In the evolving world of e-commerce and dropshipping, choosing the right fulfillment partner can make or break your business. CJdropshipping and DayOne Fulfillment both promise end-to-end supply chain solutions, but they operate in different ways. CJdropshipping is a global dropshipping platform with its own vast product catalog and warehouse network, whereas DayOne Fulfillment is a sourcing and logistics provider that manages procurement, warehousing, and shipping for your brand. This article offers an in-depth, objective comparison of CJdropshipping and DayOne across nine critical dimensions (from sourcing and shipping to integrations and pricing), helping seasoned dropshippers and business owners decide which platform aligns best with their needs.
1. Product Sourcing and Supplier Network
CJdropshipping: Founded in 2014, CJdropshipping operates as a marketplace-like supplier network that aggregates thousands of manufacturers and global warehouses. It boasts “over 500,000 SKUs available and still growing,” spanning electronics, home goods, fashion, beauty, toys, auto parts and more. Merchants can browse CJ’s catalog directly or submit custom sourcing requests; CJ’s team will then find factories or suppliers and add the product to the platform for you. This means retailers aren’t limited to a fixed catalog – if a desired item isn’t listed, CJ’s sourcing agents will seek it out (often by finding it on AliExpress or other Chinese marketplaces and onboarding the factory). There is no minimum order quantity (MOQ) on CJdropshipping, making it easy for small stores to order one-off samples or fulfill single-item orders. In practice, CJ dropshippers import products into their stores via CJ’s platform or browser extension, and CJ handles the rest.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne is more of a white-label sourcing and logistics provider than a marketplace. It does not publish a catalog of products. Instead, clients “submit CSV file and/or product links, or connect our agents to your store,” and DayOne’s team “finds a reputable supplier for your products, negotiates the lowest price, and provides an all-inclusive quote”. Essentially, DayOne offers on-demand sourcing: if you tell them what items you want, they will try to source them from Chinese factories or wholesalers (often using AliExpress listings as a reference). This approach can be flexible, but it means you can’t “shop” a prebuilt catalog; instead you rely on DayOne’s agents to handle procurement. DayOne’s MOQ for engaging the service is 30 orders per day overall, which means they cater primarily to businesses already processing dozens of orders daily.
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Pros & Cons: CJdropshipping’s strength is its massive, searchable product database and automated platform (enabling quick product discovery and import). There’s no MOQ, and if a desired item is missing, CJ’s team often adds it. DayOne’s strength is personalized service: they can source virtually any product (if it’s still manufactured) as long as you provide the link or description. However, DayOne’s model can be slower and less transparent for small sellers, since every product must be individually negotiated. CJ’s approach is faster for single items (you simply find it and import), whereas DayOne’s model is better suited for established stores ready to commit to bulk or repeated orders.
2. Warehousing and Inventory Management
CJdropshipping: CJ maintains a global warehouse network designed to speed up shipping and give local inventory options. According to CJ, it operates 30+ warehouses in countries like the US, Germany, Thailand, Indonesia and more. Merchants can choose to pre-stock products in these warehouses or have items transferred into inventory after orders are placed. CJ offers free storage for up to 3 months in its US warehouses, with only small monthly fees if stock remains beyond that. Through CJ’s platform, sellers see real-time stock levels and can even group multiple orders into one package if items are at the same warehouse. In summary, CJ’s inventory management is highly integrated: you manage stock and orders on their dashboard, and CJ’s warehouses (especially in target markets) reduce delivery times for customers.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne’s warehousing is centralized in China. It has a 30,000+ m² fulfillment center in Ningbo and a second warehouse in Guangdong (China’s electronics hub). DayOne does not operate warehouses in the US/EU; instead, all inventory is typically housed in China until shipped. DayOne uses its proprietary ERP system to sync inventory and orders across sales channels, providing automated order tracking and stock updates. For example, DayOne states that its system “integrates all orders and inventory, and automatically generates FBA-STAs” for Amazon shipments. Because DayOne quotes are typically “all-inclusive,” inventory costs (storage, handling) are usually factored into the negotiated price and not charged separately beyond the MOQ and order fees.
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Pros & Cons: CJ’s warehousing model allows retailers to stock products closer to customers in multiple regions, greatly speeding up fulfillment and simplifying inventory tracking on the platform. The initial 3-month free storage is a bonus for new users. However, after that period small fees apply, so costs can accumulate if you hold stock long-term. DayOne’s advantage is its large centralized operation (75k order capacity) with automated tracking. But because inventory is all in China, international shipping times are longer. DayOne also has fulfillment speed on Chinese New Year (staggered shifts) and automated processes, but lacks the “local stocking” benefit of CJ’s network. DayOne’s minimum order and package size requirements (e.g. MOQ 30 orders per day) mean they aim more at scaling brands than occasional dropshippers.
3. Fulfillment Speed and Global Shipping Reach
CJdropshipping: With its network of local warehouses, CJ typically offers faster shipping than standard China-to-world dropshipping. CJ’s proprietary shipping solution, CJPacket, delivers most packages in about 5–12 days globally, which is often “1–2 weeks faster than standard AliExpress shipping”. When a customer order arrives (via Shopify or other integration), CJ claims it will fulfill the order in 1–4 business days. Orders almost always receive tracking numbers, and CJ can consolidate items into one package to avoid multiple shipments. Importantly, CJ keeps some operations running through Chinese New Year (staggering staff shifts) to minimize downtime. Overall, sellers on CJdropshipping enjoy fast, reliable international delivery, especially for US/EU customers who can be served from nearby CJ warehouses.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne’s fulfillment relies on express couriers out of China. According to its FAQ, DayOne uses YunExpress as the primary global carrier, with a global average shipping time of about 9 days (as of late 2024). DayOne advertises that all goods are packed and shipped the same day they are received at the warehouse. In fact, DayOne notes that parcels typically reach Shanghai airport within 24 hours of leaving its facility. For premium service, it offers faster but costlier options on select routes. DayOne also emphasizes “fast shipping” as a client benefit and uses updated private courier lines. However, since all shipments originate in China, customers in Europe or the Americas usually wait roughly one week (9 days on average) once the package is sent. DayOne also provides discreet tracking (no Chinese-origin labels on packages) for branding purposes.
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Pros & Cons: Both platforms excel at global reach, but via different methods. CJ’s built-in 3PL means many orders ship from local stock, dramatically cutting transit time (often under 10 days worldwide). DayOne’s speeds are also competitive (around 9 days average globally), but that’s from China via express. In practice, CJ often edges out DayOne on speed for markets with local warehouses. For example, CJ advertises 5–12 day delivery, whereas DayOne’s 9-day average is a bit slower on long-hauls. On the other hand, DayOne can prepare large batches quickly once inventory arrives, and their Yiwu/Ningbo proximity to major ports helps efficient export. Both provide robust tracking updates. Sellers should note that DayOne’s quoted shipping times depend on destination country and may have premium lanes for faster delivery. One more consideration: CJ groups and consolidates orders by default, which can simplify logistics, whereas DayOne treats shipments per order (though it handles customs clearance and FBA prep). In summary, CJ generally offers faster end-to-end delivery where its warehouses serve the target market, while DayOne provides consistently reliable express shipping from China.
4. Technology Integrations (Shopify, WooCommerce, Amazon, etc.)
CJdropshipping: CJ excels in multi-platform support. Its tools and APIs can integrate Shopify, WooCommerce, BigCommerce, eBay, Amazon, Etsy, Lazada, Shopee, ShipStation, and more. For example, CJ’s Shopify app auto-imports products and automatically forwards orders to CJ for fulfillment. A Chrome extension also lets merchants quickly pull products into any store and sync orders back to CJ. CJ’s dashboard centralizes orders from all channels, so a Shopify sale and an eBay sale can both be fulfilled via CJ seamlessly. In short, CJ positions itself as a single backend: “CJ can work with nearly any store channel your business uses”. This breadth of integration makes CJ suitable for omnichannel sellers.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne provides its own ERP integration, primarily demonstrated through its Shopify app (“Dayone ERP – Built for DTC & dropshipping”). This app allows real-time syncing of orders and inventory between Shopify stores and DayOne’s system. Features include multi-currency accounting, syncing payments, refunds, stock levels and fulfillment status across channels. DayOne also highlights seamless multi-platform support in its ERP (a dashboard to manage 3PL and warehouse updates), implying it can aggregate orders from different sources. In practice, DayOne directly mentions integration with Shopify as a built-in feature. It also handles Amazon FBA and eBay by preparing compliant shipments for those channels. While DayOne doesn’t list every platform publicly, its ability to sync with inventory systems suggests it can connect to WooCommerce or marketplaces via API or CSV.
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Pros & Cons: CJdropshipping arguably has the edge in sheer integration coverage. Its official list includes every major e-commerce platform, marketplace, and even ERP like MabangERP. CJ makes it easy to drop products into multiple stores and keep stock in sync. DayOne’s integration is strong with Shopify (via its ERP app) and robust for Amazon FBA/eBay (through its fulfillment services). However, DayOne lacks public plug-ins for as many channels; some integrations may require custom work. DayOne’s system excels in inventory and fulfillment management rather than connecting product catalogs. In practice, if you sell on Shopify and Amazon/Ebay, DayOne will handle orders and shipments. But CJ provides more out-of-the-box connectors (WooCommerce, TikTok Shop, Lazada, etc.). In summary, CJ’s integration suite is broader, while DayOne focuses on depth (inventory syncing and logistics automation) especially for Shopify and marketplaces.
5. Branding and Customization Options

CJdropshipping: CJ offers robust white-label and branding services. Sellers can request custom packaging, inserts, logos, and branded boxes through CJ’s platform. According to CJ, merchants can “request branded packaging or professional photos/videos through CJ’s services”. CJ’s “Custom Packaging” solution (prominently featured on their site) allows you to design packaging which CJ will apply to orders from their warehouses. This includes custom labels, thank-you cards, branded poly mailers, etc. There is no upfront MOQ from CJ to use these services (only the order itself), making it very accessible for small stores. The cost is additive per-item, but adds significant brand polish.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne also provides white-label fulfillment and custom packaging, but with some volume requirements. Their site confirms they “source any packaging you would like – logos, customized inserts and cards, etc.” to create a bespoke unboxing experience. However, DayOne imposes a fulfillment MOQ of 100 daily orders for customized packaging. (In general, DayOne requires at least 30 orders/day to work with a client, so effectively you need 100/day to qualify for custom box printing.) Like CJ, DayOne will print or source your logoed boxes, bags, and inserts and use them in fulfillment. For example, DayOne’s homepage advertises that customers get an “awesome branded product... with all contents using your brand colors and design”. DayOne also offers product photography and video marketing services to help build a brand image.
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Pros & Cons: Both platforms enable white-label shipping and custom branding, but CJ is more accessible to smaller sellers. CJ has no MOQ for using branded packaging (beyond the cost per unit), so even one-order shipments can be fully branded. DayOne’s custom packaging has a high threshold (100 orders/day) and is geared toward larger operations. On the upside for DayOne, once you meet the MOQ, they actively handle printing and insertion. Both also guarantee discreet shipping (no Chinese origin labels) to bolster a DTC feel. In practice, CJ’s packaging and branding services are very flexible and integrated into the platform pricing. DayOne’s approach is more consultative and tailored once volumes justify it. If building a fully branded experience on a tight budget is a priority, CJ gives you the tools at lower order volumes. DayOne’s strength is its end-to-end service, but you need to scale up to use it fully.
6. Customer Support and User Experience
CJdropshipping: CJ provides 24/7 customer support and assigns personal account managers (agents) to active sellers. According to its own materials, CJ offers free account setup and around-the-clock support channels. User reviews strongly praise CJ’s support: its Trustpilot profile shows a 4.9 out of 5 rating from over 13,000 reviews, with customers highlighting “responsive, knowledgeable” agents who “often go above and beyond to ensure issues are resolved efficiently”. Many merchants mention receiving fast help from named agents or success in using CJ’s chat. The user interface, while comprehensive, can be complex for beginners. CJ’s dashboard manages products, orders, and communication in one place, which is powerful but may have a learning curve (as multiple guides note). In summary, CJ’s support is robust and globally accessible, though some sellers note that general support can be slow until a dedicated agent is assigned (usually after hitting a certain order volume).

DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne emphasizes personalized service with “responsive customer service” as a core value. They employ over 500 staff, including sourcing teams and support, and claim to reply to 100% of negative reviews. DayOne’s model assigns your account to a dedicated fulfillment team, suggesting a high-touch experience. Their Trustpilot profile (though sparse) indicates an average rating of 2.8 out of 5 from 3 reviews, all of which are negative or low; DayOne has replied publicly to customer complaints. A red flag in community feedback is that some buyers have had trouble returning items or dealing with disputes, indicating that DayOne’s fulfillment process can become complex if things go wrong. On the positive side, DayOne’s FAQ and client testimonials stress “quality inspections” and careful order handling. In practice, DayOne’s support tends to operate more on an account-management level (since clients are often larger brands).

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Pros & Cons: CJdropshipping wins points for its scale and responsiveness: round-the-clock chat, fast replies, and very high customer ratings. Smaller sellers especially appreciate CJ’s 24/7 live support and detailed help center. DayOne offers a more personalized, white-glove service model – you will likely have dedicated contacts handling your account. However, because DayOne serves larger operations, individual queries might take longer (clients must submit requests to the team) and issues like returns can be cumbersome. In summary, CJ has broad peer acclaim for excellent support, whereas DayOne emphasizes professionalism and guaranteed responses but has received some public criticism. Each platform seems committed to service, but CJ’s customer feedback suggests consistently higher satisfaction.
7. Pricing Transparency and Value for Money
CJdropshipping: CJ’s pricing model is pay-per-order with no membership fees. Users create a free account and pay only for the products, shipping, and optional add-ons they choose. Key points include: no setup fee, no subscription fee, no minimum order quantity, and basic use is free. CJ clearly lists product prices and shipping costs at checkout, so most costs are transparent. Optional services (custom packaging, photography, etc.) incur extra fees per item. For example, CJ offers free storage for 3 months in the US, but charges a small monthly inventory fee after 90 days. Overall, CJ’s structure scales with your sales: if you ship more, you pay more in total, but you aren’t locked into any monthly plan. This is generally seen as cost-effective, especially for high-volume sellers (no fixed SaaS cost).
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne does not publicly list pricing; instead, it provides custom quotes based on product orders. Their process is to negotiate a price with the supplier, then present an “all-inclusive” quote that bundles product cost and shipping. In practice, DayOne charges you for the sourced products, the shipping, and any handling; there are no separate software fees. The quote you receive includes all estimated shipping and handling (“all-inclusive product quote”), which can simplify budgeting. DayOne’s FAQ mentions that for FBA or bulk shipments, their minimum order is about 1 cubic meter or 200kg, implying per-order pricing is meant for larger batches. Importantly, DayOne’s MOQ of 30 orders/day means small sellers may not qualify at all. Because prices are bespoke, transparency depends on how detailed the quote is. Sellers should expect to pay a service margin on top of factory costs.
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Pros & Cons: CJdropshipping shines in transparency and flexibility. Its free usage and per-item fees mean businesses only pay for what they need, making it easy to calculate margins (especially since product and shipping prices are shown before checkout). DayOne’s all-in-one quoting simplifies total cost understanding for big orders, but it also means you can’t compare prices upfront across products. Value-wise, CJ’s model is usually cheaper for small and medium sellers (no membership, no hidden fees beyond known surcharges). DayOne can offer competitive bulk rates (thanks to negotiated factory pricing), but the lack of published rates means you must contact them for pricing. In short, CJ has a straightforward, transparent fee structure (free platform, pay as you go), whereas DayOne provides customized pricing with potentially larger minimum commitments. Businesses valuing predictability and low overhead often prefer CJ’s approach, while DayOne suits those with larger, consolidated orders who want a one-stop quote.
8. Scalability and Enterprise Readiness
CJdropshipping: CJ’s platform is inherently scalable. It already handles massive volumes (over one million orders per month, according to company figures). As your business grows, CJ’s global infrastructure can scale with you. For example, once a product is proven, sellers can ask CJ to pre-stock it in US/EU warehouses, and CJ will waive initial stocking fees. This bulk-preparation feature means a small test order can evolve into large warehouse replenishments seamlessly. CJ’s pay-per-use pricing also means your costs grow in line with sales, not on rigid subscription tiers. In practice, many CJ users note they scaled from dozens to hundreds of orders per day without switching suppliers, thanks to CJ’s warehousing and agent support. The platform also offers wholesale/bulk discounts for larger quantities. The downside: with scale comes complexity. Larger CJ clients must monitor inventory closely (storage fees kick in after 90 days) and the user interface and shipping options can be intricate. But overall, CJ is built for growth, allowing even enterprise brands to leverage its supply chain services globally.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne is explicitly aimed at scaling brands. Its FAQ states that “scalability with DayOne is one reason ecom owners switch to us”, highlighting their capacity for high volume and avoiding “growing pains”. They report handling 65,000+ orders daily and promise capacity up to 75,000 during peaks. Their business model is enterprise-friendly: fixed team, large warehouse space (30,000 m²), and systems ready for bulk shipments. DayOne also automates VAT/IOSS processes for EU clients, showing attention to scaling complexity. However, DayOne does have cutoffs: their MOQ of 30 orders/day means they won’t take on very small operations. Once onboarded, a client can grow without fear of overwhelming DayOne’s resources. The personalized account structure and heavy infrastructure (500+ staff) imply that as your sales scale, DayOne will add resources behind the scenes. On the flip side, DayOne’s approach may involve higher minimum shipments (e.g. 1 CBM for lowest FBA rates) which might price out very small SKUs.
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Pros & Cons: Both platforms can scale, but in different ways. CJ is a neutral platform: it can serve a one-person startup or a large brand without changing the fundamental setup. Its global warehouses and customizable services mean a seller can ramp up in any market. DayOne is more like hiring an internal fulfillment department; it’s built for large-scale dropship and DTC operations. It can handle huge order spikes (as evidenced by its current 50+ million packages shipped) but only once certain volume thresholds are met. For a growing business, DayOne promises stability and a clear path to enterprise logistics. CJ, meanwhile, offers growth on demand with no hard caps – you simply use more of its services. In terms of raw capability, both can serve enterprise needs. CJ’s advantage is that scaling doesn’t require switching systems or vendors; DayOne’s advantage is hands-on support and handling of complex issues (customs, taxes, multi-country shipping) at high volume.
9. Reputation and Community Feedback
CJdropshipping: CJ has a well-established reputation among dropshippers. On Trustpilot, CJ has an Excellent rating (4.9/5) based on over 13,000 reviews. The consensus is overwhelmingly positive: reviewers frequently mention fast shipping, good product quality, and exceptional customer service (often calling out helpful agents by name). For example, one user said their CJ agent “immediately solved my issue,” and another praised the 24/7 support. In forums and Facebook groups, CJ is often recommended for its reliability and low costs (in many user polls it beats out AliExpress, Spocket, etc.). Any negative comments (a small percentage on Trustpilot) tend to note occasional stock errors or misunderstandings, but these are rare compared to positive experiences. Overall, CJ’s brand in the community is very strong.
DayOne Fulfillment: DayOne is much less visible in mainstream reviews. Its Trustpilot page shows an average 2.8/5 from only 3 reviews. The sample is too small to draw firm conclusions, but notably all existing reviews are negative 1-star experiences (often about returns or misunderstandings). DayOne does reply to complaints, emphasizing their official policy (e.g. “we are a sourcing & warehousing company, we do not provide logistics services” in one reply). In dropshipping forums, DayOne is less discussed; it’s known primarily among serious sellers moving to in-house fulfillment. The company itself highlights its growth by word-of-mouth, not advertising. Anecdotally, some users praise DayOne for professional handling of Chinese suppliers and compliance with Amazon rules, but others warn about complexities in returns and the higher entry requirements (e.g. ask about DayOne, and many veterans note the 30-orders/day minimum).
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Pros & Cons: In the community and among customers, CJdropshipping has a clear edge in reputation. Its thousands of reviews and active user base mean you can find many real-world reports of successes. DayOne’s reputation is less clear-cut: its lack of public feedback means a new user might face uncertainty. The few online complaints on DayOne are serious (fraudulent vendor claims, returns problems), which potential clients should consider. Both companies appear responsive (DayOne replies to all negative reviews, CJ has a policy of answering any issues quickly), but CJ’s scale gives it more social proof. In summary, CJ has a proven track record among dropshippers, whereas DayOne’s reputation is still growing. New users should be aware of DayOne’s strict vetting (ensuring 30+ orders/day) but can expect a professional operation once on board.
Comparative Feature Summary
Below is a concise comparison of key features for easy reference:
| Feature | CJdropshipping | DayOne Fulfillment |
|---|---|---|
| Product Sourcing & Catalog | Over 500K products from global suppliers across dozens of categories. Curated catalog plus on-demand sourcing (submit request if item not listed). No MOQ. | No public catalog – you submit product links or CSV for DayOne to source. All items are custom-quoted. MOQ 30 orders/day. |
| Warehousing & Inventory | 30+ warehouses worldwide (US, EU, Asia, etc.) with integrated inventory management. Up to 3 months free storage in US (then small fees). Real-time stock sync. | Large China-based facilities (Ningbo and Guangdong). 30,000+ m² space, 500+ staff. Uses DayOne ERP for real-time inventory/order sync. |
| Shipping Speed & Reach | CJPacket shipping: ~5–12 day global delivery, with most orders fulfilled in 1–4 business days. Local shipping from US/EU warehouses. Grouping orders. | Express shipping via YunExpress (~9-day global average). Same-day packing/air export (to Shanghai). Discreet tracking. |
| Platform Integrations | Native integration with Shopify, WooCommerce, eBay, Amazon, Etsy, Lazada, Shopee, BigCommerce, ShipStation, etc.. Chrome Extension and API available. | Offers a Shopify ERP app (free to install) for order/inventory sync. Handles Amazon FBA & eBay shipments. Custom API/CSV for others. |
| Branding & Customization | Full white-label support: custom packaging, inserts, prints, and even ODM product development. No MOQ for custom packaging. Professional photo/video services available. | White-label shipping and custom packaging (MOQ 100 orders/day for packaging). In-house QC, and video/photo services offered. Discreet parcels. |
| Customer Support | 24/7 live chat, detailed help center, dedicated account managers. Highly rated by users (4.9/5 on Trustpilot). Responsive global support teams, though UI has a learning curve. | Dedicated account team, ERP-based support. Claims responsive service and 100% response to issues. Mixed public reviews (2.8/5). |
| Pricing Model | Free platform, pay-per-order (product + shipping). No subscription, no membership or minimum order. Transparent itemized costs. | Quote-based pricing per shipment. Provides all-inclusive quotes (product + shipping + handling) for each batch. No public rates; MOQ applies. |
| Scalability | Handles from small shops to 1M+ orders/month. Supports bulk pre-stocking in local warehouses as business grows. Scales with order volume (no subscription caps). | Enterprise-scale readiness (65k–75k orders/day capacity). Designed for high-volume brands with minimal growing pains. |
| Reputation (Trustpilot) | 4.9/5 (Excellent) from 13,000+ reviews – praised for speed, service, support. | 2.8/5 from 3 reviews (limited data, mostly negative). Replies to all complaints but scant broader feedback. |
Table: Feature comparison of CJdropshipping vs DayOne Fulfillment .
Conclusion
Both CJdropshipping and DayOne Fulfillment offer comprehensive solutions for cross-border e-commerce, but they cater to slightly different needs. CJdropshipping acts as an integrated dropshipping marketplace and 3PL, with vast product selections, multiple warehouses worldwide, and transparent pay-as-you-go pricing. It’s ideal for businesses (from solo entrepreneurs to enterprises) that want speed, flexibility, and direct control through an automated platform. DayOne Fulfillment, by contrast, operates more like a white-label sourcing and logistics partner – it specializes in personally sourcing products from China and handling all fulfillment tasks for growing brands. DayOne shines when a brand has reached higher volumes (30+ daily orders) and wants full-service procurement and logistics without managing multiple vendors.
From the evidence, CJdropshipping tends to offer broader capabilities and lower barriers for scaling. Its integration ecosystem and multi-warehouse network mean businesses can quickly expand globally without switching providers. Its pricing model scales naturally with sales, and its outstanding user reviews reflect consistently positive experiences. DayOne Fulfillment brings robust professional service and can certainly handle large-scale operations (with fast shipping and compliance expertise), but it imposes higher minimums and has less public feedback.
In practice, many entrepreneurs use both: DayOne for large batch procurement or FBA prep, and CJdropshipping for flexible dropshipping orders. However, for most e-commerce professionals and dropshippers looking for a single, scalable platform in 2025, CJdropshipping’s all-in-one solution — with its massive supplier network, fast shipping infrastructure, and rich custom services — will likely be the more comprehensive choice.

