If you are looking to buy a single piece of second hand clothing for yourself, this guide is not for you.
If you are an importer, wholesaler, distributor, or business owner looking to source used clothing by the container — keep reading. This is the most comprehensive guide to the used clothing wholesale industry available online.
The global used clothing industry is bigger than most people realize. In 2025, the second hand apparel market was valued at $198.6 billion, and it is projected to reach $485.97 billion by 2031 — growing at 16% annually. That is 7 times faster than traditional retail.
But behind these numbers lies a complex global trade network. Used clothing moves from collection points in developed countries to sorting facilities in trading hubs, then to wholesale buyers in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. Understanding how this supply chain works is the difference between a profitable import business and a costly mistake.
This guide covers: market overview, grading standards, sourcing origins, pricing, and a step-by-step framework for starting your used clothing import business.
The used clothing trade has existed for decades, but recent shifts — the rise of fast fashion, increasing environmental awareness, and growing demand for affordable apparel in emerging markets — have accelerated its growth dramatically. What was once a niche trade is now a global industry with complex supply chains spanning every continent.
In the wholesale trade, used clothing (also called second hand clothes, second hand apparel, or pre-owned garments) refers to discarded or donated clothing that is collected, sorted, graded, and sold in bulk — typically by the bale or container — to international buyers.
This is not the same as vintage clothing, thrift store retail, or curated online resale. The wholesale used clothing industry operates at scale: containers holding 8-22 tons of sorted garments, shipped to ports across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Global market size (2025) | $198.6 billion |
| Projected size (2031) | $485.97 billion |
| Annual growth rate | 16% CAGR |
| Growth vs traditional retail | 7x faster |
| Top exporting regions | China, Europe (UK, Germany, Netherlands), South Korea, USA |
| Top importing regions | East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda), West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana), Southeast Asia, South America |
| Consumers who bought secondhand (2024) | 58% of global consumers |
| Gen Z / Millennial participation | ~80% |
The used clothing trade is driven by two converging trends: rising demand for affordable apparel in developing markets, and increasing textile waste in developed countries. This creates a sustainable pipeline of supply and demand that has grown steadily for decades.
The global trade in used clothing follows distinct geographic patterns:
Used clothing is traded in bales — compressed bundles of sorted garments. The main types are:
| Type | Description | Typical Buyer |
|---|---|---|
| Mixed bales | Mixed categories (ladies, men’s, children’s) and mixed grades | General wholesalers who sort locally |
| Category-specific bales | Single category — e.g., ladies tops, men’s jeans, children’s dresses | Retailers targeting a specific segment |
| Grade-specific bales | A Grade, B Grade, or mixed grade — pre-sorted by quality | Importers who want consistent quality |
| Shoes bales | Mixed or sorted second hand shoes | Footwear wholesalers |
| Rags / wipers | Unwearable clothing for industrial use | Industrial buyers |
Understanding grades is critical when buying second hand clothes wholesale. Grades determine quality, pricing, and which end customers you can serve.
| Grade | Quality Level | Price Range (FOB/kg) |
|---|---|---|
| A Grade | No stains, tears, holes, fading, or excessive wear. Current styles. Professionally sorted. | $2.00–$3.00/kg |
| B Grade | Light wear, minor fading, or pilling. Still sellable in price-sensitive markets. | $1.00–$1.80/kg |
| C Grade / Mixed | Heavily worn, flawed, or unsorted. Often sold as rags or recycling material. | $0.30–$0.80/kg |
Important: There is no universal standard for “A Grade.” Each supplier defines it differently. Always request written definitions and photos of actual bale contents before ordering. For a detailed breakdown, see our Grade A vs Grade B mitumba bales comparison.
Used clothing is typically compressed and packed into standardized bales:
Bales are compressed using hydraulic presses to reduce volume for shipping. A 40ft HQ container typically holds 180-220 bales depending on bale size and compression density.
Used clothing is sourced from several major exporting regions. Each has distinct advantages:
China is the largest source of used clothing for African and Asian markets. Estimated monthly exports of ~$135 million. Key advantages: highest volume, widest variety, 200+ suppliers. Pricing from $2.00/kg FOB for A Grade. See our complete guide to suppliers in China.
Korean used clothing is prized for fashion-forward styles driven by K-fashion trends. Monthly exports ~$36 million. Pricing from $1.10–$2.00/kg FOB for A Grade. See our Korea sourcing guide.
European used clothing has high branded content (40-60%). Well-established sorting industry. Higher FOB prices but premium quality perception in many markets.
American used clothing offers a large volume of mixed categories. Strong supply chain through organizations like Goodwill and Salvation Army. Moderate pricing with varying quality.
When importing a container of used clothing, you will need the following documentation:
Your supplier should provide all of these documents as part of the standard export process. See our shipping cost guide for more details on logistics documentation.
Pricing varies by origin, grade, category, and volume. Here is a general benchmark for FOB pricing (excluding freight):
| Origin | A Grade (FOB/kg) | B Grade (FOB/kg) |
|---|---|---|
| China | $2.00–$3.00 | $1.00–$1.80 |
| South Korea | $1.10–$2.00 | $0.60–$1.20 |
| Europe | $2.50–$4.00 | $1.20–$2.00 |
| USA | $2.00–$3.50 | $1.00–$1.80 |
Total landed cost typically adds $0.50–$1.50/kg depending on shipping distance, container size, and import duties in your country. For detailed freight comparisons, see our shipping cost guide.
The second hand clothing wholesale industry offers real opportunities for importers who approach it systematically. The market is growing at 16% annually. Demand across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East continues to rise. And the supply chain — from China, Korea, Europe, and the USA — is mature and reliable.
Your most important decision is choosing the right supplier. Take time to verify, request video tours, compare pricing across multiple origins, and start with a small order to test quality before scaling.
The importers who succeed in the used clothing business are not the ones who find the cheapest price. They are the ones who build reliable supply chains, understand their end customers, and maintain consistent quality. The market is growing fast enough that there is room for new importers — but only those who approach it professionally.
For more detailed resources:
Ready to start? Contact Hissen Global for current pricing, live video tour of our 20,000 m² facility, and a proforma invoice tailored to your market.
Complete guide to used clothes bales — what they contain, how they are graded (A/B/Mixed),…
Complete guide to sourcing second hand clothes wholesale. Where to find suppliers, how to evaluate…
A Chinese used clothing exporter shares the honest truth about pricing, A Grade standards, video…
I lost $10,000 on my first used clothing import from China. Here are 5 lessons…
Why Korean used clothing is in high demand across Africa and Asia. K-fashion influence, quality…
Korea vs China used clothes — complete comparison. Quality, pricing, supply volume, shipping, and market…