Choose a domestic copacker if you care about speed, tight control, and clean retailer compliance. Overseas can look cheaper on a quote sheet. Total landed cost, risk, and time often erase that gap once you add freight, safety stock, and rework.
The single most important takeaway for you is this. Model total landed cost and lead time first. Then pressure test quality, retailer rules, and change control with real samples on your exact film and powder. We moved a stick pack brand from an overseas line to a U.S. copacker and on-time delivery hit 98 percent the next quarter with zero stockouts. Margin stayed healthy because air saves and buffer pallets went away.
Compliance And Certifications
Domestic facilities are easier to verify for the paperwork that retailers and auditors ask for.
What to check
• FDA registration, cGMP, and site audits
• SQF or BRCGS for GFSI alignment
• NSF, USDA Organic, Non-GMO, Gluten Free, Kosher as needed
• Allergen program and changeover logs
• COA and retain samples policy
To do this, request the last audit summary, a current certificate list, and a sample batch record. Ask them to walk you through changeover steps for your formula.
Quality Control On Stick Packs That Actually Matters
Stick packs fail in three places. Dosing drift, seal integrity, and film compatibility.
How we test
• Dosing: checkweigher data at line speed with your powder
• Seals: burst testing, MVTR and OTR for your film stack, storage at heat and humidity
• Film: fin seal vs lap seal, foil vs metallized PET, slip and COF for your line
Run a pilot with your film spec and target weight. Ask for raw checkweigher exports and seal tests, not a summary line.
Logistics Details That Bite Later
Retailers care about accuracy more than stories.
What to lock
• GS1 barcodes and GTIN assignments
• Lot code format and human readable date
• Case label spec, pallet pattern, and slip sheet rules
• EDI readiness and OTIF penalties by retailer
Pull your top retailer guide and have the copacker show a live label and ASN sample that matches it.
Total Landed Cost You Need On One Sheet
Overseas can look cheap per unit. Add the rest.
Line items
• Ocean or air freight, drayage, duties, brokerage, port fees
• Tariffs by HTS code
• Inland freight to DC
• Safety stock to cover transit and delay variance
• Detention, storage, and rework costs
Convert lead time variance into days of extra inventory, then into units, then into cash on shelf.
Contract Terms That Protect You
You want clarity on who owns what and who pays for what.
Key points
• Ownership of formulas, art, and tooling
• Film buying responsibility and safety stock rules
• MOQ and changeover fees
• Hold harmless and product liability insurance limits
• Recall plan and who pays for pulls and notices
• CAPA and change control process with timelines
Write a short quality agreement and an SLA with response times, sample approvals, and who signs off at each step.
Country Of Origin And Label Claims
COOL and claim substantiation get messy across borders.
What to check
• Country of Origin rules for finished goods and key inputs
• Prop 65 if you sell in California
• Nutrition facts source and rounding rules
• Sustainability claims and recycled content proof
To do this, gather supplier COAs and declarations for your top five inputs and store them with the batch records.
Formulation And Material Fit
Powders act different on different lines.
What to verify
• Flow aids, moisture picks, fat content, and particle size
• Auger screw profile and agitation style on the filler
• Anti-caking and hygroscopic risk
• Static and dust control around the forming tube
Send a full pilot lot worth of powder and film. Approve the run only if weights and seals pass at production speed.
Risk And Cash: Payment And FX
Cheap units can still hurt cash.
What to model
• Payment terms vs transit time
• FX exposure and hedging if you buy in a foreign currency
• Deposit requirements and refunds for defects
• Chargeback terms with retailers
Create a cash waterfall from PO to paid invoice and see how much cash sits in transit or on the water.
Why Domestic Still Wins Often For Stick Packs
Speed to restock. Fewer label and spec misses. Easier QA. Better odds with retailer checks. You can be on site this week and fix a dosing issue today.
A Simple Comparison
| Factor | Domestic Copacker | Overseas Copacker |
|---|---|---|
| Lead time | Short and predictable | Long and variable |
| Freight risk | Low | Higher with ports and customs |
| MOQ pressure | Often flexible | Often higher |
| Label changes | Days | Weeks |
| Per unit quote | Sometimes higher | Often lower |
| Total cost after add-ons | Often competitive | Grows with freight and stock |
| Audit access | Easy | Harder across time zones |
How To Set Up Or Switch Without Pain
- Pilot before promises
To do this, run one SKU on your film and powder at line speed and approve raw data. - Lock packaging early
To do this, hand over dielines, art, UPCs, and case specs in one packet with a single approver. - Set reorder math on real time
To do this, set reorder points using actual pilot lead time plus a buffer that matches your promo spikes. - Clarify who buys film and ingredients
To do this, pick the owner that gets the break on price and time and write it into the agreement. - Plan your audit and recall drill
To do this, schedule a mock audit with their QA. Walk through traceability start to finish and run a pretend recall on a small lot.
If You’re X, Do Y
• Tight cash, short shelf life
Pick domestic. Lower MOQs and quick turns keep cash out of pallets and in your bank.
• High volume, long shelf life
Price out overseas only if you can carry the inventory and live with the cycle time.
• Retailer heavy with frequent spec changes
Domestic with fast art and print turns wins here.
• Powder sticks with strict dosing
Pilot domestically where you can stand on the floor and fix drift that day.
CATEGORIES: Co-Packing












