Tour Reality Lab
Every band thinks merch is free money.
Print some shirts. Set up a table. Watch the cash roll in.
But the merch table has its own math. And that math is just as unforgiving as the rest of the road.
This is what the merch table actually looks like when you count every dollar.
Written by Hogleg
The Setup
Here's the thing about merch that nobody tells you.
The money doesn't start when you sell the first shirt.
The money starts when you order the first shirt. And that's where most bands already start losing.
You find a printer. You pick a design. You order 48 shirts, 24 hats, some koozies, stickers, and posters because that's what bands do. The order comes in at just under a grand.
A thousand dollars. Before you've played a single note. Before anyone has walked up to the table. Before the first "do you have this in a large?"
That's not profit waiting to happen.
That's inventory risk.
And most bands treat it like it's already money in the bank.
The Investment
That's a grand out the door. And the tour hasn't started yet.
The Math
This is the part where bands get excited. The margins look incredible. 68% to 80% profit on every item. What could go wrong?
| Item | Cost | Price | Margin | % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T-Shirts | $8 | $25 | $17 | 68% |
| Hats | $8 | $30 | $22 | 73% |
| Koozies | $1.50 | $5 | $3.50 | 70% |
| Stickers | $0.40 | $2 | $1.60 | 80% |
| Posters | $2.50 | $10 | $7.50 | 75% |
Looks beautiful, right?
68% margins on shirts. 80% on stickers. This is the part where bands start doing napkin math and seeing dollar signs.
But margins on paper and money in your pocket are two very different things.
The Reality
Here's what a five-night run actually looks like when you track every shirt, every koozie, and every dollar.
Gross Merch Revenue (5 Nights)
$1,885
Looks like a win. Almost double the investment.
The Leaks
This is where the napkin math falls apart. Because the merch table has expenses that nobody budgets for.
Leak #1
Cash goes into a backpack. Nobody counts it until the end of the run. By then, $40 to $80 has evaporated. Not stolen. Just... gone. Lost in gas stations, mixed with per diem, handed to someone for food.
Leak #2
Some venues take 10–20% of your merch sales. A $300 merch night becomes $240. Most bands don't know until settlement. Some never find out at all.
Leak #3
One for the sound guy. One for the bartender who hooked you up. One for the fan who drove three hours. Two for the opening band. That's five shirts. That's $125 in retail value walking out the door.
Leak #4
You ordered 12 mediums and 12 larges. You sold 4 mediums and all 12 larges by night three. Now you're carrying dead weight. Those 8 mediums are $64 in cost that will never come back.
Leak #5
Square, Stripe, whoever — they take 2.6% + $0.10 per swipe. On a $25 shirt that's $0.75. Doesn't sound like much until you've swiped 80 times in a week. That's $60 gone.
Leak #6
If you don't count inventory before and after every show, you have no idea what actually sold. You're guessing. And guessing is how money disappears.
The Truth
The Gap
Napkin Math
$889
Reality
$479
Split four ways: $120 each for five nights of merch work.
And that's assuming you sold most of your inventory.
Those 8 medium shirts that didn't sell? That's $64 in dead cost sitting in a box in someone's closet.
The 15 posters you still have? Another $37.50 that's never coming back.
Merch isn't free money. It's a small business inside your band. And most bands run it like a lemonade stand.
The Lies
"Merch is pure profit."
"We'll count it at the end of the tour."
"Cash and card will match up."
"We don't need to track stickers and koozies."
"The venue won't take a cut."
"We'll sell out of everything."
"One size fits most."
"Free shirts are good marketing."
The Survivors
Counts every item before the show. Counts every item after. Knows exactly what sold, what was given away, and what's left. Does this every single night. No exceptions.
Separates cash and card totals every night. Knows exactly how much came in through each channel. Reconciles against inventory. If the numbers don't match, they find out why before the van leaves.
Knows the cost per unit on every item. Prices for margin, not ego. Doesn't sell $8 shirts for $15 because it 'feels fair.' Sells them for $25 because that's what covers the tour.
Tracks what's selling and what's sitting. Adjusts orders for the next run based on actual data. Stops ordering mediums when the data says everyone wants larges.
The Lesson
It's a business. And the bands that treat it like one are the bands that actually take money home.
The merch tables that make money track four things every night:
Once you can see those numbers, the merch table stops being a mystery and starts being an engine.
TourForge tracks merch inventory with count-in/count-out, cash vs. card splits, venue merch fees, and per-show sales reporting. Every shirt accounted for. Every dollar tracked.