Custom Apparel Business From Home: No Inventory, No Storefront Required
Quick Answer- A custom apparel business from home requires no physical storefront, no inventory, and no production equipment.
- Print on demand fulfills orders directly from a US printing network to buyers after each order is placed.
- For fitness businesses, the home-based model means merch income without adding operational complexity.
- Setup takes under an hour. The shop runs automatically without daily management.
A custom apparel business from home through print on demand means you never see, handle, or store a single shirt. Orders come in through your shop link, products are printed by the fulfillment network, and items ship directly to buyers within about a week. Your physical location is irrelevant. You manage the shop from a browser: uploading designs, adjusting prices, reviewing orders. Everything else happens without your involvement. For fitness business owners, this means merch income without adding any operational overhead to an already busy schedule.
What You Actually Need to Run a Custom Apparel Business From Home
The minimum requirements:
- A logo or design file: PNG at 300 DPI or higher with transparent background, or a vector file. This is the only file you need to produce.
- An internet connection and browser: The entire shop operation runs through the Bear Grips Pro Shops dashboard. No software installation, no special hardware.
- An existing community to share the link with: This is the non-technical requirement that most matters. The shop generates income when people visit it. Without a distribution channel (gym members, run club, email list, social following), the shop has no traffic.
That is the full list. No warehouse, no printer, no packaging supplies, no shipping account, no storefront. The Bear Grips Pro Shops network handles all of these elements after each order is placed.
How Much Time Does a Home-Based Apparel Business Require?
After initial setup, the ongoing time commitment for a fitness business running a POD apparel shop:
- Setup (one-time): 30-60 minutes. Account creation, logo upload, product selection, price setting.
- Monthly shop maintenance: 15-30 minutes. Reviewing orders, adding seasonal products, adjusting pricing if needed.
- Promotion: 10-30 minutes per promotion cycle. Sending a shop link to members, posting on Instagram, or mentioning it in class. Not required every week for an established shop, but promotion events drive order spikes.
A gym owner with 120 members running an established merch shop spends approximately 30-45 minutes per month on total shop management. The rest is passive. For the $900-1,500 in annual income this generates, the time-per-dollar ratio is favorable compared to any service-based income at similar scale.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.
Home-Based Self-Service vs Done-For-You: Which Fits Your Situation
Bear Grips Pro Shops offers two approaches for running a home-based custom apparel business:
- Self-Service VIP ($59/month): You manage the shop yourself from home. Full control over product selection, pricing, and design. Best for owners who want to be involved in shop decisions and have 30-60 minutes per month to dedicate.
- Done-For-You VIP ($109/month): You send your logo once a month. Bear Grips Pro Shops builds and maintains the entire shop: product selection, mockup creation, description writing, and pricing. Best for gym owners, coaches, and club directors who want the income without any ongoing management. The shop operates on autopilot after the initial DFY setup.
For most fitness business owners working long hours, the DFY option pays for itself quickly if the merch shop generates $1,000+ per year in income. The delta between self-service and DFY cost ($50/month) is covered by 4-5 additional shirt sales per month at standard margins.
Scaling Your Home-Based Fitness Apparel Business
A home-based fitness apparel business scales through three channels:
- Grow the community: More gym members, more run club participants, more coaching clients. Every new paying community member is a potential apparel buyer.
- Add product categories: A shop with shirts earns X. A shop with shirts, hats, sweatshirts, and seasonal items earns 2-3X from the same community. Each product addition is an incremental revenue layer with no new operational complexity.
- Build an affiliate income layer: Refer other fitness business owners to Bear Grips Pro Shops. Earn 10% of their subscription indefinitely. A network of 5 referred gym owners each on the VIP plan generates $354/year in passive commission income that requires no additional shop work.
See the POD side hustle guide for the full income mechanics.
Start a Home-Based Fitness Apparel Business
No storefront, no inventory, no equipment. Upload your logo, share the link, earn from home.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can I run a custom apparel business from home as a sole proprietor?
Yes. Most fitness business apparel side hustles operate as sole proprietors in their early stages. You open the vendor account as an individual, report income on your personal tax return, and operate without a formal business entity. If income becomes significant, consult a tax professional about whether a business entity structure makes sense for your situation.
Do I need a business bank account for a home-based apparel business?
Not to get started. Payouts from Bear Grips Pro Shops can go to a personal bank account. If you operate the apparel side hustle as a formal business, a separate business account simplifies bookkeeping. Many fitness business owners keep their merch income in the same account as their primary business income until the scale justifies separation.
Can I run multiple fitness businesses on one Bear Grips Pro Shops account?
Vendor accounts are typically set up per shop. If you operate multiple businesses (a gym and a separate run club, for example), consult with Bear Grips Pro Shops about the best account structure for managing multiple shops.
Cameron WellsCustom Apparel and POD Industry Writer
Cameron has been writing about the custom apparel and print on demand industry for seven years, with a background in e-commerce operations. He covers platform comparisons, no-minimum vendors, and what is changing for small custom merch businesses.
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