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Custom Pressure Washing Company Shirts: Branded Crew Apparel That Builds Trust

February 14, 2026 6 min read By Brandon Holt
Quick Answer
Table of Contents
  1. Why branded apparel matters
  2. What to stock
  3. Wet-work fabric notes
  4. Set up in 30 minutes
  5. Issued vs sold
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

Custom pressure washing company shirts are one of the cheapest ways a wash business owner can look established before the truck even pulls into the driveway. A two-truck pressure washing outfit in matching logo polos reads bigger and more trustworthy than the same crew in mismatched plain tees. The old barrier was the bulk order: $250-$400 upfront for two dozen shirts, weeks of turnaround, and a new headache every time you hire. Single-piece printing through Bear Grips Pro Shops removes that friction. Here is how to set up a branded shop for your pressure washing or soft wash business and what to stock first.

Why Branded Apparel Matters for a Pressure Washing Business

What to Stock for a Pressure Washing Company Shop

PieceUseBrandVIP base
Airlume cotton teeCasual days, office, referralsBear Grips$19.88
Moisture-wicking performance teeHot, humid wash days, quick dry between jobsSport-Tek$23.86
Moisture-wicking long sleeveSun and overspray protectionSport-Tek$29.88
Performance poloQuotes, estimates, customer walkthroughsSport-Tek$34.88
Comfort soft hoodieEarly morning starts, cold-season jobsBear Grips$36.88
Embroidered snapback hatSun coverage, brand visibility on every jobYupoong$29.86

A six-piece starter shop covers hot-day work, cold mornings, customer-facing quotes, and brand visibility on every truck stop and driveway. Add pieces as your crew tells you what they actually reach for.

Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.

Fabric Notes for Wet, Humid Work

Pressure washing and soft washing crews spend the day near water, overspray, and cleaning chemical mist. Two fabric choices matter more here than in most trades:

Set Up the Shop in 30 Minutes

  1. Sign up for the free plan (3 products) or Self-Service VIP ($59/mo, 200 products).
  2. Upload your company logo as a transparent PNG.
  3. List your starter pieces. Most owners begin with a performance tee, a long sleeve, a polo, a hoodie, and a hat.
  4. Set retail prices. Working zone: $28-$32 tees, $32-$38 long sleeves, $48-$55 polos, $55-$65 hoodies, $28-$32 hats.
  5. Share the shop link with your crew and post it under your before-and-after social content.

Full setup details live on the pressure washing shop page.

Issued vs Sold: How Wash Company Owners Handle Crew Apparel

Two working models for getting branded apparel onto a pressure washing crew:

Most working pressure washing companies do a hybrid: issue one performance tee and one polo at hire, let the rest of the wardrobe (hoodie, long sleeve, hat) come from self-serve. See the full uniform breakdown for the role-by-role version.

Open Your Pressure Washing Company Shop

Tees, polos, hoodies, hats, all branded. No minimum, no upfront cost, ships in about a week.

Start Free

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to commit to a minimum order?

No. Single-piece printing is the same price structure as a large order. A new hire in week two can order one tee, no problem.

Will performance fabric hold up to pressure washing chemicals?

The moisture-wicking polyester tees and long sleeves handle sweat, water, and overspray well for daily wear. For direct chemical-soaked PPE during mixing and application, use your specialty safety gear supplier and wear the branded piece over or after that step.

How fast can a new hire get their first crew shirt?

About a week from order to door. Order on day one and the shirt lands in time for the first full week on the truck.

Can I print the front and back of the same shirt?

Yes. Company name and logo on the front chest, phone number and service area on the back, at no extra setup fee.

Brandon Holt
Brandon HoltService Industry Operator

Brandon owns a regional contracting company and previously ran an HVAC service business. He writes about trade-business branding, crew uniforms, and the apparel decisions service operators make to win local trust.

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