
“Co-packing” and “contract manufacturing” get used interchangeably, and that confusion costs brand owners real money. They’re not the same service, they don’t carry the same responsibilities, and choosing the wrong one means either paying for capabilities you don’t need or discovering — too late — that your “manufacturer” doesn’t actually own the work your brand depends on.
Here’s the real difference and how to choose the one your brand actually needs.
A contract manufacturer develops and produces your product from formula to finished goods — formulation, sourcing, manufacturing, testing, often packaging. A co-packer (contract packager) focuses on the back end: filling, packaging, and labeling a product, sometimes from materials or bulk you or another maker supply. One builds the product; the other primarily packages it.
The blur happens because many full-service contract manufacturers also package — so “co-pack” gets used loosely. The distinction that matters is who owns formulation, sourcing, and testing.
| Function | Contract Manufacturer | Co-Packer |
|---|---|---|
| Formulation & R&D | Yes | Usually no |
| Ingredient sourcing | Yes | Sometimes / supplied |
| Manufacturing the product | Yes | Sometimes (fill only) |
| Testing & CoAs | Yes | Limited to their operations |
| Packaging & labeling | Often | Core function |
Here’s where brand owners get hurt: with a co-packer, who owns testing, quality, and compliance can be ambiguous. If the co-packer only fills and labels, the responsibility for what’s in the product — identity, potency, contaminants — sits with whoever made the bulk, or with you. Spread the work across several vendors and the accountability gaps multiply. A regardless of which model you choose, a quality agreement that defines who is responsible for what is essential.
For most brand owners building something they intend to own and grow, a full-service contract manufacturer is the cleaner path — one accountable partner, clear documentation, and no gaps between “who made it” and “who packaged it.”
Contract manufacturing covers the full build — formulation, sourcing, manufacturing, and testing — while co-packing focuses on filling, packaging, and labeling, sometimes from supplied materials. The key distinction is who owns formulation, sourcing, and testing.
For packaging-only needs it can be, since you’re paying for fewer services. But if you also need formulation, sourcing, and testing, splitting those across vendors can add cost and create accountability gaps that a full-service manufacturer avoids.
A contract manufacturer. Developing a custom formula you intend to own requires formulation, sourcing, and testing — capabilities a packaging-focused co-packer typically doesn’t provide.
Need one accountable partner, not a patchwork? UniWell Labs is a full-service contract manufacturer — formulation, sourcing, testing, and packaging under one roof. Talk to our team about your product.