Trampoline MOQ Explained: A Wholesale Buyer’s Guide

TL;DR

  • Trampoline MOQ is driven by 40HQ container loading, not an arbitrary supplier rule; the cubic volume of the product sets the floor.
  • A 40HQ container of round 12–16ft trampolines typically holds about 260 units, while kids 10–12ft units run roughly 290–320 per container.
  • A mixed-SKU container lets a buyer combine models at a minimum of 30 units per SKU, so a smaller buyer can stock a range without committing a full container to each model.
  • Private label carries its own MOQ tiers, separate from the base container minimum, starting at logo printing and rising with deeper customization.
  • Larger orders lower per-unit cost because freight and setup spread thinner, but a first order does not have to be a multi-container commitment.

Why trampoline MOQ isn’t a single number

The first thing most buyers want from a trampoline supplier is a single MOQ number, and the honest answer is that there isn’t one. MOQ for trampolines depends on what you are ordering and how it loads into a shipping container. A pallet of compact kids units and a stack of bulky 15ft frames take up very different amounts of space, so they carry very different minimums.

The reason is physical, not commercial. Trampolines ship as bulky, boxed freight, and the binding constraint on an order is almost always the cubic volume of a 40-foot high-cube container rather than its weight. A supplier quoting MOQ is really quoting “how many of this product fills a container,” and that figure changes with the size and packing of each model.

Once you understand that container loading sets the floor, MOQ stops being a mysterious gatekeeping number and becomes a logistics calculation you can reason about. This guide covers how container loading works, typical MOQ by category, how mixed-SKU ordering works, how private label changes the math, and the mistakes buyers make when they treat MOQ as a barrier instead of a planning input.

How 40HQ container loading sets the floor

For trampolines, the unit of ordering is effectively the container, and the standard unit is the 40-foot high-cube (40HQ). Almost every base MOQ figure you will see traces back to how many units of a given model fit inside one.

Trampolines are a volume-bound product. The boxes are large relative to their weight, which means a container fills up on cubic space long before it hits a weight limit. A supplier’s job when quoting MOQ is to load the container efficiently — fitting frames, mats, nets, and hardware so the cubic capacity is well used — and the resulting count becomes the minimum for that model.

This is the same loading logic covered in Rocheyard’s trampoline carton dimensions and container loading guide, and it is worth reading alongside this one if you are planning your first order.

The practical takeaway is that MOQ and container utilization are the same conversation. A “low MOQ” that leaves a container half empty is not actually cheaper per unit, because you still pay to ship the air. A well-loaded container is what makes the per-unit landed cost work.

Typical MOQ by trampoline category

Because each model packs differently, MOQ varies by category. The figures below are typical full-container minimums for the main categories, and they give a realistic starting point for planning an order.

Category Typical MOQ / loading rule Planning note
Round 12–16ft About 260 units per 40HQ Mainstream backyard category; exact count depends on size mix.
Kids 10–12ft About 290–320 units per 40HQ Smaller cartons pack tighter, so more units fit.
Mixed-SKU container Minimum 30 units per SKU Lets buyers combine several models in one container.
Rectangle, oval, inground, rebounders, parts Loaded per 40HQ; discussed case by case Container math depends heavily on carton size and SKU mix.

Larger round trampolines take more cubic space per unit, so fewer fit in a container. Smaller kids units pack tighter, so more fit. For categories outside these two — rectangle, inground, rebounders, and specialty models — the order is loaded to fill a 40HQ and the exact count is discussed case by case.

The mixed-SKU container: stocking a range without a full container per model

The single most useful MOQ structure for a smaller or newer buyer is the mixed-SKU container. Instead of committing a full container to one model, you combine several models in one container at a minimum of 30 units per SKU.

This changes what is possible for a buyer building a range. A retailer who wants to stock a 12ft round, a 14ft round, and a couple of kids sizes does not need four separate containers to do it. They can load one container with a mix of those models, hitting the 30-unit-per-SKU floor on each, and come away with a balanced range from a single shipment.

For a buyer testing which sizes sell before committing deeper, that flexibility is the difference between a manageable first order and an inventory bet they cannot afford. Scaling beyond one container has its own structure: first orders and reorders are discussed case by case, and buyers running multiple containers can use staged delivery to spread cash outlay and warehouse intake over time.

How private label changes your MOQ

Adding your own brand introduces a second layer of MOQ that sits on top of the base container minimum. Customization is gated by tier, and each tier has its own minimum, separate from how many units fill a container.

Private-label customization Typical minimum
Logo printing 500 units
Custom manuals / warranty cards 300 units
Custom color 500 units
Custom tooling / structural modifications 500 units
Custom carton printing 900 units

A branded order has to satisfy both the container loading minimum and the customization minimum. A buyer scoping a private-label launch should plan against both numbers, not just the base container count, so the order size is not a surprise at quoting time. See the private label trampoline guide for the full customization-tier breakdown.

MOQ, pricing, and the cost of going too small

MOQ and per-unit cost are linked, and the link runs in one direction: smaller orders cost more per unit. Freight, customization setup, and handling are largely fixed per shipment, so spreading them across fewer units raises the cost of each one.

As covered in Rocheyard’s 2026 wholesale pricing breakdown, landed cost for a category like a round trampoline lands at a multiple of the FOB price once freight and duties are added, and a poorly loaded container makes that multiple worse. This is why chasing the smallest possible order is often a false economy.

Importing at volume also interacts with duties and classification, which you can verify against the USITC HTS database and US Customs import requirements. The goal is the smallest order that still loads a container efficiently — not the smallest order, full stop. Matching a size mix to a well-loaded container is easier with the product specifications guide and trampoline sizes reference open alongside the quote.

Common mistakes buyers make with MOQ

  • Treating MOQ as a single fixed number. MOQ varies by category and by how the order is structured. The better question is: “what’s the MOQ for this model, or for a mixed container of these models?”
  • Chasing the lowest possible order at any cost. An order that under-fills a container raises the freight cost per unit.
  • Ignoring the mixed-SKU option. A mixed-SKU container at 30 units per SKU lets buyers spread risk across a range, and many smaller buyers never ask about it.
  • Forgetting that private label adds a second MOQ. A branded order has to clear both the container loading minimum and the customization tier minimum.
  • Not connecting MOQ to a sell-through plan. The right MOQ is the one that matches how fast you can sell the units, not just the supplier’s floor.

What Rocheyard sees in MOQ buyer patterns

Across recent quoting activity, Rocheyard sees the buyers who do best treating MOQ as a planning input rather than a hurdle. Those buyers ask about the mixed-SKU structure early, build a balanced first container across a few sizes, and scale into single-model containers only after they know what sells.

Rocheyard also sees mixed-SKU flexibility doing the most work for newer and smaller buyers. Because a mixed-SKU container is accepted at a minimum of 30 units per SKU, a buyer can stock a real range from one shipment instead of committing a full container to each model — a structure that is harder to find than buyers expect, and one that local US wholesalers rarely match without a price premium.

For a partner with 800+ 40HQ-equivalent containers of loading history behind it, across 200,000+ units shipped and 20+ active US wholesale clients, that loading experience is what keeps the mixed-SKU math reliable rather than a one-off favor.

Rocheyard’s position on MOQ is deliberately plain: minimums follow container loading, the mixed-SKU container is available at 30 units per SKU, first orders and reorders are discussed case by case, and all units — base or private-label — ship with full CPSC compliance and CPC certification, designed to align with ASTM F381 and F2225. Quotes are returned within one US business day.

Frequently asked questions

What is the MOQ for wholesale trampolines?

There is no single MOQ, because it depends on the model and how it loads into a 40HQ container. As a starting point, round 12–16ft trampolines run about 260 units per container and kids 10–12ft units run roughly 290–320. A mixed-SKU container lets you combine models at a minimum of 30 units per SKU.

Why is trampoline MOQ based on container loading?

Trampolines are bulky relative to their weight, so a shipping container fills up on cubic space before it hits a weight limit. The MOQ for a model is essentially how many units fill a 40HQ container efficiently.

Can I order less than a full container of trampolines?

Yes, through a mixed-SKU container. Instead of a full container of one model, you combine several models at a minimum of 30 units per SKU.

Does a smaller order cost more per unit?

Generally yes. Freight and setup costs are largely fixed per shipment, so spreading them across fewer units raises the per-unit cost. The lowest per-unit landed cost usually comes from a well-loaded container.

What’s the MOQ to private-label a trampoline?

Private label adds its own MOQ on top of the container minimum, gated by customization tier — logo printing, packaging, color, and structural changes each have their own threshold.

How is MOQ different for a first order versus a reorder?

First orders and reorders are discussed case by case. Buyers running multiple containers can also use staged delivery to spread cash outlay and warehouse intake.

How do I figure out the right MOQ for my business?

Match the order to your sell-through plan and to efficient container loading. The right MOQ is the smallest order that still fills a container well for the models you can actually sell — often a mixed-SKU container for a newer buyer building a range.

Next steps

Before requesting a quote, decide which models you want and roughly how fast you can sell each one, then ask the supplier two things: the MOQ for those specific models, and whether a mixed-SKU container fits your range at 30 units per SKU.

For the broader process around a first order, our guide to sourcing wholesale trampolines from China covers supplier selection and what to verify, and you can compare candidates against a consistent standard using how to compare trampoline suppliers for wholesale.

When you are ready to scope an order, request a quote from Rocheyard. Quotes state the MOQ for the exact models and structure you ask about — single-model or mixed-SKU — and Rocheyard responds within one US business day. The standard round trampoline range, kids trampoline range, and replacement parts catalog are common starting points for a first mixed-SKU container.

Rocheyard B2B Sourcing Desk · Wholesale trampoline sourcing for US small business buyers — round, rectangle, oval, inground, kids, and fitness rebounder formats. About Rocheyard B2B Sourcing Desk