Tupelo Data Room

apparel business for Sale in Georgia

Similar businesses sell at 1.8x to 2.5x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

T-Shirt/Screen Printing & Promotional Products Business For Sale photo
Clothing & Fabric
+1

T-Shirt/Screen Printing & Promotional Products Business For Sale

Athens, GA, US

Wonderful opportunity for first time business owner or expanding your current operation. This company is family owned & operated and has been in business approximately 30 years, specializing in custom printing, embroidery & promotional products. Services include but not limited to screen printing on garments, embroidery set-up partnering with local embroiderers on hats, jackets, polos, etc; Vinyl heat transfers, various heat-transfers, Promotional Products for all your marketing and branding needs. Talented and experienced in-house Designers to assist in transforming an idea to a unique finished product. The building consists of approximately 9,600 sq.ft., has showroom and retail space of approximately 400 sq.ft. with production area of approximately 9,200 sq.ft. Production area is capable of handling increased volume & expansion of other growth opportunities. The business is fully equipped providing a new owner with a turn-key operation on day one without the need for any immediate equipment investment. Thirty years of well deserved reputation for quality work, dependability and customer service, business has been rewarded with long-standing relationships with a loyal client base of repeat customers including institutional companies: manufacturing plants, UGA, multiple county school systems, fire depts, churches, community organizations, hospitals, physician offices, State of GA-Departments, banks, real estate, repeat events, etc.

$398,000
$744,000Revenue
$142,700Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for apparel business businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$307k
Median cash flow$54k
Median sale price$110k
Multiple range1.8x - 2.5x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about apparel business acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating apparel business acquisitions.

Channel mix dictates the economics entirely

DTC, wholesale, and retail are three different businesses. A brand that's 100% direct-to-consumer through its own website has high gross margins (typically 60–70%) but high customer-acquisition costs. A wholesale brand selling to retailers has lower gross margins (35–50%) but predictable bulk orders. A vertically integrated brand with its own retail stores has the highest margins but also the highest overhead. Identify the channel breakdown clearly. The business operates very differently depending on the mix.

Inventory risk is the constant trap

Apparel doesn't age well. Last season's inventory is worth less than this season's. A brand sitting on $1M of unsold goods from prior seasons isn't worth $1M of inventory value — it's worth what those goods will sell for at markdown. Walk through the warehouse and review inventory by season and SKU. Anything more than two seasons old should be valued at clearance pricing or written off entirely. The seller's balance sheet may be optimistic.

Brand IP and design rights are the durable asset

Trademarks, designs, customer lists. What you're really buying in an apparel acquisition is the brand: name, logos, registered trademarks, design library, customer relationships, and the position the brand occupies in the customer's mind. Verify trademark registrations in all relevant countries (not just the U.S. — if the brand sells internationally, foreign trademarks matter). Confirm assignment of designs in the asset purchase agreement explicitly.

Manufacturing relationships are partly transferable

Factory relationships are personal. Most independent apparel brands work with a handful of factories (domestic or overseas) on a relationship basis — not formal contracts but ongoing trust, payment terms, capacity commitments. These relationships transfer to the buyer but not automatically; factories will want to know who's running things and may tighten payment terms or production capacity during transition. Get introductions to the top 3–5 factories before close.

Seasonality and working capital tie together

The cash cycle is brutal. Apparel brands typically pay manufacturers 60–120 days before goods sell. Wholesale customers pay 30–90 days after delivery. The working capital gap can be 4–6 months of revenue. A brand with $5M in revenue may need $1M–$2M in working capital just to operate. Verify the financing structure (bank lines, factor relationships, owner-funded working capital) and ensure it transfers or that you have replacement financing arranged.

Direct-to-consumer marketing economics have shifted

Customer acquisition costs have climbed substantially. Facebook/Instagram CAC has roughly doubled or tripled over the past five years; TikTok offers cheaper acquisition but smaller scale. A DTC apparel brand whose customer acquisition cost was $25 three years ago may be at $60 today, eating margin. Look at the trend, not just the current level. Strong organic and social presence is increasingly the difference between profitable DTC and unprofitable DTC.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Small independent apparel brands with $500K–$2M in revenue often trade in the Tier 1 range (under $500K), especially if they're founder-dependent or have inventory concerns. Mid-size brands with $3M–$15M in revenue, established channels, and brand equity usually trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M of SDE valuation). Larger brands with strong DTC, wholesale distribution, or specialty positioning can reach Tier 3 ($2M+).