| Why Are Dropshipping Agents So Expensive? A Real Look Inside the Industry’s Pricing Tactics |
| Dropshipping has boomed since 2015 and remains hugely popular, especially for sellers building independent websites and personal brands. |
| More and more dropshipping agencies keep popping up, and established ones keep growing bigger—for one simple reason: massive profit margins. |
| Below are the most common, yet rarely disclosed, pricing tricks they use: |
| 1. Hidden Exchange Rate Profits |
| At a real exchange rate of roughly 1 USD = 6.9 RMB, |
| most agents will use a rate of 1 USD = 6.3–6.55 RMB for billing. |
| For a product costing 100 RMB (including shipping): |
| Fair conversion: 100 ÷ 6.9 ≈ $14.49 |
| Agent’s quote: 100 ÷ 6.55 ≈ $15.27 |
| Just from the exchange rate difference, you’re already overpaying. |
| 2. 10%–20% Service Fees Built Into Pricing |
| Agencies use this markup to cover staff salaries, office and warehouse rent, utilities, packaging materials, and more. |
| Their pricing formula: |
| Actual Cost ÷ (1 − 10%~20%) |
| A 100 RMB cost becomes: |
| 111–125 RMB |
| After applying their unfavorable exchange rate, the final price easily jumps to $16.95–$19.08. |
| 3. Size & Weight Manipulation: Always Charging the Highest Rate |
| For multi-sized items like clothing (S–2XL), shoes (35–48), pet beds (S–L), etc.: |
| Actual weight ranges from 0.25kg to 0.3kg, but agents always quote based on the maximum 0.3kg. |
| Example: |
| Shipping rate: 86 RMB/kg + handling fee 25 RMB |
| True cost for size S: 0.25×86 + 25 = 46.5 RMB |
| Agent quotes using 0.3kg: 0.3×86 + 25 = 50.8 RMB |
| Then they add a 10% service fee on top. |
| Every time you sell a small size, you pay extra. |
| The more size and weight variations a product has, the more profit they make. |
| 4. Bulky / Boxed Products: Double-Dipping Charges |
| For boxed items like pet water fountains, agencies use two “safe” billing methods: |
| Artificial weight inflation: An item weighing 0.8kg is billed at 0.9–1kg |
| Volumetric weight priority: For a package 25×25×25cm, volumetric weight = 25×25×25 ÷ 8000 = 1.95kg, and they charge based on that |
| Their unwritten rule: |
| If they overcharge: no refund |
| If they undercharge: they immediately ask you to cover the difference |
| All risks fall entirely on the store seller high qoutation. |
| Introducing TCD: TrueCost Dropshipping |
| A transparent dropshipping model with fully open, real-cost pricing: |
| Factory price = your price |
| Warehouse packaging fees are exactly what’s charged |
| Airline/shipping rates are passed through at cost |
| No exchange rate markup, no hidden fees, no kickbacks. |
| You pay factories, warehouses, and carriers directly—I do not handle payments or take any price differences. |
| I run a small two-person team with no large overhead costs. My only focus: |
| order processing + shipment tracking. |
| I deliver everything big agencies do, |
| without taking any of the hidden profits they do. |
| Cooperation Requirement (to save time for both sides) |
| Due to limited dedicated shipping accounts, |
| this service is only available to sellers with 500–600 orders per month, one account per client. |
| If you’re interested in partnering, add me on WhatsApp:+8615878961551 |
| Coming Next |
| Changes to EU company registration and tax policies in 2026 — what adjustments do sellers need to make? |
| A comparison of two shipping methods: |
| Shipping from China using your own IOSS number |
| Shipping using the carrier’s customs clearance number |
| Which is more cost-effective and secure? |