There's a fulfillment decision that most apparel brands make without fully recognizing it as a decision: how their garments are stored and shipped. For many styles, the choice between garment-on-hanger (GOH) and folded fulfillment isn't arbitrary — it has direct consequences for picking accuracy, retail compliance, shipping cost, and the condition in which products arrive at their destination.
At the DTC level, folded fulfillment is often fine. A T-shirt in a poly bag, properly folded, ships efficiently and arrives in acceptable condition. But as brands scale into wholesale, retail, and department store distribution — channels where floor-ready merchandise standards apply — the handling requirements change significantly. And a 3PL that treats all garments the same way, regardless of how they'll ultimately be sold, is a 3PL creating compliance and quality problems that show up as chargebacks and returns.
GOH fulfillment means garments are received, stored, picked, and shipped while hanging on hangers — maintaining their shape, preventing wrinkles, and arriving ready for the retail floor without additional steaming or pressing.
This is not simply a storage preference. For many garment categories — blazers, dresses, formal shirts, outerwear, suits — GOH is the only handling method that preserves garment quality at scale. A blazer stored flat in a poly bag for several weeks will arrive with fold creases that require steaming before it can be displayed. In a wholesale or retail environment where time-to-floor matters, that's a handling cost and a delay. In a boutique or department store that expects floor-ready merchandise, it may be a routing guide violation.
GOH storage requires specialized infrastructure that generic warehouses don't have: rolling racks and fixed garment rails with adequate spacing to prevent compression, zone layouts that separate GOH inventory from flat-packed goods, and pick processes designed for hanging garments rather than bin-pick operations. GOH receiving costs $0.35 to $0.85 per unit compared to $0.15 to $0.40 for flat-pack, reflecting the additional infrastructure and handling requirements.
For most casual apparel categories — T-shirts, jeans, knitwear, activewear, socks, underwear — folded and poly-bagged fulfillment is appropriate for both DTC and wholesale channels, provided the folding and bagging is done correctly.
"Correctly" matters more than most brands realize. In folded fulfillment, garments that are incorrectly folded create creases that trigger returns from quality-conscious DTC customers or compliance failures in wholesale. Size labels need to be visible without opening the poly bag for efficient picking. Color and style differentiation between visually similar items needs to be legible at picking speed.
For folded inventory, an apparel-optimized 3PL uses bin-level storage organized by style, then size, then color — rather than generic shelving where pickers have to physically inspect each item to find the correct variant. This organizational discipline is what sustains picking accuracy above 99.5% in high-SKU environments.
For omnichannel apparel brands, the realistic answer is almost never "only GOH" or "only folded." Most brands have product mixes that include both garment categories, and their channel mix requires both handling approaches.
A dress that ships GOH to a department store may ship folded to a DTC customer. Outerwear distributed to wholesale needs GOH; the same style sold on the DTC channel ships more efficiently poly-bagged. Factories often ship goods already on hangers — over half of imported apparel typically arrives GOH — because de-hangering and re-hangering adds cost and handling touches. If the same units need to serve both retail (GOH) and DTC (folded) channels, the 3PL needs the infrastructure and workflow to convert between them.
This conversion capability is where many generic 3PLs fail. De-hanging and re-hanging garments is labor-intensive. Without dedicated workflows and trained staff, it introduces handling damage, size mismatches (when hangers get separated from garments during processing), and throughput bottlenecks. For brands managing high volume across multiple channels, a 3PL without robust GOH-to-folded conversion capability creates a structural bottleneck at exactly the point where channel flexibility matters most.
For wholesale and retail distribution, GOH is often not a choice — it's a routing guide requirement. Major retailers specify exactly how garments should arrive: on what type of hanger, with what price ticket placement, with what garment bag or cover, and with what labeling on the hanger itself. Deviation from these specifications generates chargebacks.
For brands expanding into Nordstrom, Macy's, Sephora, Ulta, or major department store chains, the floor-ready merchandise standards include GOH requirements for specific product categories. A fulfillment partner that treats all retail prep as a one-size workflow — regardless of which retailer is receiving the shipment and what their specific routing guide requires — will generate chargebacks that erode the wholesale margin.
The operational discipline required to execute retail-compliant GOH fulfillment at scale includes: routing guide databases maintained by retailer and updated as requirements change, hanger type verification by retailer (some retailers specify exact hanger styles), label placement QA for each retailer's specifications, and EDI transaction sets that accurately reflect the shipment configuration.
When evaluating a 3PL's apparel fulfillment capabilities, GOH handling is one of the most useful capability tests. It requires specialized infrastructure, trained staff, apparel-specific workflows, and retail compliance expertise that generic fulfillment operations simply don't have.
Ask any prospective 3PL partner the following:
What is your GOH storage capacity, and is it separate from flat-pack inventory zones? How do you handle de-hangering and re-hangering for brands with mixed channel requirements? What is your per-unit cost for GOH receiving versus flat-pack? Can you show me photos of your GOH storage infrastructure? Which major retailer routing guides do you have documented and operational? What is your process for updating routing guide compliance when retailer requirements change?
A 3PL that can answer all of these questions specifically, with documentation and evidence, has the infrastructure to handle apparel at the level enterprise brands require. One that answers vaguely, references future plans, or can't show you the physical infrastructure — hasn't built it yet.
Cart.com's fulfillment facilities include dedicated GOH infrastructure across our 17-facility nationwide network — rolling racks, garment rails, and zone configurations built specifically for hanging inventory. Our value-added services team handles garment preparation for retail distribution, including re-ticketing, hanger changes, garment bagging, and retailer-specific compliance prep.
Our Constellation WMS manages GOH and folded inventory as distinct product types with separate location logic, pick strategies, and quality checkpoints — so brands with mixed catalogs can manage both from a unified inventory pool without the handling errors that occur when generic systems try to apply the same workflow to both.
For brands like Draper James and Janie and Jack, where retail presentation standards are central to the brand's market position, our GOH and retail prep capabilities are part of how we maintain the operational discipline their retail partners expect.
Contact our team to discuss your specific GOH requirements and what a fulfillment setup built for your channel mix looks like.