Custom Sorority T-Shirts
Chapter Tees Without the Chaos
Stop DMing 80 sisters for sizes. Share one GGROUPT link in the chapter group chat, let everyone pick their own size, and place your group order without a single spreadsheet or follow-up text.
Works for rush, bid day, socials, formals, and philanthropy events.
How GGROUPT Works for Sorority Shirts
From GroupMe link to shirts at the chapter house in three steps.
Share the Link with Your Chapter
Post the GGROUPT link in GroupMe, Slack, or your chapter's group chat. Set a 48-hour deadline. Each sister clicks the link and picks her size on her phone — no account, no app, under a minute.
Upload Your Design
Upload your chapter artwork, letters, or event graphic. Browse our catalog for the right shirt style. Preview the design on the shirt before placing the order — no surprises at delivery.
We Print & Ship
Once sizes are in, review the full order and place it. Shirts arrive at the chapter house ready to hand out — organized by size, exactly what everyone ordered.
Every Sorority Shirt Chair Knows This Struggle
Coordinating shirts for a full chapter is one of the most thankless jobs in Greek life. You're not alone.
Coordinating 50–200 Members
A chapter shirt order isn't 10 people — it's 80. And every single one of them needs a different size, responds on a different timeline, and has a different opinion about whether to size up. Managing that many responses manually is a full-time job.
Rush Week Deadlines Don't Move
Bid day shirts need to be ready before bid day. Rush shirts need to look polished before recruitment starts. The chapter calendar doesn't flex for your shirt order — you need a system that moves fast enough to keep up with it.
Budget Constraints Are Real
Chapter dues only go so far. Every semester the shirt chair is trying to find a shirt that looks great at a per-unit cost the treasurer will actually approve. Ordering the wrong sizes adds waste that blows the budget.
Multiple Designs Per Semester
It's not one shirt order per year — it's four or five. Rush shirts, bid day shirts, social shirts, philanthropy shirts, formal shirts. Each one requires collecting sizes all over again from the whole chapter. The process needs to be fast enough to repeat every few weeks.
Why GGROUPT Is Built for Greek Life
Fast to set up, easy for members to use, and organized enough to handle the whole chapter.
One Link in GroupMe, Done
Post the GGROUPT link in your chapter GroupMe and pin it. Members tap the link, pick their size, and it's recorded instantly. No spreadsheet to maintain, no DMs to sort through, no "what was the Google Form link again?" — the link works every time from any phone.
Know Who Hasn't Responded
Your GGROUPT dashboard shows a live view of who has submitted their size and who hasn't. When you're at 65 out of 80 responses, you know exactly which 15 sisters to nudge — not the entire chapter. Targeted reminders instead of blasting everyone again.
Fast Enough for Semester Pace
Set up a new GGROUPT group for each event in about 2 minutes. The shirt chair can run five separate shirt orders a semester without it eating her week. Share the link Monday, close submissions Wednesday, place the order Thursday — shirts arrive before the event.
Flexible Payment for Chapter Treasuries
If the chapter is covering the shirts, pay for the full order in one transaction and reconcile through the treasury. If members are paying individually, set up individual payments so each sister pays when she submits. Either way, no one has to chase down Venmo requests after the fact.
Built for large group organizers
Frequently Asked Questions
How do we collect sizes from 80 chapter members without losing our minds?
Can we order multiple shirt designs for different events in one semester?
We have a rush week deadline — how fast can we get shirts?
Can new members (new bids) be added to the order after it's started?
How does payment work — does everyone pay individually or does the chapter pay?
Make this semester's shirts the easy part.
Drop the GGROUPT link in GroupMe, collect every sister's size, and place the chapter order in minutes — not days.