Pricing handmade crochet items is one of the most challenging aspects of running a crochet business. Underpricing undervalues your work; overpricing loses customers. Here is the complete pricing framework for crochet entrepreneurs.
The True Cost of Handmade
Most crochet sellers dramatically underprice their work by not accounting for all costs. True pricing must include: materials (yarn, notions, packaging), labor (at a fair hourly rate), overhead (workspace, tools, website fees), and transaction fees (payment processing, marketplace fees).
Calculating Material Costs
Record every material used in each project including exact quantities. Include packaging materials: tissue paper, boxes, ribbons, and thank-you cards. Even small items like stitch markers and yarn needles should be allocated across projects. Use this formula: Total Material Cost = Sum of all materials + packaging + small allocated items.
Labor Calculation
Determine your minimum acceptable hourly rate. Consider this your labor floor – you should not accept less than this for any project. Calculate how long each project takes including: designing or following patterns, crocheting, weaving in ends, assembly, and packaging. Labor Cost = Hours x Hourly Rate. A reasonable hourly rate for crochet is $15-25 for beginners, $25-40 for experienced makers.
The Pricing Formula
Wholesale Price = (Materials + Labor) x 2.0-2.5
Retail Price = Wholesale Price x 2.0-2.5
Or simpler: Retail Price = Total Cost x 4.0-5.0
Example: A blanket uses $25 in materials and requires 10 hours of work at $20/hour = $200 cost. Retail price = $200 x 4 = $800.
Market Price Research
Research comparable items in your market. Attend craft fairs and note prices for similar items. Search Etsy for comparable crochet items and analyze their pricing. Your price should be within the range of comparable items from other sellers.
When to Raise Prices
When materials costs increase. When your skill level improves (reflected in better-finished items). When demand consistently exceeds your production capacity. When you develop a recognizable brand. Annual price increases of 5-10% are normal and expected.