Premium metal card pricing is one of the most important parts of selling custom cards and branded products profitably as a reseller.
When you offer premium metal cards and custom branded products to your clients, you are not just selling a product. You are selling presentation, brand impact, memorability, and a finished piece that helps your client stand out.
For resellers, agencies, designers, print shops, promotional product companies, and brand consultants, premium metal cards and custom products can be a profitable addition to your services when they are priced correctly.
Whether you are quoting metal business cards, metal bookmarks, custom tags, wood cards, plastic cards, promotional items, or other branded pieces, your pricing should protect your profit, account for your time, and reflect the value of the final product.
A simple markup can be a great place to start, but it should not be the only thing you consider.

Your wholesale cost is the foundation of your pricing.
This is the amount you pay for the product before adding your own markup, design time, consultation, shipping, packaging, payment processing fees, or any additional services you provide to the client.
A simple reseller pricing formula is:
Wholesale Cost × Markup = Suggested Client Price
For many straightforward orders, we recommend starting with a 40% markup from your wholesale price.
For example:
If your wholesale cost is $200, a 40% markup would bring your client price to $280.
If your wholesale cost is $350, a 40% markup would bring your client price to $490.
If your wholesale cost is $500, a 40% markup would bring your client price to $700.
This gives you a consistent baseline and helps create room for profit. However, it is important to understand what a 40% markup does and does not cover.

A 40% markup is a good starting point for clean, straightforward reseller orders.
It can help account for basic business costs such as:
However, a 40% markup does not automatically cover every service you may provide.
If the project requires design work, file setup, logo cleanup, multiple revisions, rush support, special packaging, shipping coordination, client presentations, or extensive consulting, those items should either be charged separately or built into a higher project price.
The key is to treat 40% as a baseline, not a one-size-fits-all rule.
This is one of the most important things to understand when pricing custom products.
A 40% markup does not mean you are making a 40% profit.
For example:
At first glance, $120 may seem like a strong profit. But that amount may also need to cover your time, payment fees, client communication, possible shipping or handling, revisions, and any unexpected issues.
If the order is simple, that markup may work well.
If the order requires several hours of your time, that markup can shrink quickly.
That is why resellers should price based on the full scope of the project, not just the product cost.

A 40% markup is often a good fit when the project is simple and clearly defined.
This may include orders where:
In these situations, a 40% markup can give you a clean, repeatable way to quote while still leaving room for profit.

Some projects require more time, more coordination, or more expertise. In those cases, a 40% markup may not be enough.
Consider increasing your markup, adding service fees, or quoting the project as a full package when:
For these types of orders, a markup of 50% to 75% may be more appropriate, depending on the level of service involved.
Another option is to keep the product markup at 40% and charge separate fees for design, setup, rush service, or project management.

A tiered pricing structure can make quoting easier and help your clients choose the right level of service.
Instead of using the same markup for every order, you can create pricing levels based on complexity.
Best for straightforward orders with production-ready artwork and minimal coordination.
Suggested pricing:
Wholesale cost + 40% markup
This works well when the client knows what they want, and the order is simple to process.
Best for clients who need extra guidance, file review, design adjustments, or help choosing materials and finishes.
Suggested pricing:
Wholesale cost + 50% markup
or
Wholesale cost + 40% markup + setup or design fee
This gives you more room to account for the time spent helping the client make decisions and prepare the order.
Best for larger or more detailed projects involving multiple products, custom packaging, rush timelines, branding support, or hands-on project management.
Suggested pricing:
Wholesale cost + 60% to 75% markup
or
Custom project quote
For these projects, it is often better to quote one complete project price instead of showing every individual cost. This helps position the order as a premium branded solution rather than a simple product resale.

Not every cost needs to be hidden inside the product markup.
In many cases, it makes sense to charge separate fees for additional services.
Common service fees may include:
For example:
Wholesale cost: $300
40% markup: $120
Product price: $420
Artwork setup fee: $75
Final client price: $495
This approach keeps your product pricing clear while making sure your extra time is still covered.
Premium metal cards and custom branded products are value-based products.
A client is not buying them simply because they need something with their logo on it. They are buying them because they want to create a specific impression.
A metal business card, custom bookmark, branded tag, wood card, plastic card, or specialty promotional item can become a conversation starter. It can make a brand feel more polished, intentional, and memorable.
When presenting pricing, focus on the value of the final result:
When clients understand the purpose behind the product, the price becomes easier to justify.

One of the biggest mistakes resellers make is only marking up the product and forgetting about the time involved.
Your client is not just paying for the item itself. They are also paying for your guidance, communication, organization, and experience.
If you are helping them choose a finish, compare materials, review artwork, prepare files, coordinate revisions, or manage the project from start to finish, that time has value.
If you do not account for that time, your profit can disappear quickly.
Before quoting, ask yourself:
Your pricing should reflect the answers to those questions.

Discounting can quickly reduce your profit, especially when your markup is already accounting for your time and overhead.
If a client asks for a lower price, avoid immediately reducing your markup. Instead, adjust the scope.
You can offer:
For example, instead of saying:
“I can take $75 off.”
You could say:
“We can bring the project closer to that budget by simplifying the finish, adjusting the quantity, or choosing a more standard customization option.”
This keeps the conversation professional and protects your margin.

How you present pricing matters.
If you sound unsure, the client may question the price. If you present the price clearly and confidently, the client is more likely to trust your recommendation.
Instead of saying:
“These are kind of expensive, but…”
Try saying:
“For the material, customization, and quantity you are looking for, the project total is $___.”
Or:
“This option gives you a more elevated and memorable branded piece, which makes it a strong fit for the type of impression you want to create.”
Confidence helps the client understand that premium custom products are a brand investment, not just another expense.
Simple Order
Wholesale cost: $250
Markup: 40%
Client price: $350
This may work well for a straightforward order with production-ready artwork and minimal coordination.
Order With Artwork Setup
Wholesale cost: $250
40% markup: $100
Product price: $350
Artwork setup fee: $75
Client price: $425
This works well when the client needs basic file preparation or layout support.
High-Touch Custom Order
Wholesale cost: $500
Markup: 60%
Client price: $800
This may be more appropriate when the order requires custom recommendations, extra coordination, multiple product types, or a more involved sales process.
Full-Service Project
Wholesale cost: $750
Project quote: $1,250+
This may be appropriate when the project includes multiple custom products, design support, packaging, rush timing, or a larger branding rollout.
In this case, you are not just reselling a product. You are managing a premium branded project.

Some clients will know exactly what they want. Others will need guidance.
As a reseller, your role is to help them choose the product that best fits their brand, budget, and goals.
Ask questions like:
These questions make the sales process feel consultative. They also help you recommend the right option instead of simply quoting the lowest price.

Pricing premium metal cards and custom branded products as a reseller does not have to be complicated, but it does need to be intentional.
A 40% markup is a strong starting point for straightforward orders. It can help cover basic coordination, overhead, and profit. However, it should not be treated as a catch-all for every service, revision, rush request, or custom need.
For more involved projects, consider using a higher markup, adding service fees, or quoting the work as a full-service custom project.
The goal is to price in a way that protects your business, reflects the value of the product, and gives your client a premium experience from the first conversation to the final delivery.