
The eyewear industry in 2026 is busier than before. Buyers do not just source products. They build partnerships. These partnerships mix creativity, cost savings, and rules. Companies like SUSON have set a new benchmark for comprehensive OEM/ODM services—offerings designed to empower brands to navigate this ever-evolving industry landscape.
Consumer need rises bit by bit. People know more about eye safety. Blue light glasses, reading frames, and kacamata matahari are now daily items. Fashion changes happen quicker. Suppliers must bring out new designs sooner. E-commerce growth lets small shops reach buyers around the world right away.
Customization stands out now. Many buyers want logo engraving, special packaging, or green materials as usual choices. SUSON has ready-to-ship styles for cheap market trials. Green practices shape choices too. They cover acetate sources to packaging that can be recycled.
A current eyeglasses supplier is not only a factory. It forms a system of design, making, and shipping skills. From design and manufacturing to production, packaging and shipment, SUSON gives help to customers all through. This all-in-one way saves time. It cuts talk issues too.
OEM services let brands put their logo on current frames fast. ODM takes it further. It helps make unique designs from the start. This suits brands that want to stand out with shape or material changes.
MOQ is usually the first talk point with eyewear suppliers. It sets how much you must order. It shows how bendy your supplier can be.
MOQ touches pricing and stock risks. Small MOQs aid new companies to try styles without big spending. Large MOQs cut costs per piece for big brands with wide shop networks.
| MOQ | Typical Benefit | Ideal Buyer Type |
| Low (100–300 pcs) | Easier market testing | New brands |
| Medium (500–1000 pcs) | Balanced cost & flexibility | Growing labels |
| High (2000+ pcs) | Lowest unit price | Established distributors |
Susan gives small MOQs with custom packaging fixes. This helps new eyewear labels try things with less worry.
Begin by talking about raw material stock. Acetate colors or metal finishes often need minimum batches. Ask for test runs. They let you check the market before full orders. As time goes on, steady work builds trust. Suppliers often give more bendy MOQs to faithful clients later.
If your order is under usual levels, think about using ready frames with your branding. Skip making new molds. SUSON has 1000+ styles to pick from if you just add your logo. This cuts early costs. It keeps your brand look too.
Lead time sets how quick products hit the market. It counts a lot for season starts or sales pushes.
Making times rely on several steps. First:They include getting materials like acetate or titanium. Second: Mold tooling (Injection molding of materials like PC, TR90, and metal requires molds, while acetate eyeglasses do not). Then putting together, coating, checking, and packing. For orders from brand clients, we conduct quality checks at every step of the production process, which extends the production cycle. These steps are particularly important for the quality of the delivered goods. Busy seasons for spring or summer lines can add weeks to plans.
Sea shipping costs less but takes longer than air. For example, when we ship to the United States, air freight takes 8-10 days, and sea freight takes 20-25 days. In addition, customs inspection may cause further delays. Customs checks add to planning time too.
Team up with suppliers who handle all steps inside. This cuts wait from talks. SUSON runs its own mold shop for varied design work. It keeps four production lines for acetate, injection, titanium, and metal frames. The three finished product factories are used to produce orders for different types of customers. This speeds up work for different types.
A senior engineering team is responsible for product design, analysis, and prototyping. Okay samples soon stops jams later. Digital trackers give clear views at each step. They cover from mold done to final ship okay.
Timing counts. Plan orders three months before busy sales times. Early talks for factory spots ensure better delivery. This holds even when world need jumps.
Quality shapes a brand’s name in eyewear. It is what users feel each day they wear it.
QC checks frame fit, lens match, coating stick, hinge pull, and package looks before send-off. Tests cover UV block checks for CE/FDA rules, lens clearness for ANSI Z80 series, strength under pressure, and hold against sweat or rust. All are key for export rules.
Ask for full QC papers before big making starts. They show if specs fit your needs. Written deals on materials like Mazzucchelli acetate or OBE hinges stop fights later. SUSON does extra tests if asked. This includes nickel release checks and BSCI audits for fair work proof.
Eyewear items must hit area safety certs before world sales:
SUSON pushes a quality setup that gets most world certs. Rules are not just papers. They show trust that builds buyer faith over time around the globe.
Picking an eyeglasses supplier beats just price looks. It is about matching goals and skills.
Find makers skilled in optical frames and sunglasses. This range helps mix products without partner switches. In-house design groups speed ideas to sales. It aids quick replies to trends like odd shapes or clear acetates.
Good export know-how smooths paper work over borders. It is a key point many miss at first.
OEM teams let fast shop entry with top sellers under your label. ODM work digs deeper. Custom molds or special colors make one-of-a-kind items. This boosts brand notice over years. SUSON’s skilled R&D team turns your design to done glasses under NDA guard.
Joint making cuts time to sales. It keeps your idea hold. This mix is what growing brands want as fights grow world-wide.
Lasting wins rely on more than deals. They need clear talk and shared new ideas.
Steady news at each step from samples to ship builds trust both ways. Clear papers stop mix-ups on tech details or dates. SUSON keeps good talk with buyers via teams that speak many languages. So no tongue walls.
Online boards let buyers see progress with pictures. No need for just email lines. Teams based on open ways grow into strong links. Both sides advance together each year. This idea sits deep in SUSON’s goal “to engineer glasses that expand the horizons of vision.”
Most suppliers set MOQs between 300–500 pieces per style depending on material type; some offer lower volumes for startups through OEM programs.
Lead times usually range from 45–90 days including sampling; complex molds may extend timelines slightly.
Yes—for Europe CE marking is required; FDA registration applies to U.S.-bound shipments ensuring consumer safety standards are met.
Use detailed QC checklists tied to previous batches; retain approved samples as reference standards during inspections.
They reduce design costs while offering access to experienced manufacturing infrastructure—helping smaller labels scale faster without compromising uniqueness.