Nearshoring has become one of the biggest trends in apparel sourcing.
For many brands, the idea is simple:
Move production closer to home. Reduce risk. Move faster.
Mexico is usually the first option considered for U.S. brands.
But nearshoring isn’t a replacement for Asia.
It’s a tradeoff.
Speed vs cost.
Proximity vs capability.
Flexibility vs scale.
Here’s how to evaluate Mexico vs Asia — and when each actually makes sense.
The Core Difference
At a high level:
Mexico = Speed and proximity
Asia = Cost efficiency and capability
Everything else builds from that.
Lead Times: Where Nearshoring Wins
This is Mexico’s strongest advantage.
Mexico timelines:
- Production: 30–60 days
- Freight to U.S.: 2–7 days
Total: ~45–90 days
Asia timelines:
- Production: 30–60 days
- Freight:
- Air: 5–10 days
- Ocean: 20–45 days
Total: ~90–150 days
What this means:
Mexico allows:
- Faster launches
- Quicker reorders
- Lower inventory risk
Asia requires:
- Longer planning cycles
- Larger inventory commitments
Cost: Where Asia Still Leads
Mexico is not a low-cost option.
Mexico:
- Higher labor costs
- Smaller production scale
- Often higher unit price
Asia (China, Vietnam, India, etc.):
- Lower labor costs
- More efficient production at scale
- Lower unit pricing
But here’s the nuance:
Lower unit cost doesn’t always mean lower total cost.
Mexico can reduce:
- Freight costs
- Inventory holding costs
- Markdown risk
The right choice depends on your business model.
Capability: Where Asia Has the Advantage
Asia — especially China and Vietnam — leads in:
- Technical apparel (activewear, swimwear)
- Complex construction
- Fabric sourcing and innovation
Mexico is stronger in:
- Basic cut-and-sew
- Knitwear
- Repeatable styles
What this means:
If your product requires:
- Compression
- Specialized seams
- Performance fabrics
Asia is usually the better fit.
Supply Chain Integration
Asia:
- Integrated fabric mills
- Large supplier networks
- Easier access to trims and materials
Mexico:
- More limited fabric sourcing
- Often relies on imported materials
Impact:
Fabric availability can:
- Extend timelines
- Increase costs
- Limit design flexibility
MOQs and Flexibility
Mexico:
- Often more flexible for smaller runs
- Better for quick reorders
Asia:
- Higher MOQs, especially for custom fabrics
- More efficient for large-scale production
Key insight:
Mexico works well for:
- Testing demand
- Replenishment
Asia works better for:
- Core production
- Scaling volume
Risk Profile
Mexico reduces:
- Shipping delays
- Port congestion risk
- Long transit exposure
Asia reduces:
- Production inconsistency (in strong factories)
- Technical execution risk
Different risks — not less risk overall.
When Mexico Is the Right Choice
Nearshoring makes sense when:
- You need speed to market
- You run a fast-moving inventory model
- You’re producing simpler garments
- You want faster replenishment cycles
- Your primary market is North America
When Asia Is the Right Choice
Asia is the better option when:
- Cost is a priority
- You’re producing technical apparel
- You need large production volumes
- You require advanced materials
How Brands Actually Use Both
Most brands don’t choose one or the other.
They build hybrid supply chains.
Common strategy:
- Asia → core production, technical products
- Mexico → replenishment, fast-moving SKUs
Example:
- Initial production run in Asia
- Reorders and demand spikes handled in Mexico
This balances:
- Cost
- Speed
- Risk
The Biggest Mistake Founders Make
They try to replace Asia with Mexico.
That rarely works.
Mexico isn’t designed to replicate:
- Scale
- Cost structure
- Technical capability
It’s designed to complement it.
How to Decide Between Mexico and Asia
Ask:
- How fast do I need inventory?
- How complex is my product?
- What is my target margin?
- How predictable is my demand?
Your answers will point to the right mix — not just one location.
Final Thought
Nearshoring isn’t about geography.
It’s about control.
Mexico gives you speed and flexibility.
Asia gives you scale and capability.
The brands that win don’t choose one.
They build systems that use both — strategically.
Need Help Building a Multi-Region Sourcing Strategy?
We help apparel brands evaluate nearshoring vs overseas production, vet factories, and build supply chains that balance speed, cost, and risk.