The Two Seasonal Peaks Every GCC Sandal Maker Plans Around
Sandal demand in the Gulf is not flat across the year. There are two structural peaks, and missing inventory at either of them costs roughly six weeks of revenue.
- Eid al-Fitr — celebration after Ramadan. Retail demand peaks in the final 10 days of Ramadan, with the largest single sales day typically on the 25th–27th day of Ramadan. Khaleeji families buy new sandals for Eid prayer and family gatherings.
- Hajj & Eid al-Adha — pilgrimage and the festival of sacrifice. Demand starts climbing 6 weeks before Hajj, peaks in the week of Hajj, and continues through Eid al-Adha. Saudi Arabia takes the largest share of this demand because of pilgrim purchases in addition to local consumption.
Both peaks compress demand into a ~3-week window. A manufacturer that has inventory ready ships the order. A manufacturer that needs to reorder leather in the same window loses to the one that planned.
The Supply Crunch — Why It Happens Every Year
Three structural factors create the predictable supply crunch:
1. Demand from manufacturers across the GCC concentrates simultaneously
Every Khaleeji sandal workshop is buying at the same time. Tanneries that hold 5,000 sqft of usable stock can serve 5 manufacturers' 1,000-sqft orders simultaneously. They cannot serve 50.
2. Imported leather lead times don't shorten for the holiday
India and Pakistan ship at their own pace. A factory that orders import leather 6 weeks before Eid receives it 2 weeks after Eid. This is mathematically unavoidable and yet repeats every year.
3. Ramadan working hours reduce throughput
Reduced working hours during Ramadan mean tannery output is lower exactly when demand is highest. Production planning that ignores this constraint structurally under-orders.
The brands that ship the most Eid sandals are not the ones with the best designs. They're the ones who placed their leather orders 12 weeks before Ramadan started.
The Eid Season Production Calendar (Working Backwards)
Eid al-Fitr 2027 is expected around 18-20 March 2027 depending on moon-sighting. Ramadan 2027 begins ~17 February 2027. A typical retail-ready production schedule works backwards from there.
Week of 17–24 November 2026
16 weeks pre-Eid. Lock in styles, finalise patterns, approve last samples. Lead time review with OEM partners.
Week of 1–8 December 2026
14 weeks pre-Eid. Place leather orders for January production. Sole, upper, lining, insole. Specify batches and lock pricing.
Week of 22 December 2026 – 5 January 2027
10–12 weeks pre-Eid. Leather delivery, pre-production samples, dye-lot approvals. Confirm all colourways.
Week of 5–19 January 2027
8–10 weeks pre-Eid. Bulk production begins. First quality check at 30% completion.
Week of 26 January – 9 February 2027
6 weeks pre-Eid. Bulk production continues. Second QC at 80%. Packing materials confirmed.
Week of 9–16 February 2027
5 weeks pre-Eid. Pre-shipment inspection. Pack and ship to distribution centres before Ramadan begins.
Ramadan begins ~17 February 2027
Inventory now sits at retail. Reorder window is closing — only buffer stock can be added.
Last 10 days of Ramadan (~7–17 March 2027)
Retail peak. Re-routing inventory between cities possible; manufacturing new units is not.
Eid al-Fitr ~18 March 2027
Season closes. Returns and reorders begin for the post-Eid trickle.
How Much Leather Buffer to Hold
A simple rule applied by experienced Khaleeji sandal manufacturers: hold a 30% buffer above your planned production volume for Eid season, and a 15% buffer for the rest of the year. The buffer covers three real risks:
- Cutting yield variance. Different hide batches yield differently. A 5% drop in yield on a 1000-sqft batch is 50 sqft of leather you no longer have.
- Quality rejection. Even from a good supplier, 2–5% of hides typically don't meet your spec at receiving. Returns take days; the buffer covers the gap.
- Late upside. A retailer calls with a top-up order on day 22 of Ramadan. With buffer you ship; without it you lose the sale and the relationship.
Buffer is not waste. Leather doesn't expire. Unused buffer stock from Eid season becomes opening inventory for Hajj season production. The cash cost of buffer is interest on inventory for 60–90 days — typically less than 1% of the value of the season's revenue.
Hajj & Eid al-Adha — The Second Season
Hajj 2027 is expected around 16–21 June 2027. The production calendar mirrors the Eid al-Fitr cycle, working backwards:
| Phase | Date range (approx) | Activity |
|---|---|---|
| Style lock | Late February 2027 | Patterns, last, sample approval |
| Leather order | Early March 2027 | Place orders for April production |
| Bulk production | April – May 2027 | Main run, QC, packing |
| Distribution | Late May 2027 | Ship to Jeddah, Riyadh, Doha, Kuwait |
| Sales peak | June 2027 | Pilgrim purchases + local Eid demand |
For Saudi-market sandal manufacturers, Hajj is structurally the larger of the two peaks because of pilgrim purchases stacked on top of domestic Eid demand. Plan inventory accordingly: a 50% buffer for Hajj season is not excessive for Saudi-focused brands.
The Off-Season Investment That Pays Both Seasons
The quietest months for sandal production in the Gulf are typically August through October. Forward-thinking manufacturers use this window to:
- Negotiate annual supply contracts with leather suppliers, locking 12-month pricing.
- Run R&D batches on new finishes, colours and constructions.
- Build relationships with backup tanneries to de-risk the next peak.
- Restock and re-equip: cutting dies, sewing machines, finishing equipment.
- Train staff: production speed and quality both improve when retraining happens out of peak pressure.
Lock Leather for the Next Eid Season
RAK stock, full GCC delivery, batch certificates and stable per-sqft pricing locked for the season. Send your projected volumes — we'll reserve hides.
Reserve StockFrequently Asked Questions — Eid Sandal Production
When should I place my Eid season leather order?
14 weeks before Eid is the practical standard for GCC manufacturers. That gives time for delivery, sample approvals, dye matching and bulk production with QC inspections before Ramadan begins.
What's the typical inventory buffer for Eid season?
Hold a 30% buffer above your planned production volume for Eid al-Fitr and 50% for Hajj season if you sell into Saudi Arabia. Buffer covers cutting yield variance, quality rejection and late-cycle reorders from retailers.
Can I still get leather during the last weeks of Ramadan?
Local UAE stock — yes, but at higher demand prices and limited choice. Imported leather — no, lead times exceed the remaining window. Plan your buffer to avoid relying on last-week supply.
Does Ramadan slow tannery production?
Yes. Reduced working hours during Ramadan typically cut tannery throughput by 20–30%. This compresses supply at exactly the moment demand peaks. Plan inventory before Ramadan begins.
Which is the bigger sandal season in the Gulf, Eid al-Fitr or Eid al-Adha?
For local Gulf demand alone, Eid al-Fitr is typically larger. For Saudi Arabia and brands selling into Saudi retail, Hajj/Eid al-Adha is structurally larger because of pilgrim purchases stacked on top of domestic demand.