Johannesburg, Gauteng

Printing & Packaging Suppliers in Johannesburg

Manufacturing suppliers in Johannesburg should produce SANAS-accredited quality-system certificates — not self-claimed ones. ISO 9001:2015 is the baseline; HACCP and R638 for food production; IATF 16949 for automotive; SAHPRA registration for medical devices; SABS Letters of Authority for regulated electrical products. The dti's designated-sectors list mandates minimum local content for state procurement (e.g. 100% bus bodies, 70% textiles, 60% steel pylons). Compare by: MOQ structure (tooling amortisation vs per-unit), lead-time guarantees (Nov–Jan stretches 30–50% across SA factories), B-BBEE level, and a sample inspection report from an existing customer. CIPC registration + active VAT vendor status are baseline filters.

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Frequently asked questions about printing & packaging in Johannesburg

What lead time should I expect for custom SA manufacturing?

Steel fabrication (cut-list & welded assemblies): 2–4 weeks. Injection-moulded plastics (tooling included): 8–16 weeks for tooling + 1–2 weeks per production run. Apparel cut-make-trim: 4–8 weeks for runs under 1,000 units. Lead times stretch 30–50% in November–January due to factory shutdowns and SARS import delays.

How do I verify a SA manufacturer's quality system?

Ask for ISO 9001:2015 certification (SANAS-accredited body — not a self-claim). For food: HACCP and R638. For automotive supply: IATF 16949. For medical: SAHPRA registration. Sectoral standards (SABS letters of authority for electrical, SANS for construction) are sometimes mandatory. Demand sample inspection reports before the first PO.

What is the minimum order quantity (MOQ) for SA manufacturers?

MOQs depend on tooling and material costs. CNC parts: no MOQ (one-off pricing is just more expensive). Injection moulding: typically 1,000–5,000 units to amortise tooling. Apparel: 200–500 units per style/colour. Imports through SA factories use the Chinese MOQ (usually 1,000+) but with shorter LT than direct import.

Are local content requirements material for government supply?

Yes — under the Preferential Procurement Regulations 2022 and DTIC designated sectors, public-sector procurement demands minimum local content (e.g., 100% bus bodies, 70% textiles, 60% steel pylons). The dti's Verification Agency audits compliance. Misrepresentation is a Tax Administration Act offence and disqualifies you from future tenders for 10 years.

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