Wrestling Team Apparel Wholesale: Warmups and Spirit Gear Without the Minimum
Quick Answer- This covers warmup and spirit apparel, not the singlet or competition mat gear.
- Wrestling programs typically fundraise around a season hoodie and a weigh-in day tee.
- The catalog has youth and adult sizing for team, parent, and alumni orders.
- No case-lot minimum, so a single wrestler or a full varsity roster order the same way.
A wrestling program searching for wholesale apparel usually means the warmup and spirit gear layer, not the competition singlet, which is a specialty fit item that belongs with a wrestling gear manufacturer. Here is how programs typically build a fundraising shop around season hoodies, weigh-in tees, and travel gear without committing to a case-lot wholesale order.
What Fits a Wrestling Team Shop (and What Does Not)
Singlets, headgear, and mat shoes are specialty performance gear that need a dedicated wrestling equipment supplier. What print-on-demand covers well is everything the program wears off the mat: practice tees, the season hoodie, travel joggers, and parent or sibling spirit shirts sold at home duals and tournaments.
Wrestling Program Product Lineup
| Piece | Brand | VIP base | Use |
| Mens moisture-wicking tee | Sport-Tek | $23.86 | Practice and weigh-in day |
| Youth moisture-wicking tee | Sport-Tek | $23.88 | Youth wrestling club |
| Unisex Champion performance hoodie | Champion | $45.88 | Season signature piece, tournament travel |
| Mens midweight performance joggers | Independent Trading Co. | $40.88 | Warmup and cut-weight comfort |
| Perfect Soft crewneck sweatshirt | Bear Grips | $34.88 | Coach and parent apparel |
| Youth crewneck sweatshirt | Gildan | $33.88 | Youth club spirit wear |
Bear Grips Pro Shops: Custom Apparel for Your Team. No Minimums. Free Shipping.
Design Ideas Wrestling Programs Actually Use
- Weight class roster printed on the back of the season hoodie, a design wrestlers want to keep.
- Dual meet or tournament date list as a back print, functions as a schedule and a souvenir.
- Team motto or mat-side callout on the front chest, kept simple and bold since wrestling graphics read best without fine detail.
- Senior night design for graduating wrestlers as a one-time limited run.
Revenue Math for a Program Fundraiser
A hoodie at $45.88 base sold at $60 nets $14.12 per piece; a tee at $23.86 base sold at $30 nets $6.14. A 24-wrestler roster selling one hoodie and one tee per family across a season adds roughly $490-$550 in program fundraising margin, with no upfront order and nothing left over once the season ends.
Setting Up the Wrestling Program Shop
- Sign up for the free plan or Self-Service VIP ($59/mo, 200 products).
- Upload the team logo or mascot artwork.
- List the season hoodie first, since it typically outsells every other piece.
- Add youth sizing if the program runs a youth club feeder team.
- Share the link before the season's first home dual so parents can order in time for early meets.
Start Your Wrestling Program Shop
Season hoodies, practice tees, and travel gear with your team logo. No minimum, youth sizing included.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Can this program print an actual singlet?
No. Singlets and mat gear are specialty fit items that need a dedicated wrestling equipment manufacturer. This program covers warmup and spirit apparel around the mat gear.
What is the best-selling piece for a wrestling program shop?
The season hoodie with a weight class roster or schedule on the back is typically the top seller, followed by the practice tee.
Is there a minimum order for a small youth club?
No. A single wrestler's order and a full varsity roster order both work the same way, one piece at a time.
Do you have youth sizing for a feeder or club team?
Yes. Youth moisture-wicking tees and youth crewneck sweatshirts are in the catalog alongside adult sizing.
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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