The biggest barrier to starting screen printing isn’t skill or space.
It’s confusion about money.
Search “screen printing startup cost” and you’ll find estimates from $100 to $5,000. Completely contradictory advice that leaves beginners paralyzed.
Some say you can print with household items. Others insist professional equipment is mandatory from day one.
This guide gives you actual numbers based on real home printing setups. You’ll see what you pay once, what you pay repeatedly, and what different budget levels actually get you.
Whether you’re testing a hobby or starting a side business, you’ll know exactly what screen printing costs.
One-Time Startup Costs
Screens (your primary investment)
Pre-stretched aluminum frames:
- $15-30 each
- You’ll want at least 2 to start
- One for printing, one being prepped for next design
- They last years if you reclaim them properly
Wood frames:
- Cheaper at $10-15
- But they warp with moisture
- Creates tension problems later
What you need: 2-4 screens initially Budget: $60-120
Squeegees
The range:
- Basic rubber: $10
- Professional with replaceable blades: $40
What you actually need:
- One good 70-durometer squeegee
- 9-12 inch range
- Handles most beginner projects
Budget: $15-25
You don’t need a collection. You need one that fits your screen size.
Ink
Plastisol:
- Quarts run $18-25
- Prints roughly 80-120 shirts (depends on design size)
Water-based:
- $15-20 per quart
- Slightly cheaper but requires more technique
Starting out: Get 1-2 colors Budget: $40-60
Emulsion and chemistry
What you need upfront:
- Quart of diazo emulsion: $25-40 (coats 30-50 screens)
- Emulsion remover: $12-18
- Degreaser: $10-15
- Scoop coater: $15-25
Total chemistry and coating supplies: $60-100
This initial purchase lasts months.
Light source for exposing screens
Budget option:
- $30 halogen work light
- Takes longer but works identically
Pro option:
- $400 dedicated exposure unit
- Faster, more consistent
Start with the halogen. Seriously.
Curing options
The progression most people follow:
- Heat gun: $15 (hard to cure evenly)
- Used heat press: $150 (ideal)
- Flash dryer: $300 (professional)
Most home printers start with heat guns and upgrade to heat presses within a few months.
Budget: $30-150 depending on your choice
Total first-time investment:
- Absolute basics: $200-250
- Solid beginner setup: $400-600
- Quality-of-life upgrades included: $800-1,000
Ongoing Costs Per Print
Once you’re set up, the per-shirt cost drops dramatically.
Ink usage
One-color front chest design (plastisol):
- $0.20-0.50 per print
Large, full-coverage designs:
- $0.75-1.00 in ink
Water-based:
- Slightly less but requires more passes
- Evens out the difference
Emulsion (basically negligible)
- Each screen coating: $0.50-1.00 worth of emulsion
- That screen prints hundreds of shirts before you reclaim it
- Doing one-color work, printing 50 shirts before changing designs?
- Emulsion cost per shirt = literally pennies
Shirt blanks (your major variable cost)
Price ranges buying in bulk (dozen+):
- Cheap Gildan: $2-4 each
- Mid-tier (Bella+Canvas): $4-7
- Premium (Next Level, Comfort Colors): $6-10
Most home printers work in the $3-6 range.
Utilities
- Few gallons of water per screen washout
- Electricity for your heat source
- Unless you’re running a heat press 8 hours daily: $5-10 monthly max
Real cost per shirt (home printer, one-color designs):
All-in cost: $3.50-7.00
- Blank shirt
- Ink
- Minimal chemistry
Two-color prints: Add $0.30-0.75 in ink
Compare to ordering custom shirts online: $12-20 each for small quantities
The savings become obvious fast.
Budget Tiers Explained
$200 DIY starter tier
What you get:
- 2 screens
- 1 squeegee
- 1 color of ink
- Emulsion kit
- Halogen light for exposure
- Heat gun for curing
- Basic chemistry
The reality:
- You’ll wash screens in your driveway
- Cure shirts in your kitchen
- Test prints on old tees from your closet
- It’s slow and requires careful technique
- No margin for error
Does it work? Yes. People produce excellent prints with this setup.
$400-500 quality beginner range (the sweet spot)
What you get:
- 4 screens
- 2 squeegees
- 3 ink colors
- Better emulsion
- Used heat press OR basic flash dryer
- Proper washout supplies
- Enough blank shirts for real projects
Why it’s better:
- Work on multiple designs simultaneously
- Experiment with multi-color prints
- More consistent results
- Your equipment isn’t fighting you
$1,000+ semi-pro setup (side business territory)
What you get:
- 6-8 screens
- Multiple squeegees
- Full color ink set
- Quality exposure unit
- Proper flash dryer or conveyor dryer
- Washout booth
- Bulk shirt inventory
Who this is for:
- You’re not testing if you like screen printing
- You’re setting up to produce efficiently
- Side business or small production runs
Where most people should start: $300-500
It’s enough to discover if screen printing clicks for you. But not so bare-bones that equipment failures kill your motivation.
Is Screen Printing Worth It?
The math depends on your goals.
Scenario: 24 custom shirts for a family reunion
Ordering online:
- $15 each = $360 total
Printing yourself:
- $4-6 per shirt = $96-144
- Plus $400 equipment investment
- Total first batch: $496-544
You’re not saving money on that first order. You’re investing in future capability.
The break-even point
Hits around 50-100 shirts (depends on your setup cost).
After that:
- Every print costs you $4-7
- Ordering costs $12-20
- The savings accelerate
Example: 200 shirts
- Home printing: $1,000-1,400 all-in
- Ordering online: $2,400-4,000
For hobbyists (the non-financial value)
Can you:
- Make custom shirts for friends?
- Print your own designs?
- Have total creative control?
That value is personal.
For side businesses
Screen printing becomes profitable quickly:
- Shirts cost you $5-7 to produce
- Sell for $15-25 retail
- Actual margin (unlike print-on-demand that eats your profit)
Start Smart, Scale Later
Screen printing is genuinely affordable if you resist one urge:
Don’t buy professional equipment before you need it.
A $400 setup produces prints identical in quality to a $4,000 setup. The expensive version just does it faster with more convenience.
You don’t need:
- Commercial exposure units to burn great screens
- Automatic presses to print aligned designs
- Conveyor dryers to cure ink properly
You need:
- Good technique
- Which comes from practice
- Not purchases
The smart path:
- Start with essential equipment
- Print regularly to build skills
- Reinvest profits or savings into upgrades
- Solve actual problems you’re experiencing
That’s how home printers become professionals. Not by buying everything upfront, but by growing their setup as their work demands it.