Car Club Merch Profit and Pricing Strategy
Quick Answer- Pricing framework: base cost plus tier-specific markup.
- Member pricing vs supporter pricing vs event pricing.
- How to price hats, hoodies, polos, and jackets differently.
- Real markup numbers across club sizes from 20 to 200 members.
Pricing car club merch correctly is the difference between a treasury that funds the club and a treasury that breaks even. Most clubs default to "cost plus a few dollars" without thinking through tier, item type, or who is buying. This guide is the pricing framework that actually funds clubs without alienating members. Real numbers, not theory.
The Three-Audience Pricing Framework
Every car club item has three potential buyers, and each carries a different price:
- Members: The internal audience. They expect to pay close to cost. A small markup is fine, but a 50% markup feels like the club is profiting off them.
- Supporters: Friends, family, and fans of the club who are not members. They expect to pay full retail because they are not contributing dues or labor to the club.
- Event attendees: People at the annual show, cruise night, or charity event who want a souvenir. They expect to pay event-pricing (slightly above retail) because the shirt functions as both apparel and memento.
Most clubs price for one audience only (members) and miss the higher-margin revenue from supporters and event attendees. The shop model lets the same item sit at different prices for different audiences (or sit at one price that splits the difference).
Item-Specific Markup Recommendations
Markup varies by item because cost varies and member expectations vary:
- Tees: $5 to $10 markup. Members pay $5 markup, supporters pay $8 to $10.
- Hoodies: $10 to $15 markup. The higher base cost supports the higher markup.
- Hats: $8 to $12 markup. Embroidery production is consistent across the range, so the markup can be uniform.
- Polos: $8 to $12 markup. Officer-tier item with higher perceived value.
- Quarter-zips: $12 to $18 markup. Premium item, premium markup.
- Varsity jackets: $15 to $25 markup. Lifer-tier item, scarce by design, premium markup.
- Event shirts: $10 to $15 markup. Event pricing is above standard member pricing because of the collectible component.
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Single Price vs Tiered Pricing
Two approaches to handling the three-audience pricing:
- Single price for everyone: Pick a price that splits the difference between member and supporter pricing. Simpler to manage. Members feel slightly overcharged, supporters feel slightly undercharged. Most clubs run this approach.
- Member discount code: Set the public price at supporter pricing and give members a discount code that reduces it to member pricing. Members feel like they are getting a benefit, supporters pay the full price.
The discount code approach is recommended for clubs with strong member culture. Members appreciate the explicit benefit, and the club captures supporter revenue at full markup.
Sample Pricing Sheet for a 40-Member Club
Recommended Pricing (40-Member Club)
| Item | Base Cost | Member Price | Supporter Price | Avg Markup |
|---|
| Cotton tee | $20 | $25 | $30 | $7.50 |
| Performance tee | $23 | $28 | $33 | $7.50 |
| Pullover hoodie | $37 | $48 | $55 | $14.50 |
| Embroidered cap | $30 | $38 | $45 | $11.50 |
| Performance polo | $35 | $45 | $52 | $13.50 |
| Varsity jacket (lifer) | $60 | $75 | $95 | $25 |
| Annual event tee | $20 | $32 | $35 | $13.50 |
Pricing Mistakes to Avoid
Three pricing patterns that consistently fail:
- Running everything at cost: The club gets no treasury contribution from apparel. Founders and officers absorb the cost of the program in their own time without any operating budget to show for it.
- Running 50%+ markup on member tier: Members feel the club is profiting off them. Loyalty drops, members stop ordering, the program contracts.
- Pricing varsity jackets too low: The lifer jacket is supposed to be scarce and meaningful. Pricing it at $10 markup makes it feel like a tee with sleeves, not a milestone. $20+ markup keeps the perceived value high.
Set Member and Supporter Prices Today
Single shop, multiple price tiers. Member discount codes, supporter pricing, event markup. Treasury revenue flows automatically.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the right markup for car club shirts?
For member tier, $5 to $8 per shirt is standard. For supporter or public tier, $8 to $12 per shirt. For event tier, $10 to $15 per shirt. The exact markup depends on club culture and how much the apparel program is expected to fund the treasury.
Should members get a discount on club apparel?
Yes, in most cases. Members contribute time, dues, and labor to the club, and a small apparel discount recognizes that. Either set a single member price below the public price, or set the public price at full markup and give members a discount code.
How much annual treasury revenue can a club expect from apparel?
A 40-member club with a full apparel program (member, officer, event tiers) typically runs $2,000 to $4,000 a year in treasury revenue. A 100-member club running the same program runs $5,000 to $10,000+ depending on event attendance and supporter audience size.
Laila HassanBeauty and Lifestyle Studio Owner
Laila owns a salon and lifestyle studio in Miami after a decade in beauty industry sales. She writes about salon and spa branding, staff presentation, and the lifestyle-business apparel programs that turn customers into regulars.
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