How to Calculate Cost per Non Woven Bag (Simple Factory Formula)

Retailers in North and Latin America ask for a landed bag price. To answer them, you need a clear cost-per-bag model — not a guess. Here is a factory-side formula packaging plants use with OUNUO / OYANG non-woven lines.

Core formula

Cost per bag ≈ Material + Labor + Energy + Consumables + Overhead + Amortized machine cost

1. Material (usually 50–70% of cost)

  • Bag weight (g) × fabric price ($/kg) / 1000
  • Add handle / laminated film / printing ink if applicable
  • Include scrap rate (typically 2–5% for a stable line)

Example: a 40 g D-cut bag, fabric at $1.80/kg → material ≈ $0.072 before scrap.

2. Labor

  • Operators per shift × hourly cost / bags produced per hour
  • Fully automatic box-bag lines need fewer people than semi-auto handle sealing

3. Energy and consumables

  • kWh × local electricity price / bags
  • Blades, Teflon, pneumatic parts averaged per month

4. Machine amortization

  • Machine investment / expected bags over 5–7 years (or your payback target)
  • Higher speed and less downtime lower this line item quickly

Why machine choice matters

A higher-capacity automatic line (for example OYANG-17 box bag or SMART-17 multi-function) costs more upfront but often wins on labor and scrap for supermarket programs. A simpler D-cut machine can be right for smaller runs.

Send Michael your bag size, GSM, monthly volume and country. We will map a realistic cost structure and recommend a machine configuration for the Americas market.

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