Thailand is a useful sourcing market for custom plush toys, branded teddy bears, mascot dolls, and premium soft gifts, but supplier type matters. In this guide, I compare leading plush toy manufacturers in Thailand, including Teddy House, Green Leaf Toy, Trendy Dolls & Toys, PARKS TOY, and others, so buyers can better match each supplier to OEM, branding, gifting, or mascot-based projects.
Thailand is not the biggest plush manufacturing base in Asia, but it is still a very useful sourcing market for buyers looking for custom plush toys, branded teddy bears, mascot dolls, premium stuffed gifts, and softer fabric-based merchandise. What makes this market interesting is that Thai suppliers do not all follow the same model. Some look like direct plush factories. Some are stronger in premium gifts and event-driven projects. Some sit between toy manufacturing and branded merchandise. For buyers, that means supplier fit matters more than simply collecting a list of company names.
A hotel mascot project, a corporate teddy bear, a retail plush line, and a tourism-themed gift product may all require different supplier types. In Thailand, some companies appear closer to true plush manufacturing, while others are better understood as premium-products partners with plush capability. That distinction matters when you compare MOQ, sampling depth, customization, lead time, and long-run cost efficiency. This is also why Teddy House and Green Leaf Toy are important in this article: both publish unusually useful evidence about factory background, OEM positioning, or production process.
| Company | Overview | Best For | Light Key Data |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teddy House | Thai teddy-bear brand with unusually strong OEM and factory background. | Premium teddy bears, branded gifts, custom plush, fabric souvenirs | Says it established its own factory in Thailand in 1988, produced OEM goods for brands in Europe and America, launched Teddy House in 1998, and later promoted its premium plush manufacturing facility and custom gifts/fabric souvenirs. |
| Green Leaf Toy | Thai plush maker with one of the clearest public buyer-process pages. | Plush toys, mascots, premium plush, OEM projects | Says buyers’ designs and logos are welcome; states MOQ 500 pcs per design; sample charges 3,000–5,000 THB if not proceeding; production about 30+ days; emphasizes 30+ years and quality-led Thai production. |
| Trendy Dolls & Toys | Direct Thai stuffed-toy factory with broad custom product range. | Mascots, logo plush, teddy bears, idol dolls, pillows, event gifts | Says it is a leading Thai manufacturer and distributor, has 30+ years of experience, accepts made-to-order work, and is a direct factory with minimum order from 100 pieces. |
| PARKS TOY (THAILAND) CO., LTD. | Plush-oriented manufacturer with export-facing language. | OEM/ODM plush, animal plush, character projects, pet-related soft goods | Homepage positions the company as “Thailand No. 1 Manufacturer of Soft Toy & Pet” and highlights OEM, ODM, and Character IP; public profiles also describe it as a high-quality handmade plush factory in Thailand. |
| Pama Toy | More traditional manufacturer/exporter profile with plush included. | Plush toys, fabric gift items, simpler OEM programs | TTCPA lists it as Brand Owner, Exporter, Factory, Manufacturer, and OEM, with product categories including Plush Toys. |
| Spearmaster | Premium-products and branded-gifts supplier that also offers plush. | Corporate gifts, event plush, logo teddy bears, premium giveaways | Public site says it manufactures premium souvenirs and gifts from its own factory and includes custom premium plush with logo and event-gift use cases. |
| Termalou | Niche high-end stuffed-toy supplier. | Mohair teddy bears, collector-oriented plush, premium niche work | GoldSupplier profile says it is Thai-based but Korean-owned, focused on high-end stuffed toys and mohair for collectors, with 20 years’ experience, but it is also labeled as a Trading Company. |
Selected Stuffed Toy Manufacturers in Thailand
1. Teddy House
Overview
Teddy House is one of the strongest companies to include in a Thailand plush sourcing article because its public evidence chain is much fuller than most. On its brand-story page, the company says that in 1988 it established its own factory in Thailand and produced products for international brands across Europe and America as an OEM manufacturer. It also says that in 1998 it launched Teddy House as a Thai teddy bear brand. That gives it both factory background and brand history, which is rare in a public-facing plush profile.
Best for
Teddy House looks especially suitable for premium teddy bears, corporate gifts, custom plush, fabric souvenirs, and buyers who want a supplier that can connect brand presentation with plush production. Its newer OEM-facing content says it owns a premium plush toy manufacturing facility, specializes in custom gifts and fabric souvenirs, and offers end-to-end support from design through delivery.
Light Key Data
The company says it has over 35 years of experience and states that its products are certified by CE, EN-71, GB, and SNI. Because that certification language appears on Teddy House’s own promotional page, I would present it as a company-stated claim rather than treat it as independently verified third-party proof. Still, it is useful evidence of how the company wants to be positioned in the OEM plush market.
2. Green Leaf Toy
Overview
Green Leaf Toy is one of the best examples for a buyer-guide article because it does not just say “we make plush.” It actually explains how ordering works. Its site says it offers stuffed toys, plush toys, premium toys, mascots, and OEM orders, and that buyers’ designs and logos are welcome. Its background page also explains that the company has roots in Thai plush production, faced stronger competition as Korean, Chinese, and Taiwanese manufacturers entered Thailand, and chose to compete by focusing more on quality than price.
Best for
Green Leaf Toy looks especially suitable for buyers who want mascot projects, premium plush, custom logo toys, or OEM orders where communication around design and order structure matters. It appears stronger in project-based plush development than in generic low-price commodity plush. The company’s own wording supports this, because it emphasizes quality, design, premium products, and mascot work.
Light Key Data
This is one of the few Thai plush suppliers in the public market that openly states practical order details. Its production page says buyers can send reference images, logos, size, and quantity; the MOQ is 500 dolls per design; sample charges are 3,000–5,000 THB if the client does not proceed with production; and production usually takes around 30 days or more. It also states the company has worked in plush, premium dolls, and mascots for more than 30 years.
3. Trendy Dolls & Toys Co., Ltd.
Overview
Trendy Dolls & Toys still deserves a core place in this article. Its company page says it is a leading Thai manufacturer and distributor of stuffed dolls, stuffed toys, design pillows, and stuffed products, with over 30 years of experience in the doll and fabric-products business. That is already a strong public positioning signal.
Best for
This company looks especially suitable for brand-led custom plush: mascot dolls, cartoon characters, logo plush, custom teddy bears, idol dolls, plush keychains, pillows, and promotional gift products. Its product range is broad enough that it fits buyers who are not just ordering a standard teddy bear, but want something turned from a logo, character, or campaign concept into a soft product.
Light Key Data
Trendy says it is a direct factory, offers consultation, design, and sample development, and accepts minimum orders starting from 100 pieces. That lower public MOQ, together with its broad made-to-order product list, makes it especially relevant for buyers who want flexibility in softer branded merchandise rather than only larger OEM runs.
4. PARKS TOY (THAILAND) CO., LTD.
Overview
PARKS TOY looks more manufacturing-led than many Thai plush listings. Its public homepage positions the company as “Thailand No. 1 Manufacturer of Soft Toy & Pet” and highlights OEM, ODM, and Character IP. That language suggests a company thinking in product-category and manufacturing terms, not only in gift-shop terms.
Best for
PARKS TOY looks stronger for animal plush, OEM/ODM plush, character-based soft products, and buyers who want a plush-focused manufacturer rather than a broad premium-products house. Public social profiles also describe it as a high-quality handmade plush toy factory in Thailand and mention export-oriented inquiries.
Light Key Data
The evidence I have for PARKS TOY is solid enough to include it, but not yet as detailed as Teddy House or Green Leaf Toy. That means I would keep it in the article, but phrase it with a bit more caution: strong public manufacturing signals, good plush fit, but less published process detail than the strongest evidence-based entries in this list.
5. Pama Toy Co., Ltd.
Overview
Pama Toy is useful because it adds a more traditional manufacturer/exporter profile to the article. The Thai Toy and Children Product Trade Association member page classifies it as Brand Owner, Exporter, Factory, Manufacturer, and OEM, while listing Plush Toys among its product categories. That is exactly the kind of association-backed classification that helps a buyer guide feel grounded.
Best for
Pama Toy looks more suitable for buyers who want an established factory/exporter profile and who may be comfortable with a broader toy-and-gift business rather than a plush-only creative studio. It is a steadier, more classic supplier type.
Light Key Data
TTCPA lists its business types, product categories, and materials openly, which makes it easier to justify in a sourcing article than many vague directory names. Even if it does not publicly show the same plush-specific storytelling as Teddy House or Green Leaf Toy, it still belongs in a serious Thailand manufacturer roundup.
6. Spearmaster
Overview
Spearmaster is the most mixed-profile company in this list, and that is exactly why it is worth keeping. Its site presents the business as a manufacturer of corporate souvenirs and premium products, produced from its own factory and not through middlemen. At the same time, it also markets custom premium plush.
Best for
This company looks more suitable for corporate gifting, event giveaways, logo teddy bears, premium souvenirs, and promotional campaigns than for detailed collectible plush programs. In practical sourcing terms, that still matters. A lot of plush buying in Thailand is tied to branded gifting and premium merchandise, not only retail toy shelves.
Light Key Data
The public site explicitly mentions custom premium plush, logo embroidery, factory pricing, and use cases such as events, gifts, and special occasions. That is enough to justify inclusion, but I would not present Spearmaster as the strongest pure plush factory in the list.
7. Termalou
Overview
Termalou is not a mainstream Thailand plush-factory pick, but it is still worth noting because it adds a premium niche angle. Its GoldSupplier profile says it is a Thai-based but Korean-owned maker of high-end stuffed toys, specializing in mohair products for the collectors market, with design capability and 20 years of experience.
Best for
This company looks more suitable for niche collector products, mohair teddy bears, and premium plush work than for typical mass-market OEM plush. That makes it a support entry in the article, not a core all-purpose supplier.
Light Key Data
The caution point matters here: the same GoldSupplier profile also identifies Termalou as a Trading Company. So I would not rank it alongside Teddy House or Green Leaf Toy as the strongest core Thai factory examples. I would frame it as a specialized premium supplier that may be useful for certain buyers.
Premium, Mascot, and Brand-Led Plush Are a Real Thailand Strength
One of the clearest lessons from this market is that Thailand does not need to be judged only by whether it can match the cheapest plush production in Asia. The public profiles of Teddy House, Green Leaf Toy, Trendy, Spearmaster, and even parts of PARKS TOY suggest that Thailand is especially useful where plush sits close to branding, premium presentation, mascots, local storytelling, gift channels, or softer merchandise concepts. That is a different sourcing logic from simply chasing the lowest unit cost.
In other words, Thailand often looks strongest when the plush product is not just a toy, but also a gift, a brand symbol, a mascot, a souvenir, or a soft premium item. That is why the country can still be attractive even if some buyers eventually choose China or Vietnam for larger-scale cost-driven OEM programs. This is an inference from the way the selected Thai suppliers publicly position themselves.
Trade Shows in Thailand to Find Plush Toy Suppliers
Thailand does not appear to have one dominant export-style plush-factory fair equivalent to the major toy fairs in China or Hong Kong. In practice, buyers are more likely to find leads through broader toy, gift, lifestyle, and premium-product events. That conclusion is an inference based on the available public event landscape.
STYLE Bangkok 2025 is the more commercially useful event for broad sourcing context. Its official site says the show is organized by Thailand’s Department of International Trade Promotion in collaboration with the Board of Trade of Thailand, and that it features over 500 exhibitors and 800 booths across lifestyle categories including gifts and toys. For plush suppliers that sit between toys, gifts, premium merchandise, and lifestyle products, this is very relevant.
Thailand Toy Expo 2025 is also useful, but for a different reason. Its public site centers on exhibitors, artists, portfolios, and toy design culture. That makes it valuable for understanding Thailand’s character and collectible toy ecosystem, but less clearly a factory-sourcing fair in the classic OEM sense.
Certifications and Compliance for Plush Toys in Thailand
This section should be in any serious Thailand sourcing article.
Intertek’s summary of Thailand’s revised compulsory toy safety standard says Thailand updated TIS 685 part 1-2562 (BE) for toys intended for children under 14, and that the revised framework references ISO 8124 parts 1, 2, 3 and 6 as well as EN 71 Part 1. It also states that the compulsory standard was enforced on September 22, 2022.
For products sold or distributed in Thailand, the same Intertek summary says labeling must comply with TIS 685 requirements, be in Thai language, and carry the TIS mark on the product or packaging where applicable, together with a QR code linked to the TISI Toys License. It also notes that product testing is tied to TISI-nominated laboratories in Thailand, while factory audits may be waived if the factory has qualifying ISO 9001:2015 certification covering the manufacturing scope.
So in practical sourcing terms, buyers should separate two compliance questions. If the plush product is meant for the Thai domestic market, ask about TIS 685, Thai labeling, and licensing requirements. If the product is for export, you may still need destination-market standards such as EN 71, ASTM F963, or other country-specific testing. Thailand domestic compliance does not replace the rules of the country where you plan to sell.
| TIS 685-1:2562 (2019) – Key requirements (based on ISO 8124 / EN 71) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Element / Substance | Coatings, writing materials, plastics, paper, board, textiles (mg/kg) | Modelling clay (mg/kg) | Finger paint (mg/kg) |
| Antimony (Sb) | ≤ 60 | ≤ 60 | ≤ 10 |
| Arsenic (As) | ≤ 25 | ≤ 25 | ≤ 10 |
| Barium (Ba) | ≤ 1,000 | ≤ 250 | ≤ 350 |
| Cadmium (Cd) | ≤ 75 | ≤ 50 | ≤ 15 |
| Chromium (Cr) | ≤ 60 | ≤ 25 | ≤ 25 |
| Lead (Pb) | ≤ 90 | ≤ 90 | ≤ 25 |
| Mercury (Hg) | ≤ 60 | ≤ 25 | ≤ 10 |
| Selenium (Se) | ≤ 500 | ≤ 500 | ≤ 50 |
| Requirement category | Details / Limits |
|---|---|
| Phthalates – all toys | BBP + DBP + DEHP total ≤ 0.1% (plastic, rubber, coating materials) |
| Phthalates – toys for children under 3 & mouthable parts | BBP + DBP + DEHP + DINP + DIDP + DNOP total ≤ 0.1% |
| Mechanical & physical properties | Based on ISO 8124‑1:2018 and EN 71‑1:2014+A1:2018. Includes small parts, sharp edges/points, cords, folding mechanisms, projectiles – to prevent injury during normal use or foreseeable abuse. |
| Flammability | Based on ISO 8124‑2:2014. Specifies burn rate and flame resistance; highly flammable materials are prohibited. |
| Labelling & packaging | Product or package must clearly show: manufacturer/importer name, address, toy model / type, age warnings, and other required safety markings. |




