Stop guessing—and stop losing money. This guide walks through the exact cost-plus formula our shop uses for every custom DTF order, with a free calculator to automate it all.
Sound familiar? These are the 3 most common DTF pricing mistakes:
- Not knowing how much extra to charge for small-batch orders (and eating the loss)
- Forgetting to include overhead until the invoice is already sent
- A competitor quotes lower—and you don't know if undercutting them would still leave you profitable
Pricing custom DTF orders accurately is make-or-break for your printing business. This guide breaks down the core DTF pricing formula, demystifies every cost component, and shows you how to use our free DTF price calculator to quote with confidence—every time.
The Core DTF Pricing Formula
Consistent, profitable DTF pricing hinges on a simple cost-plus framework. Vague estimates lead to lost revenue—this formula gives you a repeatable way to price any custom order, from 1 piece to 500.
Equipment Wear + Overhead + Profit Margin
Every variable in this formula is measurable—that's why it works. Let's break each one down with real numbers from our shop.
1. Material Costs (Ink, Film, Powder)
Materials are the backbone of DTF printing, and their costs hit your bottom line directly. We tested 12 popular DTF ink brands across 6 months of production runs to arrive at these benchmarks:
| Material | Cost per Sq Inch | Usage Notes | Example: 4×4" Design |
|---|---|---|---|
| DTF Ink | $0.05 – $0.10 | Scales with design color density | $0.80 – $1.60 |
| Transfer Film | $0.03 – $0.07 | Add 5–10% overage for test prints | $0.48 – $1.12 |
| Hot-Melt Powder | $0.01 – $0.02 | Consistent across design types | $0.16 – $0.32 |
| Total | $0.09 – $0.19 | Per square inch | $1.44 – $3.04 |
*Internal benchmark data based on testing 12 DTF ink brands, Q3–Q4 2024. Results vary by printer model and ink viscosity settings.
Pro Tip: Use a digital caliper to measure your design's exact dimensions before quoting. Rounding up by just 0.5 inches adds ~10% to material costs on small designs—it adds up fast on a 50-piece run.
2. Labor Costs for Custom DTF Orders
Custom orders require significantly more labor than standard prints—especially for small batches or complex multi-color designs. Here's how we calculate it at our shop, broken into four billable tasks:
Small-Batch Warning: For orders of 1–50 pieces, your per-unit labor cost jumps sharply. The same 30-minute setup applies whether you're printing 5 shirts or 50. Always factor setup time as a flat fee before calculating per-unit labor.
Real Example: 10-Piece Order with Custom Logo
3. Equipment Wear & Overhead
These "hidden" costs are the most commonly missed items in DTF pricing—and skipping them means your profit margin is quietly subsidizing your clients' orders.
Equipment Wear & Tear
Divide your equipment's total cost by its expected print lifespan:
Example: Our Epson F570 DTF printer cost $5,200 and is rated for 50,000 prints → $0.10 per print added to every unit.
Monthly Overhead
Include rent, utilities, insurance, software subscriptions, and consumables (printer cleaning kits, heat press pads, etc.).
Example: $1,200 monthly overhead ÷ 220 orders = $5.45 overhead per order.
4. Profit Margin: Set It by Order Type
Profit margin isn't one-size-fits-all. After 7 years of running custom DTF orders, here's the framework we use:
Premium pricing tip: Clients requesting 24–48 hour rush turnaround will pay 20–30% more without pushback. Build a "rush fee" tier into your quoting process from day one.
Get Your Quote in 60 Seconds
Already know your costs? Our free DTF price calculator does the math automatically—just plug in your numbers.
→ Calculate My DTF Order Price Now — It's FreeNo email required. Works on mobile.
Putting It All Together: Full Pricing Example
Here's a complete calculation for a real order: 25 custom t-shirts with a 4×4" logo design.
25-Piece Order · 4×4" Custom Logo · Standard Margin
By following this formula, you'll stop underpricing—and start building a business where every order improves your bottom line.

