The Complete Guide to Custom Apparel Fundraising
Candy bars. Wrapping paper. Cookie dough. We've all bought them and we've all forgotten about them by Tuesday. Custom apparel fundraisers are different โ people actually want the product, wear it for years, and associate it with something they care about.
Why Apparel Fundraising Works
Traditional fundraisers ask people to buy something they don't really want to support something they do care about. The product is incidental. Apparel fundraisers flip this dynamic โ the product itself has genuine appeal, and the cause is the cherry on top.
Here's how apparel fundraisers typically stack up against the alternatives:
| Fundraiser Type | Avg. per Participant | Lasting Value? | Repeat Purchase? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spirit wear | $45โ$80 | Yes โ worn for years | Yes (seasonal) |
| Candy bars | $15โ$25 | No | Rarely |
| Wrapping paper | $20โ$35 | No | Sometimes |
| Cookie dough | $20โ$40 | No | Rarely |
| Discount cards | $10โ$20 | Partially | No |
A hoodie at $45 with a $12 fundraising contribution generates more per participant than a $20 candy bar box โ and the customer is actually happy about the purchase.
Setting a Realistic Goal
Before you open a store, set a specific dollar goal. Vague intentions produce vague results. Here's how to calculate a realistic target:
- Count your potential buyers. For a school of 400 students, assume 50-60% family participation (200-240 families).
- Estimate average order value. With 2-3 items per family at $30-$50 each, expect $75-$120 per order.
- Calculate gross revenue. 220 orders ร $95 avg = $20,900.
- Apply your fundraising percentage. If $10 of each sale goes to the fund, and average order is $95 with ~2.5 items, that's roughly $25/order ร 220 orders = $5,500 raised.
Share this math with your leadership before launch. A written goal creates accountability and gives you something concrete to communicate in your promotion.
Show the goal publicly
Stores that display a fundraising progress bar on the storefront raise 23% more on average. When buyers can see they're 60% of the way to the goal, they share the link. Urgency is contagious.
Choosing the Right Products
For fundraising, your margin per item matters as much as your retail price. Here's a framework for building a fundraiser-optimized catalog:
Lead with high-margin hoodies and sweatshirts
A pullover hoodie retails at $45-$55 and costs $22-$28 to produce (decorated). That's a $17-$27 margin per piece, of which $8-$12 can go to the fundraiser while still leaving profit for the apparel shop.
Add a lower-priced tee as an entry point
A $22 tee brings in buyers who won't spend $50. They often add a hoodie to the cart once they're already shopping. Think of it as a loss leader that increases total cart size.
Include a high-ticket item for outliers
A $75 embroidered quarter-zip or a $60 performance jacket pulls outlier buyers who want the best. These items often have the best absolute dollar margin.
Skip accessories for your first fundraiser
Hats, bags, and water bottles are great ongoing items but add complexity to a first fundraiser. Master the apparel side first, then expand.
Run your fundraiser on SpreeShop
Built-in fundraising goals, progress bars, per-item contribution tracking, and group orders โ all in one platform designed for schools, teams, and nonprofits.
Start Your Fundraiser FreePromoting Your Fundraiser
Promotion is where most fundraisers leave money on the table. Here's a 3-week promotion calendar that works:
Week 1 โ Launch
- โSend email announcement with store link and goal
- โPost in all parent Facebook/community groups
- โAsk the principal to send a note home
- โShare at any scheduled school event
Week 2 โ Momentum
- โPost a fundraising progress update (e.g., "We're 35% to our goal!")
- โAsk teachers to share the link with families
- โRun a classroom competition: first class to 80% participation gets a pizza party
Week 3 โ Urgency
- โSend a "3 days left" reminder email
- โPost daily countdown on social media
- โShare current progress toward the goal to create urgency
Group Orders vs. Open Store Windows
You have two primary models for collecting orders:
Open Store Window
Best for: School spirit stores, ongoing merchandise
Pros
- + Customers buy when they want
- + Great for multiple product lines
- + Can run for an entire school year
Cons
- - Harder to create urgency
- - Production batching is complex
Group Order (Time-Limited)
Best for: Team uniforms, event shirts, fundraisers
Pros
- + Built-in urgency
- + Easy to batch production
- + Simpler logistics
Cons
- - Miss the window = miss the order
- - Requires clear communication of deadline
For fundraising, we recommend a time-limited window of 2-3 weeks. See how SpreeShop group orders work.
Measuring Success
After the window closes, track these numbers before your debrief meeting:
- โTotal orders: How many families participated?
- โParticipation rate: Orders รท total potential buyers. Anything above 40% is excellent.
- โAverage order value: Total revenue รท number of orders. Benchmark against your estimate.
- โFunds raised: Actual dollars allocated to the fundraising cause.
- โTop-selling items: Which products drove the most revenue? This shapes your next catalog.
Share a brief results summary with your community โ even a one-paragraph email saying "You raised $4,200 for the 8th grade Washington DC trip!" closes the loop and builds goodwill for the next fundraiser.
Ready to Start?
SpreeShop's fundraising tools are built for exactly this use case โ progress bars, per-item contribution tracking, and time-limited order windows that create urgency. Available for schools, sports teams, and nonprofits.