Most DTF shops have a rough idea of their ink cost. Few have a number they'd stake a quote on. That gap—between knowing you spend money on film and powder and actually knowing what each transfer costs—is where margin disappears quietly.
This article walks through all six variables in a DTF per-transfer cost, gives you the formula for each one, and works through a realistic A4 example. You leave with a number you can actually build a price from.
The six variables in your per-transfer cost
The cost per transfer breaks down into six components. Most shops track the first three with some accuracy. The last three tend to get skipped entirely.
- Film
- Ink (CMYK + white)
- Powder adhesive
- Machine depreciation
- Labor
- Waste factor
None of these is optional. A quote built on film and ink alone is a quote that's underpriced—sometimes significantly.
Film cost per transfer
Film is the easiest variable to calculate. Take the roll price and divide by the number of transfers you can cut from it.
A standard 30m × 60cm DTF film roll yields approximately 200 A4-sized sheets cut efficiently—two columns of 21cm each, 29.7cm per row. A roll priced at $50 gives you $0.25 per sheet. At $40, that drops to $0.20.
What shifts this number: edge waste on narrower designs, how tightly you nest irregular artwork on gang sheets, and whether your operator is cutting to the design edge or leaving generous margins.
Ink cost per transfer
Ink is the hardest variable because it depends on coverage—and most shops estimate it rather than measure it.
DTF requires two ink layers: the CMYK color layer and the white underbase. White is the expensive layer. It runs at higher volume and costs more per milliliter than CMYK. On most setups, white ink represents 60–70% of your total ink cost per transfer.
Realistic consumption for an A4 transfer at approximately 60% average coverage:
- White ink: ~0.9ml at $0.045/ml = ~$0.040
- CMYK combined: ~0.4ml at $0.035/ml average = ~$0.014
- Total ink cost per A4: $0.05–$0.08
Full-coverage designs—solid fills, large logos with dense color—run higher, up to $0.12 per A4. Light designs with significant open film area drop to $0.03. The only reliable way to know your actual number is to track ink levels before and after a production run of known volume.
Weigh your ink bottles before and after a 100-print run. Divide total ink weight consumed by 100. Do this monthly—ink consumption drifts as printheads age and RIP settings change.
Powder adhesive cost per transfer
Powder is the most underestimated line item. It's cheap per kilogram, so shops don't track it carefully—and then wonder why margins drift when powder prices or consumption changes.
A typical A4 transfer uses 1–2 grams of hot melt adhesive powder. At bulk pricing of $6–10 per kilogram, that's $0.006–$0.020 per transfer. Not large, but not zero—and it compounds.
If your operator shakes excess powder back into the container consistently, consumption sits at the low end. If the process is inconsistent or the powder application is heavy, it creeps up and your per-transfer cost moves without you noticing.
Machine depreciation per transfer
This is the line item most shops leave off entirely.
Your DTF printer cost money. It will eventually need replacing. The cost of that machine belongs in every transfer price—spread across its useful production life.
Example: an $8,000 entry-level DTF printer depreciated over 4 years = $2,000 per year. At 150,000 A4-equivalent transfers annually, that adds $0.013 per transfer. At 50,000 per year: $0.040.
Include your curing oven in the same calculation—it has a lifespan too. The number sounds small until you're facing machine replacement with no reserve built into your pricing.
Labor per transfer
Labor is where different job types diverge most sharply. Gang sheets destined for wholesale transfer supply look nothing like individual custom runs on setup cost and handling time.
A realistic throughput for a single operator handling film loading, powder application, and curing on a standard entry-level setup: 80–100 A4 transfers per hour. At a $20/hr labor rate, that's $0.20–$0.25 per transfer in labor alone.
High-volume gang sheet runs with efficient batching push throughput higher and labor cost per unit lower. Individual one-off prints with separate setup runs push it higher. Your actual number depends on your job mix.
The waste factor
Every roll has edge waste. Every ink system has dead volume at the cartridge bottom. Every production run has misprints. Ignoring waste means your real cost is always higher than your model.
A realistic waste factor for DTF runs 8–15% depending on setup maturity, printhead condition, and operator consistency. Apply it as a multiplier to your consumables total—not to labor or depreciation, which don't scale with waste in the same way.
Track misprints as a percentage of total monthly output. Anything above 5% consistently is a maintenance or process problem, not a fixed cost to absorb.
Putting it together: a full example calculation
An A4 transfer on a mid-range setup, 60% average design coverage, single operator:
| Cost Variable | Inputs | Cost per A4 |
|---|---|---|
| Film (30m roll, $50, 200 sheets) | $50 ÷ 200 | $0.250 |
| Ink (0.9ml white + 0.4ml CMYK) | $0.040 + $0.014 | $0.054 |
| Powder adhesive (1.5g at $8/kg) | 1.5 × $0.008 | $0.012 |
| Consumables subtotal | $0.316 | |
| Waste factor applied (10%) | $0.316 × 1.10 | $0.348 |
| Machine depreciation ($8k, 4yr, 100k/yr) | $2,000 ÷ 100,000 | $0.020 |
| Labor (90 prints/hr at $20/hr) | $20 ÷ 90 | $0.222 |
| TOTAL COST PER A4 TRANSFER | $0.59 |
A transfer priced at $0.99 returns approximately 40% gross margin on this model. At $0.75, that drops to 21%. At $0.65, you're covering costs with almost nothing left. The math only works if you know your $0.59.
Your number will be different. Film pricing, ink brand, labor rate, and machine cost all vary. The point of this exercise is to build your specific model, not to use someone else's average as a pricing anchor.
If your calculated cost per A4 transfer comes out below $0.30, you're almost certainly missing labor or depreciation. If it's above $1.20, check your waste factor and ink consumption figures—something is running high.
Frequently asked questions
A realistic per-transfer cost for an A4 transfer on a standard entry-level to mid-range DTF setup runs $0.45–$0.90, depending on ink coverage, labor rate, machine cost, and print volume. High-volume shops printing gang sheets efficiently sit toward the lower end. Low-volume custom runs with individual designs and separate setups sit higher. Any number below $0.30 almost always means labor or depreciation has been omitted.
Weigh your ink bottles before and after a known production run—100 prints is a useful sample size. Divide total ink weight consumed by print count to get per-print consumption in milliliters. Multiply by your ink cost per milliliter (calculate this from the bottle price and volume). Average consumption for an A4 transfer at 60% coverage is approximately 0.9ml white ink and 0.4ml combined CMYK.
It depends on your volume. At 150,000 A4 transfers per year, an $8,000 printer depreciated over 4 years adds roughly $0.013 per transfer—minor. At 30,000 per year, it adds $0.067. For low-volume operations, machine depreciation becomes one of the largest cost line items in the model. It doesn't disappear by being ignored; it just turns up as surprise capital expense when the machine needs replacing.
DTF waste comes from film edge losses, ink dead volume at cartridge bottom, powder that cannot be fully recovered, and misprints. Apply a waste factor of 8–15% as a multiplier to your consumables total. Track misprints monthly as a percentage of output—anything consistently above 5% signals a maintenance or process issue that should be fixed rather than absorbed as a permanent cost line.
Want the complete cost model with built-in formulas?
The DTF Printing Profit Blueprint includes 8 downloadable Excel templates covering gang sheet yield, markup frameworks, job-type cost comparison, and full per-transfer calculation models—all formulas included, no setup required.
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