Here is something most troop leaders overlook: hats sell faster than shirts at outdoor events. Whether it is a summer camp, a hiking day, or a community service project, a well-designed snapback or mesh cap becomes the item every kid wants. This post breaks down which hat styles work for Girl Scout troops and how to add them to any custom apparel setup with zero minimum order.
Shirts require sizing. Hats do not. An adjustable snapback or rope cap fits virtually every head, which eliminates the most common friction point in group apparel orders. Leaders do not need to collect sizes, and parents do not need to worry about ordering wrong.
Hats also photograph well. A row of scouts in matching caps looks sharp in troop photos without requiring everyone to change clothes. For social media posts or troop newsletters, that matters.
At outdoor events specifically, hats have a functional angle that shirts do not. Shade and sun protection make them practical, which helps parents justify the purchase even if they would pass on a shirt.
Not every hat style translates well to troop use. Here are the three that work:
Structured flat bill snapbacks are also available for troops that want a more modern streetwear look, which some older cadette and senior troops prefer.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.Hat design has one constraint shirts do not: the printable area is smaller. A strong hat design needs to read well at a distance on a small patch or front panel.
What works:
What does not work: dense text, gradients, and anything requiring a large printable area. Keep it simple, and the hat becomes a clean statement piece rather than a busy design that does not translate.
Embroidered styles (flat bill snapback) carry a more premium feel and hold up better to outdoor use. Printed styles (rope hat, mesh snapback) offer more color and design flexibility.
Hats pair well with shirts on a fundraiser merch table because they serve a different customer. Some parents will buy a hat who would not buy a shirt. Some scouts want both.
A three-item table setup that works:
Hats at a $22-25 retail price point carry about $8-12 in margin on top of the base cost, which is competitive with shirt margins at lower retail prices. They are also impulse buys because the price is lower and sizing is not a concern.
If you are running a pre-order fundraiser online, adding hats as a second product doubles the per-customer average order value with almost no additional effort.
A simple online troop shop eliminates the coordination overhead of tracking paper orders and collecting payments. Parents order directly, pay at checkout, and the order ships to their door.
For leaders managing multiple events throughout the year, an online shop keeps one consistent storefront open year-round rather than running a separate campaign for each event. Hats stay listed alongside shirts, and new parents joining mid-year can still order without chasing down leftover inventory.
No upfront cost, no minimum quantity, and no inventory to manage makes this practical for volunteer-led troops where bandwidth is always limited.
Open a free troop shop and list hats alongside shirts. No inventory, no minimums, no volunteer coordination overhead.
Start FreeYes. Troop numbers in bold block lettering are one of the most popular hat designs. They read clearly on the small front panel and identify the troop immediately in group photos.
There is no minimum. You can order one hat or one hundred with the same per-item base price. This makes it practical for small troops or to test a design before a larger event.
Adjustable styles (snapbacks, rope hats, lifestyle caps) fit both youth and adults without separate sizing. One design covers the whole troop including parents and leaders.
Custom hats typically ship within the same production window as shirts, around 3-5 business days plus transit. Order at least two weeks before any event to have buffer time.