The quality a brand wants comes from a mature cluster — concentrated machinery, yarn on the doorstep, decades of European export. An honest case, including where we don't win.
When a Nigerian brand decides to source knitwear abroad, the first instinct is China — and for huge-volume commodity basics, that instinct is often right. But for elevated knit, dependable quality and a real working relationship, a growing number of brands look to Gaziantep, the heart of Turkey's knitwear industry. This is the honest case for why — and, just as importantly, where Gaziantep is not the answer.
Gaziantep is not a single factory — it is a dense flat-knit cluster, an ecosystem where machines, yarn, skills and finishing all sit close together. That concentration is the real product:
A high density of modern Shima Seiki WHOLEGARMENT and Stoll CMS flat-knit machines across the cluster. That means seamless and fully-fashioned capability is normal here, not exotic — and capacity exists when you scale.
Spinners, yarn agents and dyers are local. Sourcing the right cotton, wool, cashmere or blend — and matching a colour — happens fast because the supply chain is next door, not an import away.
Flat-knit is a craft. Programmers, linkers and finishers in Gaziantep have spent careers on these machines. That skill base is what turns a tech pack into a garment that actually fits and lasts.
Knitting, linking, washing, finishing, pressing, labelling and packing — all available within the cluster. Fewer hand-offs between separate vendors means fewer things go wrong.
Turkish knitwear has supplied European brands for over twenty years. European retail is unforgiving on quality, consistency, measurements and delivery — and the factories that survived that scrutiny learned to meet it. Our own factory was founded in 2010 and runs around 22 flat-knit machines (Shima Seiki WHOLEGARMENT and Stoll CMS) in Gaziantep. For a Nigerian brand, the practical benefit is inheriting standards that were forged for picky European buyers — without paying European prices.
No sourcing region wins on everything. Here is where the main options genuinely stand for a Nigerian brand:
| Origin | Strength | The honest catch |
|---|---|---|
| China | Unbeatable on huge-volume commodity price & scale | For elevated knit and smaller, detail-driven runs the quality/communication fit is weaker. Same ECOWAS duty into Nigeria as Turkey. |
| Portugal | Excellent quality, EU-made cachet | Typically higher cost and higher minimums than Gaziantep for comparable knit. |
| Bangladesh | Very competitive on large basic programmes | Strength is volume garments; less suited to short-run, premium flat-knit and seamless. |
| Gaziantep (Turkey) | Quality flat-knit, sensible MOQ (250), English, China+1 reliability | Not the cheapest for commodity volume, and — being honest — no customs advantage over China into Nigeria. |
We will not sell you a story that does not survive contact with a customs agent. There is no Turkey–Nigeria free trade agreement. Turkish knitwear enters under the ECOWAS Common External Tariff — a high band for apparel (commonly around 20%, with some textile lines as high as 35%), plus import VAT. Goods from China face the same CET. So on duty, Gaziantep gives you no advantage over China. Anyone claiming otherwise is guessing or selling.
What Gaziantep does give a Nigerian brand is everything that is not the tariff line:
Mature WHOLEGARMENT and fully-fashioned capability, finished to standards built for European retail.
A genuine Nigeria advantage. Your tech pack and comments land exactly as written — no translation layer, fewer costly misreads.
A credible second source that de-risks an all-China supply chain, at sensible minimums (MOQ 250) and shorter ~10–14 day sea transit than the Far East.
Nigerian shoppers already know and trust Turkish apparel quality — a label-level advantage that helps the product sell.
Nigeria has a real textile story of its own — the Kaduna heritage among it. We are not here to compete with that. We complement it: bringing modern flat-knit and seamless capability that sits alongside local strengths, so a Nigerian brand can build a complete range. Nigeria is Africa's largest market — around 220 million people, a young population and fast-growing demand for apparel — and brands serving it deserve a knit source that is honest about both its strengths and its limits.
Tell us what you make and where you want to take it. We'll be straight about whether we're the right factory for your styles — quality, MOQ, timeline and the real landed cost — with no fake tariff claims.