Wholesale Resources
Buying Asian food by the case saves you money only when the case price divided by the number of units beats the per-unit price you'd pay buying singles at an Asian grocery store — and the way to verify it is one division you can do before you add to cart: case price ÷ units per case = your true cost per unit. This guide gives you that formula, four worked examples across the categories we actually stock, the break-even point where a case pays for itself, and an honest list of what you should and shouldn't buy a full case of.
Asia Food Depot sells one thing: the case. Every product page lists a case price and a units-per-case count (for example, a case of 24 bags, 12 bottles, or 30 packets). You are not buying a single bag at a wholesale discount — you are buying the whole sealed master case at a per-unit price that a grocery store can't match, because the store has to mark up each single unit to cover shelf space, staff, and small-quantity handling.
That means the number that matters to you is never the case price by itself. It's the per-unit cost hidden inside it. Two cases at the same case price are completely different deals if one holds twice as many units as the other — the one with more units is half the per-unit cost. Always divide before you judge.
This is also why our product pages show a 'typical retail' per-unit reference next to our per-unit price — an observed, dated single-unit price at mainstream Asian grocers, shown per unit so it's a fair, apples-to-apples comparison. The point of this guide is to teach you to run that same division yourself, on any case, so the savings claim is something you verify, not something you take on faith.
Here is the only formula you need, plus how to read the result. The numbers below are illustrative — plug in the real case price, case count, and the per-unit price you'd actually pay at your local Asian grocery to get your own answer.
Wholesale cost per unit = case price ÷ units per case. Savings per unit = typical retail unit price − wholesale cost per unit. Savings on the whole case = savings per unit × units per case. Run it across the four big categories we stock, plugging in the live case price and unit count from each product page and the single-unit price at your local store:
There are two different 'break-evens,' and confusing them is the most common bulk-buying mistake. The first is the price break-even: it's instant. The moment your wholesale cost per unit is below the retail unit price, every single unit in the case is already cheaper than buying it one at a time — there's no minimum quantity to 'unlock' the saving on a per-unit basis.
The second, the one that actually matters, is the consumption break-even: how many units you have to genuinely use before the case beats just buying singles as you need them. If a 24-bag case saves some amount per bag, the case 'pays for itself' versus retail only to the extent you eat the bags. Finish all 24 and you bank the full per-case saving. Eat 10 and let 14 expire, and your effective saving turns negative — you'd have been better off buying 10 singles.
So the honest break-even test is one question: will my household (or my customers) realistically get through this case before the best-by date? If yes, buy the case. If you're not sure, size down to a category you turn over fast, or split the case with friends or neighbors. Don't let a great per-unit price talk you into stock you won't finish.
Shipping can quietly make or break a small case order, so fold it in. We ship a flat $14.99 to the 48 contiguous states (heavier orders ≥70 lbs go freight at $29.99), orders over $99 ship free, and local pickup at our City of Industry, CA warehouse is always free.
Spread the shipping across the units to get your true delivered cost per unit: (case price + shipping) ÷ units per case. On a single small case, that flat shipping can erase much of the per-unit saving versus a grocery price. But add a second or third case to clear the $99 free-shipping line, and shipping per unit drops toward zero, restoring the full wholesale advantage. This is exactly why bundling several cases (or splitting the cost of a larger order with others) is where wholesale economics really pay off.
Everything we sell is shelf-stable and ships in sealed manufacturer packaging — there are no perishables to spoil in transit. But 'shelf-stable' isn't 'lasts forever,' and best-by windows differ enough by category that they should shape how big a case you buy.
Use this rough hierarchy when deciding how much to commit to:
If you want the strongest wholesale-versus-retail spread combined with shelf life you don't have to babysit, start here. These are the categories where the per-unit math and the storage math both point the same direction.
Run your own division on any product page before committing — but these are the reliable wins:
The cleanest way to capture the wholesale per-unit price when you can't finish a whole case yourself is to split it with people you already know — friends, family, or neighbors. One person places the order, the case ships to a single address, and everyone divides the units and settles up among themselves.
Because the case is sealed, shelf-stable goods handed over as-is, nobody is repackaging food or holding perishables — you simply hand each person their share of unopened units. Keep the arithmetic simple by picking a split that divides evenly into the case count.
The economics are the whole point: splitting a 24-unit case six ways means each person pays the wholesale per-unit price for just four units, gets the same per-unit saving as a full-case buyer, and never has to store 20 units they won't eat. A split order also clears the $99 free-shipping threshold far more easily than any one person buying singles. For households that love the per-unit math but live in a small apartment, this is the answer.
Wholesale isn't automatically the right move, and saying so is the honest version of this guide. Skip the full case — or split it — in these situations:
Usually yes, on a per-unit basis — but you have to check, not assume. Divide the case price by the number of units to get your true wholesale cost per unit, then compare that single number to the per-unit shelf price at the grocer. Our product pages show a dated 'typical retail' per-unit reference next to ours so you can see the gap, but the division is something you can verify yourself on any case in under ten seconds.
Three steps. (1) Wholesale cost per unit = case price ÷ units per case. (2) Savings per unit = typical retail unit price − your wholesale cost per unit. (3) Savings on the case = savings per unit × units per case. If you're paying for shipping, add it to the case price before step 1 to get your true delivered per-unit cost — or add cases to clear the $99 free-shipping line.
On price, there's no minimum: the moment your per-unit cost is below the retail unit price, every unit is already cheaper than buying singles. The real break-even is consumption — the case only pays off to the extent you actually use it before the best-by date. The honest test is whether your household or customers will realistically finish the case in time.
Shelf-stable, long-best-by categories are the safest full-case buys: tea, cooking sauces, and seasoning mixes store for a long time in a cool, dry cupboard. Instant noodles keep well too. Oil-fried and spicy snacks like latiao have a shorter best-by, so buy a case only if you'll move through it in a couple of months, or split it with friends or neighbors.
Split it with people you already know. One person orders, the case ships to a single address, and you divide the unopened units among friends, family, or neighbors and settle up between yourselves. Everyone pays the same low per-unit price, nobody stores units they won't eat, and a split order clears the $99 free-shipping threshold far more easily than buying singles.
It can on a single small case, so always fold it in. We charge a flat $14.99 to the contiguous US (freight $29.99 for orders ≥70 lbs), free over $99, and free for local pickup at our City of Industry, CA warehouse. Spread the shipping across the units: one small case plus shipping may match grocery prices, but bundling cases past $99 — or doing local pickup, or splitting a larger order with others — drops shipping per unit toward zero and restores the full saving.