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Greek Chapter Apparel Revenue Math

March 13, 2026 7 min read By Hannah Kowalski
Quick Answer
Table of Contents
  1. Baseline Letter Apparel Revenue
  2. Event-Based Revenue Layers
  3. Markup Strategy and Member Pricing
  4. Affiliate Layer and Side Income
  5. Scaling to Large Chapter and Alumni Programs
  6. Frequently Asked Questions
A Greek chapter apparel shop generates passive chapter revenue through retail markup on print-on-demand orders. Here are the realistic earning numbers by chapter size, event lineup, and markup level, plus the math on how each layer of chapter apparel program stacks into total annual revenue.

Baseline: Standard Letter Apparel Across the Year

The baseline chapter apparel revenue assumes only the core letter apparel program: chapter letter tee, hoodie, and hat available year-round. Most chapters can sustain this on the free Pro Shops tier (3 products) or the $59/month VIP tier (200 products).

Chapter SizeItems Per Member Per YearMarkupAnnual Revenue
25 members3$12$900
50 members3$12$1,800
75 members3$12$2,700
100 members3$12$3,600
150 members3$12$5,400

The math: Chapter Size x Items Per Member Per Year x Markup = Annual Revenue

Three items per member is the conservative baseline. Active chapter members in chapters with strong identity often buy 5-7 chapter items across the year (multiple letter shirts in different colors, the hoodie, the hat, plus seasonal items). The chapter can run the math both ways: baseline as a floor, active member behavior as the realistic case.

Event Revenue: Bid Day, Big Little, Philanthropy, Class Shirts

Each chapter event with apparel attached adds a separate revenue layer on top of the baseline:

EventAudiencePer-Event Revenue (50-member chapter)
Bid day shirts40 new members + 30 actives buy keepsake$840 ($12 markup x 70 shirts)
Big little reveal week40 NMs x 3 family shirts each$1,440 ($12 x 120 shirts)
Pledge class shirts40 new members$480 ($12 x 40)
Fall philanthropy event200 donor participants$2,400 ($12 x 200)
Spring philanthropy event150 donor participants$1,800 ($12 x 150)
Senior week shirts15 seniors + 35 underclass keepsake$600 ($12 x 50)
Officer polos7 officers, often subsidized$0-200 depending on coverage

For a 50-member chapter running a full event calendar, the event layer alone generates approximately $7,500 per year on top of the $1,800 baseline. Total: $9,300 per year in chapter revenue.

For a chapter where event apparel partially covers chapter philanthropy obligations or chapter treasury costs (housing fees, formal hosting, alumni events), the apparel program effectively replaces ad-hoc fundraisers and generates more reliable income.

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How to Set Markup Without Members Pushing Back

The markup ceiling depends on perceived chapter cost compared to retail Greek apparel from competitors. Members compare chapter prices to what they would pay at Custom Ink, traditional Greek vendors, or local screen print shops. The sweet spot is matching or slightly under retail Greek apparel pricing while still generating chapter margin.

Typical Greek apparel retail prices:

Chapter pricing that lands at the lower end of those ranges with no upfront chapter cost, no shipping fees to members, and no minimum order is universally well-received. The chapter generates margin per shirt, members get a fair retail price, and the order convenience is dramatically better than coordinating with a traditional vendor.

For chapters that want to be transparent about the chapter funding role, a one-line note in the chapter shop home page (something like "Every purchase contributes to chapter treasury and philanthropy fund") establishes the connection. Members lean in rather than push back when the chapter benefit is clear.

The Affiliate Layer for the Merch Chair

Beyond the chapter shop revenue, the chapter's affiliate link earns 10% of any referred shop's monthly subscription plus $1 per unit they sell, forever, paid bi-weekly. For a chapter merch chair who actively promotes the program to other chapters, alumni boards, and campus organizations, the affiliate layer can become a personal income stream.

Realistic affiliate income math:

ReferralsEach PaysMonthly Affiliate IncomeAnnual
5 chapters$59/month$29.50 + $1 per unit sold (estimated $50)~$950
15 chapters$59/month$88.50 + $150 unit volume~$2,850
30 chaptersMix of $59-109$240 + $300 unit volume~$6,500

For a chapter merch chair who treats the role as a personal portfolio builder rather than a one-semester task, the combination of chapter treasury revenue (which the chapter keeps) and personal affiliate revenue (which goes to the merch chair) can be a meaningful side income through the four years of chapter service.

Chapter Programs That Hit Five Figures

The largest chapter apparel programs in active operation reach $15,000-30,000 per year in chapter revenue. These programs typically involve:

Chapters at this scale typically run on the Done-For-You VIP tier ($109/month) where Bear Grips handles design rotation, mockup creation, and lineup management. The chapter focuses on the chapter program; the apparel program runs as professionally as any external vendor would.

For a chapter generating $20,000+ per year in apparel revenue, the $1,308 annual platform cost ($109/month) is a 1.5% expense ratio. Most chapters at scale find the operational time saved more valuable than the cash cost.

Run the Revenue Math for Your Own Chapter

Set up a free Pro Shop, plug in your chapter size and markup, watch the math compound across events. Zero inventory, free shipping to members.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much can a Greek chapter earn from an apparel shop per year?

A 50-member chapter with a baseline letter apparel program earns approximately $1,800 per year. Adding philanthropy events, bid day, big little reveal, and class shirts brings total annual revenue to $7,000-10,000. The largest active chapter programs reach $15,000-30,000 per year.

What markup should a chapter set on apparel?

Most chapters set a $10-15 markup per item, which keeps retail pricing in line with traditional Greek vendor prices and generates real revenue at chapter scale. The exact markup depends on member tolerance, perceived retail comparison pricing, and chapter philanthropy goals.

Can a chapter use the apparel program as the primary fundraiser?

For active chapters with a full event calendar, the apparel program can generate enough to cover chapter treasury obligations, philanthropy commitments, and operating costs. Many chapters use it alongside one or two larger fundraising events rather than as the sole funding source.

Does the merch chair earn personal income from the shop?

The chapter shop revenue goes to the chapter treasury. The merch chair can separately use the affiliate program to refer other chapters, alumni boards, or campus organizations and earn personal affiliate commissions (10% of subscription plus $1 per unit) on those referrals.

Hannah Kowalski
Hannah KowalskiSchool Spirit and Greek Life Specialist

Hannah works in a state university Greek life office and previously taught middle school. She writes about school spirit programs, sorority and fraternity ordering cycles, and how K-12 programs handle the apparel side of community building.

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