At some point, almost every produce buyer asks the same question: should we keep buying direct, or is it time to bring in a consolidator?
There’s no universal answer — it depends on your volume, your variety needs, and how much administrative weight your team can carry. But there is a clear way to think it through. Below, we break down what each model actually looks like, where each one wins, and why most growing operations eventually land on a hybrid of the two.
What Direct Buying Looks Like
Direct buying is exactly what it sounds like: your team builds and manages relationships with individual growers and shippers, and either you or your carrier handles pickup at each source.
This model works well when:
- You’re buying high volume from a small number of growers
- Your product mix is relatively simple — a handful of core SKUs rather than dozens
- Demand is steady enough to plan full truckloads in advance
The strength of direct buying is control and relationship depth. The tradeoff shows up as you scale — more growers means more pickups, more coordination, and more exposure to the inefficiencies of less-than-truckload (LTL) shipping when one grower can’t fill a full load on their own.
What Produce Consolidation Looks Like
Produce consolidation brings product from multiple growers and shippers into a centralized warehouse, where it’s combined into a single, optimized shipment built to your specifications. We’ve covered the mechanics of this in detail in What is Produce Consolidation? — but the short version is that it’s a logistics layer, not a replacement for your sourcing relationships.
That last point matters enough that we’ve written about it on its own: consolidation is built to work alongside direct relationships, not instead of them. See Keep Direct Purchasing and Relationships with Consolidation for how that works in practice.
| Operational Impact | Direct Buying | Produce Consolidation |
|---|---|---|
| Cost structure | Pay each grower/shipper + your own freight | Pay for product + a consolidation fee, offset by freight savings |
| Minimum volume needed | Best at high volume per grower | Works well even with smaller, LTL-sized orders |
| Variety access | Limited to your existing grower network | Access to 100+ growers through one relationship |
| Admin burden | Higher — you coordinate every pickup | Lower — one point of contact manages the load |
| Freshness / transit time | Depends on pickup scheduling at each source | Optimized for fewer stops and faster dispatch |
| Flexibility for seasonal/specialty items | Requires building a new direct relationship | Add items without adding vendor overhead |
When Direct Buying Still Wins
It’s worth saying plainly: direct buying isn’t a worse model, it’s a different one — and for the right buyer, it’s still the better fit.
If you’re a high-volume buyer working with one or two core growers near your own facility, and your product mix is simple and stable, you may not need a consolidator at all. Adding a consolidation layer when you don’t have a variety or LTL problem just adds a step without solving anything. Direct buying keeps things simple, and simple is sometimes exactly right.
When Consolidation Makes Sense
Consolidation tends to earn its place when one or more of these is true:
- You need product from multiple growing regions to hit your variety targets
- You’re accumulating LTL orders that are expensive or hard to schedule on their own
- You want to add seasonal or specialty items without taking on new vendor management
- Your team is spending more time coordinating pickups than buying produce
The savings can be substantial. One Fresh Avenue customer reduced their truck count by 4 per week at roughly $10,000 per truck — about $1.5 million in annual savings, achieved simply by optimizing how their loads were built. (More on that in The Savings Found through Produce Consolidation.)
Most Buyers Use Both
In practice, the buyers who get the most out of their supply chain don’t pick one model and abandon the other. They keep their direct grower relationships for the volume and consistency those relationships provide, and they layer in consolidation to handle variety, LTL gaps, and the administrative load that comes with scaling.
That’s the model we built Fresh Avenue around: a consolidation partner that strengthens your existing relationships rather than replacing them.
Curious where your current buying model has room to flex? Call us at 1-888-373-7440 or contact our team to talk through your specific volume and variety needs.



