CHARMING INSIGHTS

Should you switch to heat transfer labels?

Written by Rich Ringeisen | Jun 1, 2026 5:59:51 PM

Most apparel teams default to woven labels because that's what they've always used. For some garments, that's the right call. For others, it might be costing you money and compromising quality.

Heat transfer labels aren't a downgrade or a cheap alternative. They solve specific problems woven labels can't touch. Knowing when to switch (and when to stick with woven) is the difference between a label that works and one your customers cut out the first time they wear the shirt.

What heat transfer labels do that woven labels can't

While woven labels are, in many ways, still the standard in the fashion industry, heat transfer labels offer a lot of improvements for the producer and end customer alike. Primary differences between heat transfer labels and woven labels include:

  • They sit flat against the skin. No folded edge, no stitching, nothing to rub or scratch. This is a much more comfortable experience for the customer, and keeps the branding from being severed from the customer if the tag gets cut off.

  • They print full color and fine detail. Heat transfer labels can include photo-quality artwork, gradients, small care icons, and multi-color logos, creating a brilliant opportunity for brands to make an impact. Woven labels are built from thread, so they top out at a certain level of detail.

  • They work well on stretch fabric. A sewn-in woven label can pull or pucker on spandex blends and performance fabric. Heat transfer labels move with the garment, without adding bulk.

And one extra thing worth clearing up: switching to heat transfer doesn't mean giving up smart label capability. A heat transfer label can include a printed QR code right alongside your logo and care info, all in one press application. If your team is building toward DPP compliance or thinking about resale and circularity, heat transfer can carry that data the same as a woven label does.

The full cost picture

By switching to heat transfer labels, brands have two opportunities to save money: materials and labor.

A heat transfer label requires a press and ink, TPU, or silicone, while every garment with a woven label demands fabric. Garments can even include multiple woven labels—one for size and one for care—which only exacerbates the material cost further. In high-volume orders, this cost differential can be significant.

Additionally, woven labels need to be sewn in. That's labor time per garment, plus the labor to position and align the label correctly. Heat transfer labels add a press step but cut out the need for additional sewing. On t-shirts and basics running in high volume, the labor savings add up.

Heat transfer also lets you combine brand info, size, and care into one application. With woven, you usually need a separate care label sewn somewhere else. That's two labels and two sewing operations instead of one press.

Where woven labels still win

Woven labels aren’t going anywhere, and for good reason. They’re still usually the right call for premium products, denim, outerwear, and structured pieces where the label is part of the look. They're also the right pick for anything with a visible label on the outside of the garment, like back pocket tags or sleeve labels.

Additionally, woven labels can hold up through more wash cycles than heat transfers. For a jacket someone will own for 10 years, that matters—but it also requires the customer to keep the tag on the garment.

Five signs it's time to switch

While there are a lot of relevant considerations for which label is best for your brand and garment, these are five signs you might need to consider changing your tag approach.

  • Customers are complaining about itchy neck tags or cutting them out
  • You're moving into activewear, baby clothes, underwear, or base layers
  • Your artwork has gradients, photos, or fine detail that thread can't reproduce
  • Your factory keeps flagging label placement or puckering issues on stretch fabric
  • You're running high volume on basics and the per-garment labor cost is creeping up

If any two of these apply, it's worth pricing out heat transfer for that product line.

The both-and approach

A lot of brands use both, and, in most cases, that’s what we recommend. Woven for sturdy garments or clothes with external labels, heat transfer on the inside for care info. That setup gives customers the look and feel they expect when they handle the garment, with the comfort and detail of heat transfer where it touches the skin.

If you're trying to figure out which label type fits each of your product lines, talk to your Charming Business Developer. We'll help you take a closer look at what will serve you and your customers the best.