Merch Order Form Template

Run a merch drop from a single link — fans pick items and sizes, you confirm totals and settle up when the batch ships.

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The drop is live! Claim your merch below — we'll reply with your total once the batch closes, and everything ships together.

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Merch drops work on rhythm: announce, open a window, print one batch, ship everything at once. That batch model is why a creator doesn't need a storefront — a store implies always-on inventory, while a drop just needs a clean way to collect claims for two weeks. This form is that mechanism, and the batch-then-settle flow means you never print a hoodie nobody paid for or charge a fan before you're sure the run is happening.

Why these fields. "Fan name (for the packing slip)" sets the tone — it tells people the thing they're filling in becomes a physical package. Items are one multi-select with prices, because a drop menu should be scannable in five seconds on a phone. The apparel size dropdown includes a "no apparel" escape so poster-only orders don't stall on a required-feeling question. Total item count plus the free-text breakdown is a deliberate two-step: the number gives you a fast production sum across all responses, and the breakdown catches the fan who wants two tees in different sizes without forcing a grid on everyone else. Email is framed around tracking updates, which is the message fans actually want from you.

What we left out. A size-per-item matrix (drops die when the form feels like a spreadsheet), shipping addresses (collect them with the payment email once totals are confirmed — two weeks is long enough for someone to move apartments), and any "join my mailing list" checkbox, because everyone who orders merch is already your list.

Who uses this. Bands running tour-merch pre-orders, podcasters and streamers doing an annual drop, artists selling a print run, and student organizations printing one legendary hoodie per year.

Make it yours. Set the drop window with a close date in Settings — scarcity is the marketing — or cap the run with a response limit for numbered items. Put the form link in your bio and embed it on your site with the popup embed behind a "Shop the drop" button. Match the form to the drop's art direction with a custom theme color. When the window closes, export the CSV: item and size columns are your print order, and the email column is your settle-up list.

Settling up. The ending promises a total and payment details by email when the batch closes. Fans are used to this cadence from every independent drop — and it means your print quantities are locked before any money moves, which is the whole financial safety of the batch model.

Frequently asked questions

How do fans pay for their merch?

After the window closes you email each fan their total with your payment details — however you normally take money. The form locks in claims and sizes so the print run is exact.

Can I make the drop feel limited?

It can be limited: set a close date for a timed window, or a response cap for a numbered run. Either way latecomers see your custom closed message instead of a dead link.

What goes to the printer when the drop ends?

Export the CSV and tally the item and size columns — that summary is exactly the quantities-by-size sheet a print shop quotes from.

Can the form match my drop artwork?

Yes — set the accent color, background, and font in the theme settings so the form reads as part of the drop, not a generic checkout. The share link works in a bio, a story, or a QR on tour.