Most Memphis live-printing events land between $5K and $15K all-in, but the real number depends on a few levers you control. Here is how pricing actually works so you can budget before you ask for a quote.
What drives the price
- Guest count & print volume - the biggest factor. More shirts means more press time, more blanks, and sometimes a second station.
- Hours on site - a two-hour activation and an all-day Renasant Convention Center booths setup are very different quotes.
- Garments & goods - a basic tee, a premium hoodie, a cap for the hat bar, or promo goods each carry different blank costs.
- Print method - screen printing is efficient at volume; DTF handles full color and small runs; embroidery is the premium finish.
- Travel - local the Mid-South events are simplest; distance and load-in complexity add to it.
What is always included
Every Memphis quote covers the crew, presses, garments, setup and teardown, and every print - one itemized number, sent within 24 hours. No per-piece surprises on the day of the event.
Quick way to scope it: tell us your headcount, the run time, and whether you want one station or a few. We will size the setup to the room and send a real number, not a generic menu.
How to keep it efficient
If budget is tight, a single high-throughput screen-print station at a busy FedExForum game nights usually delivers the most pieces per dollar. If the goal is a premium guest moment, a smaller hat-bar or embroidery station reads as more valuable per piece. See pricing and cost FAQs, then send your event details.
Memphis proof
Local proof before the presses roll in
For Memphis, the page you are reading is planned around real venue constraints, not a generic merch table. We map the nearest load-in, the available power, the line path, and the point where guests choose garments before they reach the press. That planning is what keeps the station looking sharp at Renasant Convention Center, a Downtown & Convention Center private event, or a smaller activation near FedExForum.
Merch Troop is based in Fullerton and travels with the same live-event production kit: presses, flash dryers, heat presses, blanks, folding tables, signage, and trained printers. A standard station needs roughly 10x10 ft and two 120V circuits, and a two-press setup can clear 100+ shirts per hour when the design menu is simple.