Ordering custom cheerleading uniforms is a significant investment — both financially and in terms of team morale. A great uniform boosts confidence and team pride; a poor one creates frustration that lasts the entire season.
1. Fabric Quality and Composition
Ask your manufacturer: What is the exact fabric composition? What is the GSM (fabric weight)? Is the fabric 4-way stretch? What is the fabric’s recovery rate? Is the fabric Oeko-Tex certified? Red flag: Manufacturers who cannot provide fabric specifications or swatches before you order.
2. Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ)
Every manufacturer sets an MOQ. Some manufacturers: 5-10 units minimum. Mid-tier manufacturers: 20-30 units. Large-scale factories: 50-100 units minimum. Some manufacturers allow mixed sizes within the MOQ — ask specifically.
3. Production Lead Time
Standard total timeline: 4-8 Wochen. This includes design confirmation (3-7 days), sample production (7-14 days), bulk production (14-30 days), and quality inspection and shipping (7-14 days). Start early: If you need uniforms for a September competition, place your order by June at the latest.
4. Design Flexibility and Capabilities
Before committing, confirm: Can they do sublimation printing? What is the maximum number of colors? Do they offer rhinestone application? Can they match specific Pantone colors? Do they offer design assistance?
5. Pricing Structure and Hidden Costs
Get a full quote breakdown: Unit price at your quantity, set-up or design fees, sample fees, shipping costs, taxes and duties, currency exchange rates, and rush order surcharges. Tip: Get quotes from at least 3 manufacturers before deciding.
6. Quality Control and Inspection Process
Understand: What is the defect rate? What is the defect replacement policy? Do they inspect every unit? Can you reject uniforms that do not meet specifications? What is the warranty?
7. Communication and Customer Service
Good signs: Responsive communication within 24 hours. They ask questions about your needs. They offer a sample before bulk production. They provide production progress photos. Red flags: Cannot communicate clearly in your language. Pressure you to order quickly. Vague about timelines or pricing.



