Not all products work equally well with all-over-print. A galaxy pattern might look stunning on a hoodie but feel out of place on a tote bag. A floral design might sell like crazy on leggings but flop on a button-up shirt.
If you're a print-on-demand seller, knowing which products perform best with AOP is the difference between a store that converts and one that collects dust.
In this guide, we'll walk through the 10 best all-over-print products to sell right now — based on what actually moves in the POD market — along with practical tips on designing, pricing, and targeting the right buyers for each one.
If you're still getting familiar with how all-over-print works, start with our beginner's guide to all-over-print to understand the process before choosing your products.
What Makes a Product Great for All-Over-Print?
Before we get to the list, let's establish what separates a great AOP product from a mediocre one. Not every item in a POD catalog is worth printing edge-to-edge.

The best AOP products share four traits:
Large printable surface area. The more fabric you have to work with, the more impact your design makes. A hoodie with its front, back, sleeves, and hood gives you a massive canvas. A small pouch does not.
Pattern-friendly shape. Products with relatively flat, continuous panels (like leggings or T-shirts) are easier to design for than products with complex structures (like structured bags or shoes).
Buyers who expect bold visuals. If your target customer is someone who wants to stand out — athletes, pet lovers, festival-goers, streetwear fans — AOP is a natural fit. If they want subtle and minimal, it's not.
Higher perceived value. AOP products that feel premium can command prices well above standard printed basics. The more a customer expects to pay, the better your margins.
With those criteria in mind, here are the products that check every box.
The 10 Best All-Over-Print Products to Sell
1. All-Over-Print Hoodies
Why they sell: Hoodies are the undisputed king of AOP. The large surface area — front panel, back panel, two sleeves, and a hood — gives your design maximum impact. A galaxy print that wraps around an entire hoodie looks like a piece of wearable art, not a basic printed garment.
Best niches: Galaxy/space, streetwear, anime, pet breeds, abstract art, holiday themes.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$22–$28, retail $45–$65. Strong margins.
Design tip: Make sure the pattern flows naturally across the shoulders and hood. Disconnected patterns at the seam lines look cheap. For a deep dive into this product category, our complete AOP hoodies guide covers everything from design specs to marketing strategies.
2. All-Over-Print T-Shirts
Why they sell: T-shirts are the most popular garment in print-on-demand, and AOP versions stand out immediately in a sea of chest-logo basics. They're lower-priced than hoodies, making them an easy impulse buy.
Best niches: Tropical patterns, tie-dye effects, floral prints, geometric designs, music/festival themes.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$12–$18, retail $28–$40.
Design tip: AOP tees work best with repeating patterns or seamless textures. Avoid designs that have a clear "top" and "bottom" — the pattern should look good from every angle.
3. All-Over-Print Leggings
Why they sell: Leggings are a perfect AOP product because the fabric is tight-fitting and stretchy, which makes full-coverage patterns look incredible. The activewear market continues to grow, and printed leggings are a staple.
Best niches: Fitness/activewear, yoga, floral and botanical, animal prints, galaxy/cosmic, abstract art.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$15–$20, retail $35–$50.
Design tip: Consider how the pattern stretches and moves with the body. Vertical patterns can create a flattering elongating effect. Test your design on a 3D mockup to see how it looks on an actual body shape before listing it.
4. All-Over-Print Backpacks
Why they sell: Backpacks are one of the few non-clothing items that work brilliantly with AOP. The flat front panel and side pockets provide a large, visible canvas. They're also high-perceived-value items — people expect to pay more for a quality backpack.
Best niches: School/back-to-school, travel, streetwear accessories, pet-themed, nature/landscape, kids' designs.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$18–$25, retail $40–$60.
Design tip: The front panel is the star — put your strongest visual there. Side panels and the back can carry a simpler continuation of the pattern or a solid color.
5. All-Over-Print Swim Trunks
Why they sell: Swimwear is a natural fit for bold, all-over patterns. Nobody wants a plain solid-color swim trunk when they're heading to the beach or pool. This is a seasonal product with explosive demand in summer months.
Best niches: Tropical/floral, Hawaiian shirt patterns, novelty prints (pizza, dinosaurs, pets), patriotic themes, surf/skate culture.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$12–$18, retail $30–$45.
Design tip: Bright, saturated colors work best. Pastels and muted tones tend to look washed out on swim fabric. Keep the pattern scale medium-to-large — tiny details get lost on textured swim material.
6. All-Over-Print Sports Jerseys
Why they sell: Custom sports jerseys are a massive market, and AOP lets you create designs that look like professional team gear. From amateur sports leagues to e-sports teams to fantasy fan gear, the demand is broad and recurring.
Best niches: E-sports/gaming, fantasy sports, custom team uniforms, cycling, running, soccer culture.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$18–$25, retail $40–$65.
Design tip: Use athletic design language — bold stripes, dynamic gradients, number placements. Make sure the pattern doesn't interfere with any text or numbers you're adding.
7. All-Over-Print Socks
Why they sell: Socks are a low-cost, high-volume product with universal appeal. They make excellent gift items and stocking stuffers. The full-coverage print turns a boring everyday item into a fun statement piece.
Best niches: Novelty/fun patterns, pet faces, food prints (pizza, tacos, sushi), holiday themes, gift market.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$5–$8, retail $12–$20. Lower margin per unit, but high volume potential.
Design tip: Sock designs work best with repeating small-scale patterns or fun character faces. The curved, stretchy surface means fine details won't be visible — go bold and simple.
8. All-Over-Print Tank Tops
Why they sell: Tank tops are the warm-weather counterpart to AOP tees. They're popular in fitness, beach culture, and festival scenes. The lower fabric cost means better margins, and the sleeveless cut gives a different canvas shape that works well with certain designs.
Best niches: Gym/fitness, beach/summer, festival/rave, tropical, motivational/quote-based.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$10–$15, retail $25–$38.
Design tip: Remember that tank tops have less surface area than tees — no sleeves to print on. Concentrate your best visuals on the front and back panels.
9. All-Over-Print Blankets
Why they sell: Blankets are a high-value home product with a huge printable surface. They're gift-friendly, seasonal (Q4 goldmine), and the large flat area means your design displays beautifully without the distortion you get on wearable items.
Best niches: Pet portraits, baby/kids, holiday/seasonal, nature photography, galaxy/cosmic, cozy aesthetic patterns.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$20–$30, retail $50–$80. Excellent margins.
Design tip: Blankets are viewed from a distance (draped over a couch, spread on a bed), so large-scale patterns and bold imagery work better than small, detailed work. Think poster, not business card.
10. All-Over-Print Phone Cases
Why they sell: Phone cases are a high-volume accessory market. Everyone has a phone, and many people change their case regularly. AOP lets you create cases that are covered edge-to-edge in a design, not just a graphic slapped on the back.
Best niches: Aesthetic/minimalist patterns, floral, marble/texture effects, pop culture, personalized/custom.
Typical pricing: Cost ~$5–$8, retail $15–$25. High volume, moderate margin.
Design tip: Phone cases have curved edges and camera cutouts. Design your pattern to work around these features, not fight them. Test with mockups for the most popular phone models.

Quick Comparison: Which AOP Product Should You Start With?
Product | Cost Range | Retail Range | Margin | Difficulty | Best Season |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hoodies | $22–$28 | $45–$65 | High | Medium | Q4 / Winter |
T-Shirts | $12–$18 | $28–$40 | Medium | Low | Year-round |
Leggings | $15–$20 | $35–$50 | Medium-High | Medium | Year-round |
Backpacks | $18–$25 | $40–$60 | High | Medium | Back-to-school |
Swim Trunks | $12–$18 | $30–$45 | Medium | Low | Summer |
Sports Jerseys | $18–$25 | $40–$65 | High | High | Year-round |
Socks | $5–$8 | $12–$20 | Low-Medium | Low | Q4 / Gift season |
Tank Tops | $10–$15 | $25–$38 | Medium | Low | Summer |
Blankets | $20–$30 | $50–$80 | Very High | Low | Q4 / Winter |
Phone Cases | $5–$8 | $15–$25 | Medium | Low | Year-round |
If you're just starting out, AOP T-shirts and tank tops are the easiest entry point — simple designs, broad appeal, and low risk. If you want the best margins, hoodies and blankets offer the highest per-product profit.
How to Choose the Right AOP Products for Your Niche
The best product isn't just the one with the highest margin — it's the one that fits your niche and audience.
Ask yourself these questions:
Who is my customer?
Fitness enthusiasts → leggings, sports jerseys, tank tops
Pet lovers → hoodies, blankets, socks with pet patterns
Festival/concert crowd → tees, tank tops, bandanas
Students → backpacks, phone cases, hoodies
Gift buyers → blankets, socks, phone cases
What season am I targeting?
Q1–Q2 (spring/summer) → swim trunks, tank tops, tees
Q3 (back-to-school) → backpacks, hoodies
Q4 (holiday/gift season) → blankets, hoodies, socks
What's my design style?
Bold, large-scale patterns → hoodies, blankets, backpacks
Repeating small patterns → socks, phone cases, leggings
Photo-realistic or scenic → blankets, tees, hoodies
Pricing Your AOP Products for Profit
One of the biggest advantages of AOP products: they command higher prices than standard printed basics. But you need to price them correctly.
Here's a simple framework:
Know your base cost. Check your POD supplier's pricing for each product.
Add your margin. A healthy target is 40–60% gross margin.
Check competitors. Look at similar AOP products on Etsy, Amazon, and independent Shopify stores.
Price at or slightly above market. AOP products feel premium — don't underprice them.
For example, if an AOP hoodie costs you $24 to produce:
At $45 retail → 47% margin ✅
At $55 retail → 56% margin ✅✅
At $35 retail → 31% margin ❌ (too low for AOP)
For a complete pricing framework — including psychological pricing tactics and how to test different price points — read our complete POD pricing guide.
How to Start Selling These Products
Once you know which products you want to sell, you need a supplier that can handle all-over-print at scale — without requiring you to invest in equipment or inventory.

With a print-on-demand platform like Yoycol, you can access all 10 products on this list — and more. Here's what you get:
1,600+ AOP products across every category we covered above
Free 3D mockup tools to preview your designs on real products before you list them
No minimum orders — test new products one at a time
Global shipping — we print and ship directly to your customers worldwide
If you're planning to sell on Shopify, our step-by-step AOP-on-Shopify guide walks through the full store setup and integration.
Ready to start selling? Create your free Yoycol account →
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best all-over-print product to sell?
All-over-print hoodies are widely considered the best AOP product for POD sellers. They offer the largest design canvas, the highest per-product margins ($20–$40 profit per sale), and strong year-round demand. Leggings and backpacks are close runners-up.
Which AOP products have the highest profit margins?
Blankets and hoodies offer the highest profit margins in AOP. A well-priced AOP blanket can yield $30–$50 profit per sale, while hoodies typically yield $20–$40. Both products have high perceived value that customers are willing to pay premium prices for.
Are all-over-print products good for beginners?
Yes. AOP T-shirts, tank tops, and socks are excellent beginner products — they have simple design requirements, broad appeal, and low base costs. Start with these simpler products, then expand into hoodies and backpacks as you gain confidence.
Do all-over-print products sell on Etsy?
Yes, AOP products perform well on Etsy, especially in niches like pet-themed items, personalized gifts, and seasonal products. The key is to use strong keywords and mockup photos that showcase the full-coverage design.
What products should I avoid for all-over-print?
Products with complex structures, heavy seams, or very small printable areas don't work well with AOP. Avoid structured hats, shoes with complex paneling, and small accessories where the design would be too compressed to look good.
Want to go deeper? Read our complete All-Over-Print guide for everything on the AOP process, designing for full coverage, and scaling your POD store.



