Bag Supplier for USA Buyers

For US buyers, sourcing bags from Türkiye is less about geography and more about whether the supplier works the way a US importer needs: clear terms, retail-ready packing, a sample you can approve before committing, and consistent units across a long run. Transit is longer than from Europe, so the planning around it matters more.

VYGR Bags is a Türkiye-based OEM, ODM and private label manufacturer, and the way it is set up maps onto what US programs typically require.

Diversifying beyond a single sourcing region

Many US brands and importers now keep more than one manufacturing region in play rather than concentrating everything in one place. Türkiye fits that strategy: a different region with an established leather and textile base and a working contract-manufacturing culture, useful as either a primary source for certain categories or a second source for resilience. It is a sourcing decision, not a slogan, and it only works if the partner can hold quality across reorders.

Terms and packing for import into the US

US importers usually care about three operational things, and the catalogue addresses each:

  • Terms: shipment is arranged under EXW, FOB or CIF. FOB from a Turkish port is the common choice for US importers managing their own freight; CIF shifts more of the logistics to the supplier side.
  • Documentation: full shipping documentation is prepared, which matters for a smooth customs process.
  • Packing: goods are packed to your spec, whether individual polybags, barcode labels, custom boxes or inserts, so units can arrive retail- or DC-ready rather than needing rework.

What the catalogue does not state is anything about duties, country-specific compliance or transit times, so treat those as your own diligence rather than assumptions.

Consistency over a long run

A US retail or e-commerce program often means large, repeated orders, where the real risk is drift: unit number forty-thousand not matching the approved sample. VYGR Bags handles this with a defined sequence: requirements aligned, materials and branding specified, a sample approved before bulk, then production against fixed checkpoints (stitching, hardware attachment, logo application, measurement verification, final inspection). Capacity supports scale: 100,000–150,000 cotton totes a month, tens of thousands of wallets and cardholders, and 12,000–18,000 leather bags, by complexity, with branded and plain orders running at the same capacity.

Categories US buyers order

The range covers the main US demand:

  1. Cotton and canvas totes for retail, grocery and merch
  2. Leather and PU wallets and cardholders for accessories lines and gifting
  3. PU, canvas and polyester backpacks, including padded laptop styles
  4. Polyester drawstring bags for events, schools and giveaways
  5. Cosmetic pouches and insulated carriers, including a non-woven hot food bag and a polyester medical cold-chain bag

Branding options span embossing and debossing, screen, digital and sublimation printing, embroidery, woven and PU labels, metal logos and hangtags.

Starting a US program

Send the product, quantity, target price, intended use, branding, your packing spec (note barcodes and retail requirements), and your preferred term and destination port. Build a sample round into the timeline; for a long US run it is the cheapest way to confirm the product before you commit volume across an ocean.

Buyer checklist

  • Confirm the Incoterm (EXW/FOB/CIF) and destination port fit your freight setup.
  • Verify packing specs (polybags, barcodes, boxes, inserts) match your retail or DC needs.
  • Allow time for sample approval before committing to bulk.
  • Confirm whether Türkiye is a primary or diversifying source for you.
  • Treat duties, transit times and US compliance as your own diligence.

RFQ / spec checklist

  • Product type and category (tote, wallet, backpack, pouch)
  • Quantity and order frequency
  • Target price per unit or total budget
  • Branding method and logo specs (emboss, print, embroidery, label)
  • Packing specification (polybags, barcodes, retail box, inserts)
  • Incoterm (EXW, FOB, CIF) and destination port
  • Material and finish preference (leather, PU, canvas, polyester, cotton)

Frequently asked questions

Can VYGR Bags ship to the United States?

Shipment is arranged under EXW, FOB or CIF with full documentation. Duties, transit times and US-specific compliance are the buyer's own diligence, as the catalogue doesn't cover them.

What shipping term do US importers usually use?

FOB from a Turkish port is common for importers managing their own freight; CIF moves more logistics to the supplier side.

Can units arrive retail-ready?

Yes — packing follows your spec, including polybags, barcode labels, boxes and inserts.

How is consistency maintained across large runs?

A sample is approved before bulk, and production runs against fixed checkpoints including final inspection before dispatch.

What's the production capacity?

By complexity: 100,000–150,000 cotton totes, 25,000–45,000 wallets, 35,000–60,000 cardholders and 12,000–18,000 leather bags per month.