Manufacturer directory

Best private label menstrual products manufacturers

Shortlist private label menstrual products suppliers on Wonnda. Sourcing for these products involves diverse manufacturing processes, from high-speed converting lines for absorbent disposables like pads and tampons, to injection molding for medical-grade silicone menstrual cups, and specialized textile production for period underwear. Key considerations include material selection, such as organic cotton or medical-grade silicone, and adherence to relevant device compliance standards for products that come into contact with skin. Lead times can vary significantly depending on the product type and the complexity of its manufacturing. Certifications like GOTS or OEKO-TEX may also be important for certain material compositions.

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Menstrual Products
SUPPLIER SHORTLIST FOR THIS CATEGORY

4+ Top private label menstrual products manufacturers

Wonnda works with the best private label menstrual products manufacturers. Here is a list of trusted suppliers from our network.

  1. Featured
    Casco Bay Molding logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Europe-based manufacturer producing sterilization trays, instrument handles, sleep apnea cpap components, available to brands sourcing menstrual products.

    Country
    -
    MOQ
    Lead time
  2. Featured
    Put A Cup In It logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Europe-based manufacturer producing reusable menstrual cups, menstrual discs, pacii-branded merchandise pins, available to brands sourcing menstrual products.

    Country
    -
    MOQ
    Lead time
  3. Featured
    Sucesores De Géneros De Punto Francés SL logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Spain-based manufacturer producing knitted fabrics, hosiery (socks), underwear, available to brands sourcing menstrual products.

    Country
    Spain
    MOQ
    Lead time
  4. Papilion logo
    Private LabelContract Manufacturing

    Europe-based manufacturer producing tissue paper, wet wipes, cosmetics, available to brands sourcing menstrual products.

    Country
    -
    MOQ
    Lead time

Compare MOQs and lead times

Quick side-by-side of the shortlist. Missing values shown as a dash.

SupplierLocationTypesMOQLead time
Casco Bay Molding-PL · CM
Put A Cup In It-PL · CM
Sucesores De Géneros De Punto Francés SLSpainPL · CM
Papilion-PL · CM
What good looks like

Buyer criteria

  • Material safety and certification

    Because these products contact sensitive and often internal tissue, confirm the materials are safe, pure, and certified where claimed, organic cotton certification for organic claims, medical-grade and biocompatible silicone for cups. Ask for material documentation and test evidence. Material safety is the threshold requirement given the intimate use, so unverified or uncertified materials are not acceptable in this category.

  • Regulatory status and device compliance

    Many menstrual products are regulated as medical devices in major markets, so confirm the regulatory classification of your product and that the maker can meet the registration, testing, and documentation it requires. Ask how they handle device compliance. Treating a medical-device-classified product as ordinary consumer goods is a serious compliance gap that can block the product from sale, so this must be clarified early.

  • Absorbency performance backed by testing

    Absorbency is the functional promise, so confirm the product meets its claimed absorbency level with testing rather than an asserted rating, and that tampon absorbency labeling is accurate given its safety relevance. Ask for absorbency test data. A product that underperforms its absorbency claim leaks and fails the user, so tested, accurate absorbency is a core qualification, especially for tampons where it ties to safety.

  • Durability for reusable products

    For menstrual cups and period underwear, confirm the product withstands repeated use, washing, and the stated lifespan without degrading, since reusability is the whole value proposition. Ask for durability testing over use cycles. A cup that degrades or underwear that loses absorbency after a few washes fails the sustainability promise customers paid a premium for, so longevity must be demonstrated.

  • Sustainability substantiation

    If you claim organic, plastic-free, or reusable, confirm the materials and design genuinely support those claims with certification and documentation, since the category's growth is driven by sustainability and the audience scrutinizes it. Ask for the certificates behind each claim. An unsubstantiated organic or plastic-free claim in a category defined by conscious consumers is both a compliance and a trust risk.

Avoid these

Red flags

  • Medical-device product treated as ordinary goods

    If the product is regulated as a medical device in your market but the maker treats it as a generic consumer item without the required testing, registration, and documentation, the compliance gap can block sale and expose the brand to liability. A maker unaware of or dismissive of device classification for an intimate, often internal product is a serious risk, so device-status clarity is essential.

  • No material safety or purity evidence

    Given that these products contact sensitive and internal tissue, a maker that cannot provide material safety, purity, and biocompatibility evidence is not controlling the most safety-critical aspect of the product. Unverified materials in intimate-contact products are unacceptable. Treat an inability to document material safety as disqualifying, regardless of price or appearance, since the intimate use raises the stakes far above ordinary goods.

  • Absorbency claimed without testing

    An absorbency rating asserted without test data is unreliable, and for tampons inaccurate absorbency labeling carries safety relevance because it relates to usage guidance and the toxic shock concern. A maker that cannot substantiate absorbency with testing is shipping a performance and, for tampons, a safety claim it cannot back. Demand absorbency test evidence rather than accepting a stated rating.

  • Reusable claim with no durability data

    A menstrual cup or period underwear sold as reusable for a stated lifespan but with no durability testing over wash and use cycles may degrade quickly, failing the sustainability promise that justified its premium. A maker that cannot show the product survives repeated use is risking a reusable product that does not last, which both disappoints customers and undermines the environmental claim that sold it.

How it's made

Manufacturing process

  1. 01

    Product type and material selection

    The maker confirms the product, pad, tampon, menstrual cup, or period underwear, since each runs on a different line, and selects materials: absorbent fibers and cores for disposables, medical-grade silicone for cups, technical textiles for underwear. Organic cotton or certified materials are chosen here for a sustainability claim, since material is central to positioning and cost.

  2. 02

    Absorbency and design engineering

    The absorbent system and design are engineered to the target absorbency level and fit: core construction and wings for pads, absorbency and applicator for tampons, capacity and shape for cups, layered absorbent fabric zones for underwear. Absorbency performance is the functional core, so it is designed and later tested against the claimed capacity.

  3. 03

    Manufacturing on the appropriate line

    Disposables are produced on high-speed converting lines that form, layer, and cut the absorbent product; cups are injection molded from medical-grade silicone and cured; period underwear is cut and sewn with bonded absorbent layers. Each process is specialized and industrial, which is why menstrual products carry high MOQs and need a maker dedicated to that specific type.

  4. 04

    Material safety and purity control

    Because these products contact sensitive and often internal tissue, materials are controlled for purity and safety, with testing for harmful substances and, for tampons, attention to absorbency and the toxic shock concern. Medical-grade silicone for cups is verified for biocompatibility. Material purity is a safety-critical step given the intimate use, not a routine quality check.

  5. 05

    Performance, safety and regulatory testing

    Products undergo absorbency testing against the claimed level, skin and tissue safety assessment, and for medical-device-classified products the testing and documentation required for registration in the target market. Reusable cups and underwear are tested for durability over repeated use. Testing substantiates both the safety and the performance claims before launch.

  6. 06

    Packaging, labeling and compliance

    Products are packaged hygienically with usage and safety information, including warnings such as toxic shock guidance for tampons, and labeled per the applicable regulation, which may be medical-device rules rather than cosmetics. Lot traceability and any required registration are completed. Hygienic, informative packaging and correct regulatory labeling are finalized before release.

Deep dive

Understanding menstrual products private-label manufacturing

Menstrual products span several quite different items unified by a single intimate use, and the first thing a brand has to settle is which it is making, because a tampon, a pad, a menstrual cup, and period underwear are made by entirely separate manufacturers using unrelated processes. Tampons and pads are absorbent disposables made from fibers and absorbent cores on high-speed converting lines. Menstrual cups are medical-grade silicone formed by injection molding. Period underwear is a textile garment with engineered absorbent layers, made in apparel and technical-textile factories. There is no single supplier for a full menstrual range, so scoping the product precisely is the foundational sourcing step. What distinguishes this category from ordinary personal care is that these products contact the most sensitive area of the body, often internally, which raises safety, material purity, and regulatory stakes well above a typical cosmetic. Many menstrual products are regulated as medical devices in major markets, and material safety, absorbency claims, and for tampons the well-known toxic shock concern all demand rigorous control and testing. The sustainability shift is also reshaping the category: organic cotton tampons and pads, plastic-free applicators, reusable cups, and reusable period underwear have grown strongly as consumers react against conventional disposables, so the material and reusability story is central to positioning. Manufacturing reflects the split. Disposable pads and tampons are made by specialist hygiene converters, with strong production in Germany, Italy, Eastern Europe, and Asia; menstrual cups by medical-grade silicone molders, with capability in Europe and Asia; period underwear by technical-textile and apparel makers, with Asia and parts of Europe significant. MOQs are typically high because these run on industrial lines: disposables often start in the tens of thousands of units, cups and underwear lower but still substantial. Lead times run 10 to 20 weeks, longer where medical-device registration applies. Cost is driven by the materials and absorbent system first (organic and certified materials cost more), then the manufacturing and any applicator or design, then packaging and regulatory work. Private label menstrual product buyers are femcare D2C and subscription brands, sustainable and organic period brands, retailer and drugstore own-label hygiene ranges, and increasingly inclusive and wellness-positioned brands. The category has been energized by sustainability and by brands willing to talk openly about periods. Qualify a partner on material safety and certification, on regulatory status and medical-device compliance where it applies, and on absorbency performance backed by testing, because a menstrual product that leaks, irritates sensitive tissue, or cannot substantiate its safety and absorbency fails on the most intimate and trust-dependent use there is.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Why can't one manufacturer make a full menstrual product range?+
Because the products in the category are made by entirely different processes in unrelated factories. Disposable pads and tampons are absorbent hygiene products formed from fibers and absorbent cores on high-speed converting lines run by specialist hygiene converters. Menstrual cups are medical-grade silicone parts made by injection molding in silicone-molding facilities. Period underwear is a textile garment with engineered absorbent layers, cut and sewn in apparel and technical-textile factories. These manufacturing worlds share almost nothing, so there is no single supplier that credibly makes all of them. A brand building a multi-product menstrual range therefore sources each item from a different specialist manufacturer. The practical implication is to scope your range precisely and accept that, for example, a tampon line and a cup and period underwear will come from three separate partners, each qualified for that specific product, rather than expecting one factory to cover the category.
Are menstrual products regulated as medical devices?+
In many major markets, yes, several menstrual products are regulated as medical devices rather than as ordinary consumer goods, because they contact sensitive and often internal tissue and their safety and performance carry real health implications. Tampons and menstrual cups in particular commonly fall under medical-device regulation, which brings requirements for material safety and biocompatibility testing, performance substantiation, documentation, and registration before the product can be sold. The exact classification depends on the product and the market, so it must be checked for your specific case. This matters enormously at the sourcing stage, because a maker who treats a device-classified product as a generic consumer item, skipping the required testing and registration, creates a compliance gap that can block the product from market and expose the brand to liability.
What is the significance of toxic shock syndrome for tampon sourcing?+
Toxic shock syndrome, or TSS, is a rare but serious condition historically associated with tampon use, particularly with higher-absorbency tampons left in too long, and it is the reason tampon safety, absorbency labeling, and usage guidance are treated so seriously in this category. For sourcing, the significance is threefold. First, material safety and purity are critical, since the tampon contacts internal tissue. Second, absorbency labeling must be accurate, because absorbency relates directly to the usage guidance that helps reduce risk, so an overstated or untested absorbency rating is not just a performance issue but a safety one. Third, packaging must carry the appropriate safety information and warnings. A credible tampon manufacturer controls materials rigorously, tests and labels absorbency accurately, and includes the required safety guidance.
What should I look for in a menstrual cup manufacturer?+
A menstrual cup is a reusable medical-grade silicone product worn internally, so the key sourcing criteria center on material and durability. First, confirm the silicone is genuinely medical-grade and biocompatible, with documentation, since the cup contacts internal tissue for extended periods and must be safe and inert. Second, because the cup is usually a medical device, confirm the maker can meet the device testing, documentation, and registration required in your market. Third, since the entire value proposition is reusability over years, confirm the cup withstands repeated use, cleaning, and sterilization without degrading, ideally with durability testing over use cycles. Fourth, the molding quality matters for comfort and seal, so the shape, rim, and finish must be well made.
What MOQ and lead time should I expect for private label menstrual products?+
MOQs in this category are generally high because the products run on industrial lines. Disposable pads and tampons, made on high-speed converting lines, often start in the tens of thousands of units, while menstrual cups and period underwear typically have lower but still substantial minimums. Lead times run roughly 10 to 20 weeks and can extend significantly where medical-device registration applies, since the testing and documentation for a device add time before launch. Cost is driven by the materials and absorbent system first, with organic and certified materials and medical-grade silicone costing more, then the manufacturing and any applicator or garment design, then packaging and the regulatory work. Because each product type comes from a different specialist with its own minimums, plan each separately.
How do I substantiate organic, plastic-free, or reusable sustainability claims?+
Sustainability is the main growth driver in this category, and its audience is conscious and scrutinizing, so each claim must be genuinely backed. For an organic claim, the cotton or other materials need recognized organic certification, with documentation traceable through the supply chain. For a plastic-free claim, the product and applicator design must actually avoid plastic, for example a cardboard applicator or applicator-free tampon, verified in the bill of materials. For a reusable claim on a cup or period underwear, the product must withstand its stated lifespan of repeated use and washing without degrading, which should be supported by durability testing over use cycles. The common thread is that the claim has to be documented, not just asserted, both for compliance and to withstand an informed audience that checks.
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