Most custom apparel suppliers require a minimum order of 12-24 shirts. For a small mountain biking trail crew of six people or a newly formed MTB club with ten members, that minimum forces a bulk purchase that most of the group never ordered and nobody wanted to manage. At Bear Grips Pro Shops, there is no minimum. Five riders get five shirts. A club of ten gets exactly ten. Here is why no-minimum custom MTB shirts change how small riding groups approach their apparel programs.
Screen printers and traditional custom apparel suppliers set minimums because their printing process (screen setup, film burning, press registration) has a fixed cost that only makes sense spread across many shirts. The minimum protects their margin, not yours.
Print-on-demand removes that constraint. Each shirt is printed digitally, individually, when an order comes in. The cost structure does not change based on volume. This means:
For a small MTB club or trail crew starting a shop for the first time, the simplest effective setup:
Most small clubs start with one design and $0 upfront. The first order might be the club founder ordering their own shirt to verify the design. From there, the shop link goes in the club chat and members order individually, whenever they want.
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.Trail maintenance crews are among the best use cases for no-minimum custom MTB shirts. Trail work is typically organized through volunteer networks with inconsistent attendance. Pre-ordering shirts for a trail work day involves guessing how many people will show up, which sizes they will need, and whether they will actually come back next month.
The better approach: open the shop two weeks before a major trail work event, share the link with the volunteer email list, and let participants pre-order their shirts. People who committed to ordering a shirt are more likely to show up to the work day. People who do not order are not pre-committed to attending.
Trail crew shirt design ideas that convert well:
The natural growth arc for a small MTB club shop:
Phase 1 (founding, under 50 members): one design, free plan, share the link in the group chat. Five to fifteen shirts sold in the first month. Revenue covers a tank of gas for a trail trip.
Phase 2 (growing, 50-200 members): add a second design (seasonal event or funny MTB slogan shirt). Upgrade to Self-Service VIP ($59/month) to access lower base prices and higher margin per shirt. Revenue grows to cover trail maintenance costs.
Phase 3 (established, 200+ members): seasonal launches, limited event shirts, hat and hoodie in the lineup. Revenue covers race entry sponsorships, trail equipment purchases, and club events. See the full club shop revenue guide for the math at each stage.
The no-minimum model makes this growth path low-risk at every stage. A club never has to commit to bulk inventory to move from one phase to the next.
Five riders or five hundred. Custom club shirts with no bulk commitment. Free shop, free shipping, US printed.
Start FreeSet up your shop, add a design, share the link. Each member visits the link, chooses their size, and pays. The shirt is printed and shipped to their home. You never handle money, inventory, or shipping. The margin transfers to your account automatically.
The base cost is the same whether you order one shirt or one hundred. You do not pay a premium for small orders. The VIP plan ($59/month) gives you the lowest base price per shirt regardless of order volume.
Yes. Set up the shop with your design before the first ride. Share the link when you recruit your first riders. The shop grows with the club.
Those three people order that design. No minimum means those three shirts print and ship individually. You do not need to wait for more demand or commit anyone else to a purchase.