The single most common question we get from Singapore marketing and HR teams scoping a USB Mouse Customized campaign is some variant of “what does 300 mice actually cost?” This article answers that question with the real 2026 price bands we quote every week, broken down by body type, print method, packaging, and quantity tier — so a procurement team can build a defensible budget line before the first sample lands on the desk.
TL;DR: Expect S$5.80–S$7.50 per piece for a wired UV-printed mouse at 300 MOQ, S$9.50–S$11.50 for a wireless 2.4 GHz mouse, and S$12–S$14 for a rechargeable Bluetooth mouse with laser-etched branding and a simple gift box. Prices fall 12–20% at 1,000 pieces and another 8–15% at 2,000+ pieces. Everything below breaks those bands down line by line.
The 300-piece baseline: what goes into the unit price
At the 300-piece Aquaholic MOQ, the landed per-piece price of a customised mouse is the sum of five ingredients: the blank mouse unit cost, the print or etch setup and run cost, packaging (polybag minimum up to custom gift box maximum), local handling and delivery, and a small buffer for artwork proofing and sampling. Each of those line items moves independently depending on the specification.
Wired USB mouse — line item breakdown
- Blank wired USB optical mouse (ABS, 1,200 DPI, matte top): S$3.20–S$4.00
- Full-colour UV print on top shell (one-time setup amortised): S$1.40–S$1.80
- Clear polybag + printed insert card: S$0.30–S$0.50
- Local handling, QC, delivery within Singapore: S$0.70–S$0.90
- Artwork proofing + sample buffer (amortised): S$0.20–S$0.30
- Landed total at 300 pcs: S$5.80–S$7.50
Wireless 2.4 GHz mouse — line item breakdown
- Blank wireless 2.4 GHz mouse with nano USB receiver + AAA battery: S$6.80–S$8.20
- Full-colour UV print on top shell: S$1.40–S$1.80
- Polybag + printed insert card (kit-ready): S$0.40–S$0.70
- Local handling, QC, split delivery: S$0.70–S$0.90
- Artwork + sample buffer: S$0.20–S$0.30
- Landed total at 300 pcs: S$9.50–S$11.50
Rechargeable Bluetooth mouse — line item breakdown
- Rechargeable Bluetooth mouse (dual-mode 5.0, USB-C charge, silent click): S$8.50–S$10.20
- Laser etch of logo on top shell: S$0.90–S$1.30
- Kraft or white magnetic-close gift box with foam insert: S$1.80–S$2.50
- Local handling, QC, premium delivery: S$0.70–S$0.90
- Artwork + sample buffer: S$0.20–S$0.30
- Landed total at 300 pcs: S$12.00–S$14.00
Quantity tier pricing — how unit cost moves with volume
Per-piece cost drops predictably as quantity climbs, driven mostly by print setup amortisation and blank-unit volume discounts at the factory. The table below shows indicative landed prices for the three main mouse categories at four standard quantity tiers Singapore teams order in.
The sharpest drop happens between 300 and 1,000 pieces — that is where print setup becomes a smaller slice of the per-unit cost and the blank-unit factory break hits. Above 2,000 pieces, per-piece reductions flatten out and further savings come mostly from packaging trade-offs rather than unit price.
Where budgets leak — the five most common pricing mistakes
Over the last two years we have quoted hundreds of Singapore Custom Mice runs, and five mistakes show up repeatedly in RFQs that end up over budget. Each one is avoidable if caught before artwork approval.
- Under-estimating packaging on premium runs. A S$12 Bluetooth mouse in a clear polybag looks cheaper than a S$7 wired mouse in a branded kraft sleeve. For executive gifts, packaging is 15–20% of the landed cost and cannot be cut.
- Multiple artworks at MOQ. Every different logo or language variant counts as a separate job with its own 300-piece minimum. Teams often try to “split” 300 pieces across two brands and end up paying for 600.
- Rush fees for missed lead time. Expedited production on a wired USB run is possible but adds S$1.20–S$2.00 per piece. For Bluetooth runs with laser etch, rush is often impossible at all.
- Multiple delivery drops. Each additional Singapore drop point costs S$60–S$120. On a 300-piece run split across 10 offices, that is S$600–S$1,200 of extra cost most teams do not factor in.
- Skipping the pre-production sample. On any run above S$4,000 total, the S$60 sample fee is insurance against a S$4,000 rework bill.
Building the budget line
A Singapore procurement team building a budget for a Q4 client-gift mouse run should think in terms of three budget lines, not one: the per-piece landed cost (mouse + print + packaging), a fixed sampling and proofing allowance (S$80–S$160 per artwork), and a delivery allowance based on the number of drop points. For a 300-piece Bluetooth run to a single office, that is roughly S$3,600 + S$120 + S$90 = S$3,810 total. For the same 300 pieces split across five regional offices, it climbs to roughly S$3,600 + S$120 + S$450 = S$4,170. The cost jumps look obvious on paper but they are routinely missed in first-draft budgets.
Budget tip: When you present the line to finance, frame it as cost per impression rather than cost per piece. A S$12 Bluetooth mouse on a desk for 24 months generates roughly 800 brand impressions — that is under S$0.02 per impression, dramatically cheaper than any digital ad placement on the same audience.
What falls outside the standard bands
Four specification upgrades push cost outside the standard bands. An aluminium-body Bluetooth mouse with brushed finish runs S$16–S$22 per piece at 300 MOQ. A fully custom-moulded body (bespoke shape matching a brand’s product design) requires a one-time tooling fee of S$3,500–S$6,500 plus a higher per-unit cost and only makes sense on runs of 1,500+. A dual-mode Bluetooth + 2.4 GHz mouse with multi-device pairing buttons adds S$2–S$3 per piece. Full-colour printing plus laser etch in combination (premium layered branding) adds S$1.50 per piece over either method alone.
For the full current 2026 USB Mouse Customized pricing on every body type and print method we stock, see the Custom USB mouse gallery — each listing carries the 300-piece MOQ price and the tier breaks up to 2,000 pieces.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a lower MOQ than 300 pieces for special cases?
300 pieces per artwork is the standard Aquaholic MOQ and we rarely go lower on mice — the print and handling setup costs become uneconomic below that. We can sometimes accommodate 200 pieces on a wired model as a one-off for existing clients, but the per-piece price rises 20–30%.
Do quoted prices include GST?
All per-piece landed prices in this guide are pre-GST. Add 9% GST (2026 Singapore rate) to the totals for the final invoice figure.
How is payment structured on a large mouse run?
Standard terms are 50% on artwork approval, 50% on delivery for runs under S$10,000. For runs above S$10,000, a 30/30/40 split (artwork / production start / delivery) is available on request.
Can you match a competitor’s quote?
We benchmark against any comparable Singapore-based quote on the same specification. Quotes from overseas suppliers on cheaper blank units are a different product — we do not match them and we do not recommend them for corporate-grade branding work.
What is the cost to expedite a Q4 order?
Expedited production adds S$1.20–S$2.00 per piece for wired runs, and is usually not possible for laser-etched Bluetooth runs at all. The safer route is to lock artwork 5–6 weeks before the delivery date.
Need a hard number on your specific spec?
Tell us the quantity, body type, print method, and delivery points — we will send back a landed-cost quote within one working day, inclusive of packaging and all drop fees. Start by browsing the Custom USB mouse gallery to pick a starting model.







