebec’s Charter of the French Language (Bill 96) adds additional requirements — French text must appear at least as prominently as any other language.
Certain product categories have additional bilingual labelling requirements: foods and beverages must carry a bilingual Nutrition Facts table; natural health products must carry bilingual recommended use and cautions plus an NPN number; cosmetics must list ingredients in INCI format; and toys and children’s products must include bilingual safety warnings under CCPSA regulations. Textiles require bilingual fibre content labels under the Textile Labelling Act.
⚠️ Warning: Chinese Suppliers Default to English-Only
Unless you specifically instruct your Chinese packaging supplier otherwise, they will produce English-only packaging. You must provide all French translations yourself (or through a certified translator), incorporate them into your design file, and confirm their placement meets CPLA requirements. Do not rely on your Chinese supplier to translate or verify French text — this is your legal responsibility as the Canadian importer of record.
French text is typically 20–30% longer than English for the same content. Plan for bilingual text from the very beginning of the design process. Common solutions include a dedicated panel on the back of the box for bilingual legal copy, a two-sided sticker applied over the base packaging, or a full “Canadian market” version with bilingual text built into the design. The sticker solution is popular for brands testing the Canadian market — setup costs for a bilingual sticker are very low, often CAD $150–$300 for plates plus a low per-unit cost.
A dieline is the flat, unfolded template of your packaging structure — the blueprint showing exactly where every fold, cut, glue tab, and perforation goes. Providing the correct dieline to your Chinese supplier is one of the most important technical steps in packaging development, and getting it wrong causes delays, wasted samples, and costly reprints.
If you’re creating packaging from scratch, your Chinese supplier will generate the dieline based on your product dimensions. You give them the product specs (height, width, depth, weight/fragility); they give you the dieline in Adobe Illustrator format (.ai or .eps). The dieline shows cut lines, fold lines (dashed), and glue zones on a separate layer from your artwork. If you already have a structure from a Canadian packaging designer, you can provide your own dieline and ask the supplier to confirm it matches their production capabilities.
Most Chinese packaging suppliers work with Adobe Illustrator (.ai or .eps) as the industry standard, PDF for artwork, and CorelDRAW (.cdr) for labelling work. When sending artwork files, always: convert text to outlines to avoid font errors; embed all images at 300 DPI minimum; set colour mode to CMYK (not RGB); specify any Pantone colours by exact number; and indicate laminate, spot UV, or hot-stamp areas on separate layers.
💡 Pro Tip: Always request a digital proof (PDF with colour separations) before approving production, and a physical golden sample before the full run begins. The digital proof catches layout and text errors. The physical sample catches colour, finish, and structural issues. Skipping either step almost always costs more time than it saves.
Wondering how to manage packaging development from Canada? Epic Sourcing’s team in Guangdong handles supplier communication, file transfers, and sample approvals on your behalf. Book a free consultation
Understanding packaging lead times is essential for coordinating packaging arrival with product production. The two timelines must align — your product and its packaging need to arrive at the same location at the same time.
| Packaging Type | Sample Lead Time | Production Lead Time (after sample approval) |
|---|---|---|
| Folding carton (standard) | 7–14 days | 15–25 days |
| Rigid box (gift box) | 10–20 days | 20–35 days |
| Stand-up pouch / flexible | 7–14 days | 20–30 days |
| Corrugated mailer box | 7–14 days | 15–25 days |
| Printed label (offset or flexo) | 5–10 days | 10–20 days |
| Rigid box with special finishes | 14–25 days | 30–45 days |
These are factory lead times only. They do not include: your proof review time (1–5 business days), courier time for samples to Canada (5–10 days), your sample approval time (2–5 business days), ocean freight Vancouver/Halifax (18–30 days), CBSA customs clearance (1–5 business days), or domestic trucking. A realistic end-to-end timeline from “we need packaging” to “packaging is in our Canadian warehouse” is typically 10–16 weeks.
⚠️ Warning: Never Tie Your Product Launch Date to a Packaging Lead Time Without Buffer
Chinese packaging factories shut down 2–4 weeks around Chinese New Year and shorter periods at Golden Week (Oct 1–7) and May Day (May 1–5). Always build a minimum 2–3 week buffer into your packaging lead time when setting external deadlines.
Canadian retailers including Loblaws, Costco Canada, and MEC increasingly require suppliers to meet environmental packaging standards. Chinese factories have invested heavily in sustainable packaging capabilities — you have real options.
FSC-certified paperboard (10–20% cost premium) is widely available and increasingly required by major Canadian retailers. Post-consumer waste (PCW) recycled content paperboard at 30%, 50%, or 100% PCW gives genuine recycled content claims. Uncoated natural Kraft paper is 100% recyclable and popular for food, soap, and personal care products targeting the Canadian natural market.
For flexible packaging, compostable PLA-based films certified to BPI or EN 13432 are available at a 40–80% cost premium but require industrial composting. Water-based coatings replacing plastic laminate on paperboard make the packaging recyclable as paper at a 5–15% premium. Moulded pulp inserts replace EPS foam at a 20–50% premium and are fully recyclable.
| Sustainable Option | Cost Premium vs. Standard | Certification Available? |
|---|---|---|
| FSC-certified paperboard | +10–20% | Yes (FSC) |
| 50% PCW recycled paperboard | +15–25% | Third-party verification |
| Compostable flexible packaging (PLA) | +40–80% | Yes (BPI, EN 13432) |
| Moulded pulp insert (vs. EPS) | +20–50% | Recyclable (no cert. needed) |
| Water-based coating (vs. laminate) | +5–15% | Recyclable label available |
| Kraft natural paper (uncoated) | -5% to +5% | 100% recyclable claim |
📌 Note: Canada’s Competition Bureau has updated guidance on environmental claims. If you make biodegradable or compostable claims on your packaging, ensure they are specific, substantiated, and backed by third-party certification. Vague claims like “eco-friendly” or “green” are increasingly under scrutiny in Canada.
For most categories, your product manufacturer and your packaging supplier are different factories. Garment factories typically handle hang tags and poly bags in-house. Electronics factories often have box manufacturer relationships. But for premium folding cartons, rigid boxes, certified materials, or complex structures, sourcing packaging separately from a specialist factory almost always delivers better quality at a lower price than having your product manufacturer source it on your behalf (with markup).
The trade-off is coordinating two suppliers. The solution is having your sourcing agent coordinate “packing at origin” — packaging is shipped from the packaging factory to the product factory, where final packing and QC happen before the combined shipment goes to Canada. This eliminates the need to receive product and packaging separately in Canada.
💡 Pro Tip: Ask your sourcing agent to coordinate packing at origin. The packaging ships from the packaging factory to the product factory. Final packing and quality inspection happen before the combined shipment goes to your Canadian warehouse. This saves you the cost and complexity of packing in Canada.
Before mass production begins, your supplier should produce a golden sample for you to physically review: structure integrity, print colour accuracy against Pantone/CMYK specs, text and layout against your artwork, finish quality (laminate, UV, hot stamp), bilingual text accuracy (have a French speaker verify), and barcode scannability. Do not approve mass production based on photos alone.
For orders of 5,000+ units, request an inline inspection mid-production to catch systemic issues before the full run is complete. A pre-shipment inspection (PSI) should cover quantity count, visual print quality (AQL 2.5 for major defects), dimensional accuracy, barcode scanning, and drop/compression tests for structural packaging.
Epic Sourcing’s Canadian team coordinates PSIs in China through our network of third-party inspectors. Reports include photo documentation and go/no-go recommendations before you release your balance payment. View Our Services
When importing custom packaging from China separately from your product, it’s a separate import with its own HS codes, duties, and paperwork.
| Packaging Type | HS Code (Canada) | MFN Duty Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Folding cartons (paperboard) | 4819.20 | 0% | Most paper packaging duty-free |
| Rigid boxes (paperboard) | 4819.10 | 0% | — |
| Flexible packaging / pouches (plastic) | 3923.29 | 6.5% | Verify exact classification |
| Printed labels (paper) | 4821.10 | 0% | — |
| Corrugated boxes | 4819.10 | 0% | — |
| Poly bags (plastic) | 3923.21 / 3923.29 | 6.5% | Depends on material |
Paper-based packaging generally enters Canada duty-free. Plastic packaging typically attracts 6.5% duty. All imports are subject to 5% federal GST at the border — recoverable as an input tax credit if you’re a GST registrant. Ensure you are registered in CARM (CBSA Assessment and Revenue Management) if you import commercially. Canada’s 2024 surtax on certain Chinese goods does not currently apply to most paper packaging categories — verify with your customs broker for plastic packaging.
Starting too late. Packaging development should run in parallel with product development. Start 12–16 weeks before your intended launch. Skipping the physical sample. Approving packaging based on digital proofs or photos is a false economy. Ignoring bilingual requirements until the last minute. Build bilingual text into your design from the beginning — French is 20–30% longer than English and affects your entire layout. Assuming your product supplier handles packaging QC. Arrange packaging QC separately. Not scanning the barcode before production. Verify scannability on the physical sample with at least two scanner types. Skipping the dieline confirmation. Always confirm the structural dieline against your actual product before artwork. Misaligning product and packaging shipments. Coordinate shipping windows so product and packaging arrive at your warehouse together.
Ready to get your packaging right the first time? Epic Sourcing’s Canadian team has sourced custom packaging for hundreds of Canadian brands. Book a free 30-minute consultation
If you have invested significantly in developing unique packaging — a distinctive box structure, a proprietary dieline, or a custom-engineered closure — your intellectual property in that design is potentially at risk unless you take steps to protect it.
Before sharing your artwork, dieline files, or any proprietary design elements with a Chinese packaging factory, have them sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA). An effective NDA should cover: confidentiality of your artwork and structural designs, prohibition on producing your design for other clients, ownership of any custom tooling (dies, plates) that you have paid for, and the handling of digital files after your business relationship ends. Use a bilingual (English/Chinese) NDA — Chinese courts require contracts in Chinese to have legal standing in China.
When you pay for a custom die, a printing plate, or an embossing mould, include explicit tooling ownership language in your purchase orders: that all tooling produced for the order is the exclusive property of your company and shall be clearly labelled as such, and that the supplier agrees to transfer or destroy it upon request. Having your sourcing agent physically mark and photograph the tooling at the factory adds documentation you can rely on if a dispute arises.
For commercially distinctive packaging, consider an exclusivity clause preventing the factory from producing the same design for your competitors. Also consider registering your packaging design with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office (CIPO) as an industrial design — registration protects shape, configuration, pattern, and ornament for up to 15 years and gives you legal standing in Canada if a competitor copies your packaging.
If your product is made in Canada but packaged using Chinese-sourced packaging, the product is still “Made in Canada” (subject to the substantial transformation test) — the packaging is not the product. If your product is made in China, your packaging must accurately state “Made in China” or “Product of China” if any origin claim is made. Canadian consumers are increasingly attentive to origin claims, and misrepresentation can attract Competition Bureau scrutiny.
Canadian packaging regulation is not static. Stay current with Health Canada updates, Competition Bureau guidance on environmental claims, Quebec’s Bill 96 implications, and front-of-pack labelling developments. Working with a Canadian regulatory consultant for your specific product category is an investment that prevents costly packaging revisions.
The minimum order quantity (MOQ) for custom packaging from China depends on the packaging type and print method. For most folding cartons and mailer boxes, the practical MOQ is 500–1,000 units. For rigid gift boxes, MOQs typically start at 1,000–2,000 units. For flexible packaging like stand-up pouches, expect 1,000–3,000 units as the standard minimum for offset or flexo printing. Labels and hang tags can often be ordered in quantities as low as 500–1,000 units. Digital printing can allow shorter runs of 50–200 units, but the per-unit cost is significantly higher. For most Canadian importers launching a new product, ordering at MOQ on the first run is usually the most cost-effective approach, as setup costs are fixed regardless of quantity.
Your total first-order packaging cost includes: one-time setup fees (typically CAD $700–$2,000 depending on finishes and colours), per-unit manufacturing cost (CAD $0.50–$8.00 per unit for most categories at MOQ), sample costs (CAD $100–$400 for physical samples delivered to Canada), LCL ocean freight (CAD $300–$800 plus customs clearance fees), and quality inspection costs (CAD $200–$400 for a PSI). On reorders with the same artwork, setup fees are eliminated. For a typical first order of 1,000 custom folding cartons, a realistic total landed cost in Canada is CAD $2,500–$5,000 depending on finish level and shipping method.
For most prepackaged consumer goods, yes — the federal Consumer Packaging and Labelling Act (CPLA) requires that mandatory information appear in both English and French. There are limited exceptions for region-specific sales, but for any product sold nationally or online, bilingual labelling is effectively mandatory. Products sold in Quebec have additional requirements under Bill 96. Food, health products, cosmetics, and textiles have additional bilingual requirements under their respective regulations. Always consult a Canadian regulatory specialist or your customs broker about the specific requirements for your product category before finalizing artwork.
Key verification steps include: checking factory certifications (ISO 9001, FSC for sustainability, BSCI or Sedex for social compliance); requesting samples from their existing client portfolio to assess print quality; verifying their equipment — litho presses, die-cutting machines, laminating equipment; confirming experience with export packaging for North American markets (they should understand CMYK, Pantone matching, and bleed/trim requirements); and requesting client references in Canada or the US. Working through a sourcing agency with established packaging supplier relationships eliminates most of this vetting time and gives you access to pre-verified factories with known quality standards.
Yes — and this is often the right approach. It allows you to source each from the most specialized and cost-effective factory. The practical consideration is coordination: packaging needs to arrive at your product manufacturer (if packing at origin) or at your Canadian warehouse (if packing in Canada) at the right time. If packing in Canada, you’ll import both under separate customs entries with their own commercial invoices, HS codes, and applicable duties. Your freight forwarder can often consolidate packaging and product into a single container if timing and factory locations work, reducing your freight cost per unit significantly.
The full timeline from initiating packaging development to having packaging in your Canadian warehouse is typically 10–16 weeks for a standard first order: artwork finalization and supplier briefing (1–2 weeks), sample production (1–3 weeks), sample shipping to Canada by courier (1 week), sample review and approval (1–2 weeks), mass production (3–5 weeks), ocean freight to Vancouver or Halifax (3–4 weeks), and CBSA clearance and domestic delivery (1–2 weeks). Chinese New Year, artwork revision rounds, and port congestion can extend this. Air freight reduces the ocean leg to 5–7 days but costs 4–6x more per kilogram — typically not viable for full production packaging runs.
Chinese packaging factories have invested significantly in sustainable capabilities. FSC-certified paperboard is widely available at a 10–20% premium and increasingly required by major Canadian retailers. PCW recycled content paperboard is available at 30%, 50%, and 100% PCW levels. Compostable PLA-based films (BPI or EN 13432 certified) cost 40–80% more than conventional flexible packaging and require industrial composting. Water-based coatings replacing plastic laminate make paperboard recyclable. Moulded pulp inserts replace EPS foam. The most practical upgrade for most Canadian importers is FSC-certified natural Kraft paper — strong environmental story, meets major retailer requirements, and costs no more than conventional paperboard for standard finishes.
Whether you’re designing your first custom box for a Canadian product launch, switching to sustainable packaging to meet retailer requirements, or optimizing packaging costs on an existing product line, Epic Sourcing’s Canadian team is here to help. We coordinate packaging development from supplier selection through sample approval, bilingual compliance review, pre-shipment inspection, and freight forwarding to your Canadian warehouse.
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