Ask any Nigerian brand owner about their worst experience, and there’s a reasonable chance a manufacturer is at the centre of the story. Wrong sizes. Missed deadlines. Deposits paid and work never delivered. Quality that looked nothing like the sample approved.
Finding a reliable Nigerian clothing manufacturer is genuinely difficult. But it’s not impossible, if you know what to look for.
This guide gives you the exact framework we use at BMT Studios to earn and keep the trust of 500+ Nigerian brand owners.
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Why finding a good manufacturer in Lagos is so hard
The Nigerian garment manufacturing sector is largely informal. Most manufacturers operate without a formal business registration, without a public-facing brand, and without any kind of accountability infrastructure. There are no industry ratings, no standardised quality certifications, and no consistent pricing benchmarks.
This means the quality gap between the best and worst manufacturers in Lagos is enormous, and because most operate without a visible digital presence, it’s hard to know what you’re getting until you’ve already paid.
The result is a market where brand owners rely almost entirely on word of mouth, where bad actors face no consequences beyond losing one client’s business, and where good manufacturers are chronically underpriced because they compete against people with none of the same standards.
The six things a reliable manufacturer must be able to show you
1. A portfolio of completed work
Any manufacturer worth briefing should be able to show you finished garments they have produced for real clients. Not sketches. Not descriptions. Actual physical or photographed finished product.
Look for: consistency in construction, clean stitching, accurate print placement, and evidence that the samples match the brief. If a manufacturer cannot show you completed work, that is not a gap in their documentation — it’s a gap in their experience.
2. A sample before a bulk order
No credible manufacturer should expect you to commit to a full production run without first producing a sample for your approval. The sample process exists to catch problems before they become expensive — sizing errors, colour mismatches, construction defects — before they are multiplied across 100 or 200 units.
If a manufacturer refuses to produce a sample, or tells you samples are not necessary, do not proceed.
3. Clear, written communication
A reliable manufacturer communicates in writing — not just verbally. Every brief, every quote, every timeline, every revision should be documented. WhatsApp is fine as the communication channel for Nigerian brand owners. What is not fine is a manufacturer who keeps everything in their head and gives you no paper trail when something goes wrong.
At BMT Studios, every production brief is confirmed in writing on WhatsApp before production begins. Every quote is itemised. Every deadline is stated explicitly.
4. A clear pricing structure
Good manufacturers know what things cost and can explain why. A quote that is significantly lower than comparable manufacturers is not good news — it usually signals corners being cut somewhere in the production process. A quote with no itemisation is a red flag.
A manufacturer who can explain each line item is a manufacturer who understands what they’re doing.
5. References from existing clients
Ask for two or three brand owners they have produced for. Contact those brands directly. Ask: Was the quality what you expected? Were deadlines met? How did they handle problems when they came up?
A manufacturer with genuine satisfied clients will be happy to provide references. A manufacturer who deflects, or tells you references are confidential, is worth being cautious about.
How to brief a manufacturer effectively
Even the best manufacturer cannot produce what you imagined if you haven’t communicated it clearly. Here is the information every brief should contain:
The garment spec:
- Exact measurements (chest, length, sleeve length) in centimetres
- Fabric: weight (GSM), composition (100% cotton, cotton-poly blend, etc.), finish (combed, ring-spun)
- Colour: Pantone reference, not just a name
- Construction details: pocket placement, hem style, collar type, cuffs
The branding spec:
- Print or embroidery artwork in vector format (AI or EPS file)
- Print placement: exact position and dimensions in centimetres
- Print type: screen print, DTF, embroidery, heat transfer
- Label spec: woven neck label, printed care label, hang tag
The order details:
- Total quantity
- Size breakdown (how many XS, S, M, L, XL, XXL)
- Colour breakdown (if ordering multiple colourways)
- Required delivery date
- Packaging specification
The more complete your brief, the faster production moves and the closer the final product is to what you imagined.
What a fair production timeline looks like in Lagos
Be suspicious of any manufacturer who promises an unrealistically fast turnaround. Quality production takes time. Here are realistic timelines for the Lagos market:
| Production type | Realistic timeline |
|---|---|
| Printed blanks (screen print or DTF) | 5–10 working days |
| Embroidered blanks | 7–14 working days |
| Cut-and-sew sample | 7–14 working days |
| Cut-and-sew bulk run (50–200 units) | 21–35 working days after sample approval |
| Cut-and-sew bulk run (200–500 units) | 35–50 working days after sample approval |
Add time for: public holidays, fabric sourcing delays, and revisions after sample review. Build these buffers into your launch planning.
Why BMT Studios was built
Every red flag in this article is something BMT Clothing Company was built to eliminate. We started because Nigerian brand owners kept coming to us after being let down — wrong sizes, missed deadlines, deposits lost, quality that looked nothing like what was approved.
We built a fixed production space in Lagos, a documented brief process, a sample-before-bulk policy, and a QC checkpoint on every single order before it leaves our facility. Not because these are exceptional standards. Because they are the minimum that brand owners deserve.
We’re not the right fit for every brief. But if quality, reliability, and clear communication matter to your brand, we’d like to earn the conversation.