What Is Kitting & Assembly Services and When Should Your Brand Use Them?
Kitting and assembly help eCommerce brands bundle products efficiently, speed up fulfillment, and reduce labor costs—here’s when it makes sense to outsource.
Kitting and assembly help eCommerce brands bundle products efficiently, speed up fulfillment, and reduce labor costs—here’s when it makes sense to outsource.
As eCommerce brands grow, many expand beyond single-item orders and start offering bundles, subscription boxes, gift sets, or multi-SKU promotions. That’s great for increasing average order value—but it also creates operational complexity.
Instead of shipping one SKU per order, your warehouse team now has to pick multiple items, combine them correctly, package them consistently, and ensure everything is accurate.
That’s where kitting and assembly services come in.
In this guide, we’ll explain what kitting and assembly is, how it works, and when your brand should use it to save time, cut costs, and scale fulfillment.
Kitting is the process of combining multiple individual products into one packaged unit (a “kit”) that can be stored, tracked, and shipped as a single item.
Assembly services involve putting products or packaging components together—often as part of a kit or bundle.
These services are commonly used for:
product bundles
subscription boxes
promotional kits
influencer mailers
gift sets
multi-pack products
onboarding kits or welcome kits
In short: kitting and assembly turn multiple items into one organized, shippable unit.
While the terms are often used together, there’s a difference.
Bundles multiple SKUs into one kit SKU
Often stored as a finished kit
Shipped as a single unit
Involves building, inserting, or packaging components
Can include labeling, folding, stuffing, or combining packaging materials
Often used for branded presentation
Many brands use both at the same time.
Kitting can dramatically improve efficiency—especially when your brand ships bundles frequently.
speed up picking and packing
reduce fulfillment errors
standardize packaging and presentation
improve unboxing experience
reduce labor per order
simplify inventory tracking for bundles
When kits are prepared in advance, fulfillment becomes faster and more accurate.
Here’s how the process typically works with a fulfillment partner or warehouse team.
First, the kit is defined by:
included SKUs
quantities of each item
packaging requirements
inserts or marketing materials
labeling rules (if needed)
A kit must be documented clearly to ensure consistency.
Inventory is pulled from existing stock and allocated to kit production.
This ensures:
the correct SKUs are used
kits don’t accidentally consume inventory needed for individual orders
stock levels remain accurate
The warehouse team assembles the kit by:
picking all required components
assembling items into packaging
adding inserts, cards, or promotional materials
sealing and preparing kits for storage or shipment
Most kits are assigned a unique kit SKU so they can be:
stored as a finished product
tracked accurately in inventory
picked quickly like a normal item
This is especially important for multi-channel selling and inventory sync.
Once kits are completed, they’re either:
stored as finished kits and shipped when orders come in, or
assembled on demand (as orders are placed)
Pre-kitting is usually faster, while on-demand kitting can reduce unused kit inventory.
Kitting is used across many industries. Some of the most common examples include:
Example:
shampoo + conditioner + hair mask
skincare set
electronics accessories bundle
Bundles increase average order value and simplify promotions.
Subscription boxes require consistent, repeatable assembly at scale.
Common needs include:
high-volume packing
consistent inserts
branded packaging
strict accuracy standards
Brands often run short-term campaigns like:
holiday gift sets
product launch bundles
buy-one-get-one kits
influencer marketing packages
Kitting makes these promotions easier to fulfill quickly.
PR kits often require:
custom packaging
inserts
careful assembly
premium presentation
A kitting partner ensures mailers look professional and consistent.
Kitting becomes valuable when fulfillment complexity starts slowing down operations or increasing errors.
Your brand may benefit from kitting if:
bundles make up a large percentage of orders
your team spends too much time assembling kits manually
fulfillment errors are increasing
packing takes too long per order
you want a consistent branded unboxing experience
you’re launching a subscription program
you’re running frequent promotions
If kits are slowing down shipping, it’s time to systemize the process.
Many brands start by assembling kits in-house, but it quickly becomes time-consuming.
reduce labor and staffing pressure
speed up order processing
improve kit consistency
lower fulfillment error rates
scale during peak seasons
support large promotions without delays
Kitting and assembly are highly operational—outsourcing often improves both speed and accuracy.
Kitting is powerful, but it must be managed correctly.
inaccurate kit documentation
inventory not allocated correctly
kit SKUs not tracked properly
inconsistent packaging or inserts
too much pre-kitted inventory that doesn’t sell
document kits clearly
track kits with unique SKUs
forecast kit demand before pre-kitting too much
work with a team experienced in kitting workflows
Kitting and assembly services help eCommerce brands streamline bundle fulfillment, reduce labor, improve accuracy, and create a better customer experience.
If your brand ships bundles, subscription boxes, or promotional kits regularly, kitting is one of the smartest operational upgrades you can make—especially when growth demands faster shipping and fewer mistakes.
You’ve seen how we work. If you’re ready to clean up fulfillment and returns — we’re ready when you are.