A DTF printing business can generate roughly $15+ in gross profit per shirt in a lean setup when pricing is planned carefully — for example, a $20 shirt with about $4.50 in blank-and-print costs. Gross margins after the blank and transfer, but before labor, platform fees, advertising, and overhead, may often fall in the 50–80% range. Profit varies significantly by product: a printed tote, UV DTF tumbler, or hoodie may earn more per sale than a basic T-shirt. A committed solo seller may build toward $500–$2,000/month after several months — but actual results depend on product mix, pricing, marketing, and order volume.
"How much can I actually make?" is the first real question every custom-apparel seller asks — and most articles answer it with one shirt and one number. Reality is messier: the same printer makes wildly different profit depending on what you print, which hidden costs you forgot, and how you climb from your first order to your hundredth.
One of our customers, Johanna Suarez (@jpsisterss), who runs her shop on a Haolic XP600, put it simply: "It's been the absolute backbone of my shop, letting me handle high-volume orders with ease."

This guide is the money deep-dive behind a quote like that — which products earn most, the hidden costs that quietly eat your margin, and the realistic path from side hustle to full-time income. All with cited industry references and illustrative 2026 estimates.
Want your real number, not an average? Plug in your costs:
Open the Free Profit Calculator →Surface Profit vs. Real Profit: The Number That Fools Beginners
Here's the trap. You sell a shirt for $25, the blank cost $5, so you "made $20." That's surface profit — tempting, but incomplete. Your real profit is what's left after every cost, including the ones you can't see on the invoice.
| The Quick Math | The Real Math | |
|---|---|---|
| Selling price | $25.00 | $25.00 |
| Blank shirt | − $5.00 | − $5.00 |
| Transfer (ink + film + powder) | — | − $1.50 |
| Packaging | — | − $0.75 |
| Payment + platform fee | — | − $1.00 |
| Waste / reprint buffer | — | − $0.40 |
| Your labor (15 min) | — | − $3.00 |
| What you actually keep | $20.00 😍 | ≈ $13.35 😅 |
Still a healthy margin. In DTF apparel, gross margins may often fall in the 50–80% range after blank and transfer costs, but before labor, selling fees, advertising, and overhead. But the seller who budgets for $20 and the seller who budgets for $13.35 make very different pricing decisions. Build your pricing around real profit.
Which Products Actually Earn the Most?
This is the question almost no "how much can you make" article answers — and it's the most important one. The same DTF transfer can go on a $4 tote or a $45 hoodie. Because the cost of a similar-sized print stays relatively consistent across different blanks, the product you choose changes your profit dramatically.
Here's a realistic comparison using 2026 industry figures (illustrative — your costs will vary):

| Product | Blank + Print Cost | Typical Sell Price | Profit / Item | Why |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T-Shirt | ≈ $6–$8 | $22–$28 | ≈ $14–$18 | The reliable bread-and-butter. Huge demand, easy to make. |
| Tote Bag | ≈ $3–$5 | $18–$25 | ≈ $13–$20 | Cheap blank, small print (~$0.96 in supplies), high perceived value. Underrated margin. |
| Tumbler / Cup (UV DTF) | ≈ $4–$7 | $22–$35 | ≈ $16–$28 | UV DTF wraps give a premium look buyers pay a premium for. Top margin per item. |
| Hoodie | ≈ $18–$24 | $45–$60 | ≈ $20–$34 | Highest cash profit per sale — but pricier blank ties up more money up front. |
| Hat / Cap | ≈ $4–$6 | $18–$26 | ≈ $12–$18 | Tiny print (~$0.11 in supplies), but needs the right placement technique. |
The sellers with the best margins rarely sell just shirts. They mix a cheap-blank, high-perceived-value item (tote or tumbler) for fat percentage margins with a premium item (hoodie) for big cash profit per order — then bundle them to raise the average order value.
The Hidden Costs That Quietly Eat Your Margin
This is where real businesses lose money they didn't see coming. None of these show up when you calculate "blank + transfer," but all of them are real:
Your own labor
The most-skipped cost. If a shirt takes 15 minutes end-to-end and you value your time at $12/hr, that's $3 per shirt gone. If you don't pay yourself, you don't have a business — you have a tiring hobby.
Returns, remakes & mistakes
Wrong size, a press that didn't cure right, a customer who changed their mind. Budget a few percent of revenue for this — it's highest when you're new and still dialing in settings.
Platform & ad fees
Etsy and Shopify take a cut of every sale, and if you run ads to get seen, that's more margin gone. These scale with revenue, so build them into your price from day one.
Printer upkeep
Cleaning solution, wipes, and filters run about $30–$60/month if you print daily. White ink especially needs regular circulation — skip maintenance and you get clogs and downtime, which is lost income.
Cash tied up in inventory
Blanks, film, ink, and seasonal stock all cost money before you sell anything. Hoodies tie up the most. This isn't a loss, but it's cash you can't spend twice — plan for it, especially before busy seasons.
What You'll Realistically Take Home
Let's translate per-item profit into monthly reality. Using a conservative $8 take-home profit per item after the hidden costs above, here's how volume could scale under a set of practical operating assumptions:
~5 orders / week
About 20 items a month. Small but real — and this is the learning phase where you dial in settings, build reviews, and find your niche.
~20 orders / week
About 80 items a month → meaningful side income. Repeat customers and word-of-mouth start carrying you.
~100 orders / week
About $800/week. A genuine business — but it needs systems, consistency, and often a second machine or help.
For context on where this lands you: third-party industry estimates suggest that an active Etsy seller may earn somewhere around $500–$2,000/month, while serious full-timers can reach $2,000–$7,000/month. Encouragingly, this market is built for individuals — third-party industry data suggests that many Etsy sellers work from home and run their shops solo. The honest flip side: a significant share of casual sellers earn very little, often because they underprice their products, market inconsistently, or treat the business as an occasional hobby.
The Side-Hustle-to-Full-Time Ladder
The scenarios above are rungs, not a single leap. Here's how sellers actually climb from their first order to full-time — and what to focus on at each stage:
| Stage | Focus | What changes |
|---|---|---|
| Month 1–2 Prove it works |
Nail your workflow & first reviews | Print test pieces, perfect your press settings, list 1 hero product, get your first 5–10 sales. Don't worry about volume yet. |
| Month 3–4 Find your margin |
Raise prices & add products | You'll know your real costs now. Stop underpricing. Add a second product (tote or tumbler) to lift average order value. |
| Month 5–6 Build momentum |
Repeat buyers & bundles | This is often the stage where consistent income starts to become possible. Bundle products, encourage repeat orders, lean into your best niche. |
| Month 6+ Scale up |
Capacity & systems | When orders outpace your hours, that's the signal to add a faster/second machine or get help — not before. |
Why Owning Your Printer Wins in 2026
Many sellers start with print-on-demand (POD) — a third party prints and ships for you. It's easy and requires less upfront investment, but you hand over part of the margin on every sale. Printful and Printify announced their merger in late 2024 and continue to operate as separate brands within FYUL, bringing two major POD ecosystems closer together. For independent sellers, this may increase catalog overlap and make product differentiation even more important.
| At 100 orders / month (illustrative) | In-House (own printer) |
Outsourced (POD) |
|---|---|---|
| Margin kept per order | Full markup is yours | Shared with the platform |
| Example monthly difference | In one illustrative industry analysis at 100 orders per month, in-house printing earned roughly $650/month more than outsourcing. | |
| You also control | Turnaround time, product quality, and your brand experience | |

Ready to compare machines? See which fits your stage in the DTF Printer Buying Guide, or browse Haolic's top DTF printers.
Frequently Asked Questions
What product makes the most profit with a DTF printer?
How much profit do you really make per shirt?
What hidden costs do beginners forget?
How much can a beginner realistically earn per month?
Is it better to own a printer or use print-on-demand?
How fast does a DTF printer pay for itself?
See Exactly What You'd Make
Averages are a starting point — your real profit depends on your products and costs. Plug in your numbers and see your profit per item, margin, and payback in seconds.
• Printful — Printful and Printify Announce Merger (official announcement, November 2024).
• FYUL — About (company history and brand structure).
• xTool — DTF Printing Costs 2026 (supply cost by print size: tee ~$1.18, tote ~$0.96, cap ~$0.11; margins 60–80%; maintenance $30–$60/mo; DTF apparel vs. UV DTF hard-surface workflows).
• We Must — Small-Business ROI 2026 ($20/$4.50/$15.50; expand product range to maximize profit).
• Raccoon Transfers & Cobra DTF (product & bundle profit comparisons); TX Maya (UV DTF premium perceived value); DTF PrintCo & Southeast Prints (pricing formula, 30–60% markup); InkSonic (in-house vs outsource ~$650/mo difference).
• Printify, Bents Magazine & other industry trackers (Etsy seller income estimates — figures are industry approximations, not official Etsy data).
All figures are industry-reported averages or illustrative assumptions and will vary by individual seller. Income figures cited for Etsy and similar platforms are third-party estimates, not official platform data. This article is for educational purposes and is not a guarantee of income.