A Beginner's Guide to Dropshipping Basics
Dropshipping basics start with one core idea: you sell a product online without ever holding inventory yourself, and a supplier ships it directly to your customer when an order comes in. It's one of the lowest-cost ways to start an online store, which is exactly why it's also one of the most oversaturated and misunderstood side hustles out there. This guide covers how the model actually works, what it costs, and the realistic numbers most "get rich quick" content leaves out.
Dropshipping Basics: What the Model Actually Is
In a traditional retail business, you buy inventory upfront, store it, and hope it sells. In dropshipping, you list a product in your own online store, and only when a customer buys it do you purchase that single unit from a supplier — who ships it straight to the customer under your store's branding. You never touch the product. Your job is the storefront, the marketing, and customer service; the supplier's job is manufacturing, warehousing, and shipping.
This is why dropshipping basics are so appealing to beginners: no upfront inventory purchase, no warehouse, and a store that can technically launch in a weekend. Shopify, the platform most dropshipping stores run on, has a detailed breakdown of how the model works end to end if you want the mechanics in full.
How the Order Flow Works, Step by Step
- A customer buys a product from your online store and pays your listed retail price.
- You forward that order to your supplier and pay their wholesale price — the difference is your margin.
- The supplier packs and ships the product directly to your customer, often with your branding on the packaging if you've set that up.
- You handle any customer service — questions, tracking issues, returns — even though you never touched the physical product.
That last point surprises a lot of beginners: the supplier disappears from the customer's experience entirely. If something goes wrong with shipping or quality, your store is the one fielding the complaint.
What It Costs to Start (and What It Realistically Pays)
| Cost | Typical range |
|---|---|
| Store platform subscription | $29–79/month |
| Domain name | $10–15/year |
| Starter ad budget (to get first sales data) | $300–1,000 |
| Apps and tools (reviews, email, etc.) | $0–100/month |
| Business registration (optional at first) | $0–300 |
On the revenue side, be skeptical of anything promising huge margins with zero effort. Open-marketplace dropshipping — reselling generic products anyone can list — typically nets 10–15% margins after ad spend; working with vetted, niche suppliers can push that to 20–50%, but takes more time to set up relationships and build a brand people trust. Budget at least three to six months of consistent listing, testing, and ad iteration before judging whether a store is viable — most that fail do so in month one, before they've collected enough data to know if the product or the execution was the problem.
If you'd rather register the store as a real legal business from the start — useful once you're taking it seriously — the SBA's guide to registering a business walks through the state-by-state basics.
Picking Products and Suppliers Without Getting Burned
- Order a sample yourself before listing it. Photos from a supplier catalog hide slow shipping, flimsy packaging, and quality issues you'll only catch by holding the product.
- Check shipping times honestly. A product that takes three to four weeks to arrive will generate refund requests no matter how good your marketing is; look for suppliers with domestic or regional warehouses if possible.
- Avoid trademarked or heavily saturated "trending" products. By the time a product is a viral dropshipping trend, margins have usually already collapsed from competition.
- Read supplier reviews on the platform, not just the product reviews. A great product from an unreliable supplier still turns into cancelled orders and refunds.
Selling something you understand rather than something you saw trending tends to hold up better long-term. A related model with even lower upfront risk is reselling thrifted clothes — you inspect and own the item before it's ever listed, which removes a lot of the supplier-quality risk dropshipping carries.
Common Beginner Mistakes That Sink New Stores
- Launching with 50+ products instead of a focused catalog. A tight, well-photographed catalog of 10–15 products converts better than a sprawling, generic one.
- Spending the entire budget on ads before testing organically. A little organic traffic — social posts, communities, search content — tells you if a product has any pull before you pay to find out.
- Ignoring the numbers past "did I make a sale." Track cost per click, conversion rate, and actual margin after ad spend — a store that generates sales but loses money on every one isn't a business yet.
- Underestimating customer service load. Every order is a potential shipping question; budget real time for it, not an afterthought.
Dropshipping basics are simple to explain and genuinely hard to execute profitably — treat the first few months as a paid research project, not a guaranteed income stream. For a lower-overhead alternative that still uses an online storefront, our Etsy selling guide and the affiliate marketing guide are both worth comparing before you commit ad budget to a dropshipping store. More options live in the make-money category.
This is general business information, not financial, tax, or legal advice — talk to a qualified professional before registering a business entity or making significant ad spend decisions.