Sports bras are often harder to develop than leggings. On paper they look simple. In real production they create more fit questions, more support questions and more revision rounds. For a buyer launching a first activewear collection, the private label sports bra is usually the product that reveals whether the development process is clear or not.
A legging can survive small fit adjustments more easily. A bra cannot. That’s why so many first sports bra orders need a second sample round — and why getting a few decisions right at the start saves weeks later.

Start with support level, not just style reference
One of the biggest sourcing mistakes is sending a reference photo without clearly defining support level. Two bras can look similar on the outside and perform very differently in wear. Before the first sample, buyers should decide whether the product is meant for:
- Light support — yoga, pilates, lounge
- Medium support — training, cycling, studio workouts
- High support — running, HIIT, full movement
Support level changes fabric choice, strap width, underband structure, liner construction and pad design. Skipping this decision means the first sample is essentially a guess.
Choose the underband carefully
For activewear bras, the underband does more work than many first-time buyers expect. If it is too soft, the bra feels unstable. If it is too tight, customers complain that it digs in. The underband also affects size grading. A style that looks balanced in size S can feel completely different in XL if the elastic recovery is not controlled correctly.
When reviewing a sample, do not just ask whether the chest fits. Ask whether the underband feels secure after movement.
Fabric choice changes support more than buyers think
A smooth nylon-spandex fabric with good recovery usually creates a cleaner premium look and a softer hand feel. But the same silhouette in a softer fabric may not deliver enough hold for higher impact use. That is why support should be tested with the actual intended fabric, not judged from sketch alone.
Buyers should define whether the goal is soft and clean for studio/lifestyle use, supportive and dense for training use, or seamless knit for aesthetic impact and body-mapped stretch. Fabric weight matters here too — see our guide to GSM for the basics.
Cup shape and removable pads need an early decision
Many brands assume removable pads are the easy default. In practice they create their own questions:
- Will the pad opening show through on the inside?
- Will the pad shift after washing?
- Does the market actually want removable pads?
Some buyers prefer fixed shaping or double-layer fronts instead. There is no universal best answer, but it should be decided before sampling, because changing cup structure late usually creates delays.
Strap design is not only aesthetic
Thin straps look clean in photos, but thin straps do not work for every support level. Cross-back straps may look premium, but they can affect comfort and tension balance. Before confirming a sports bra design, ask: does the strap width match the intended support level? Will this be worn for yoga or for higher-impact movement? Does the strap construction make grading harder across sizes?
Logo placement matters more on bras
Compared with leggings, bras give buyers less room for branding. A logo placed too high can be distorted by stretch. A logo placed too close to the underband seam may not look balanced. A center-front logo can work well on some clean styles, but side or back branding may look more premium depending on the silhouette.
This is where mockups before sampling save time. We provide free logo mockups before sampling — see our services page for details.
What buyers should send before the first sample
A strong first inquiry for sports bra development should include:
- Reference images from front and back
- Target support level
- Target fabric feel
- Whether pads are removable, fixed, or not included
- Target size range
- Logo file and rough placement idea
- Estimated quantity
A full tech pack is helpful, but not always required for the first discussion if the development team can guide from reference images.
Final thought
The best sports bra developments do not start with “can you copy this?” They start with a clear product intention. If the buyer defines support, fabric feel, cup construction and branding before the first sample, the revision process becomes shorter, the fit comments become clearer, and the product is much more likely to work commercially.
Want our team to review your project?
Send us your reference image, target quantity and timeline. We reply within 24 hours on weekdays — in English, Spanish or Chinese — with fabric options, MOQ, sample lead time and a transparent price breakdown. MOQ from 100 sets, mixed colors and sizes allowed.
Frequently asked questions
What MOQ is realistic for a custom private label sports bra?
At YOUMEGA, stock bra styles with custom logo start at 100 sets. Full custom OEM development with your own pattern and fabric typically requires 300–500 pcs per style per color.
How long does sports bra sampling take?
Approximately 7 days for stock styles with custom logo, and 12–15 days for full custom OEM/ODM development. Fit revisions are free until you approve the sample.
Should I use removable or fixed pads in my first sports bra collection?
There’s no universal answer. Removable pads give customers flexibility but can shift after washing. Fixed shaping is cleaner but less adjustable. Decide before sampling — changing pad construction mid-development usually adds two weeks.
What support level sells best for a new activewear brand?
Medium support is the most commercially flexible — it works for training, studio and lifestyle wear. Most first-time brands launch with one medium-support bra and add light or high support in their second collection.
Can you develop a sports bra from a reference photo without a tech pack?
Yes. Many of our first-time clients don’t have a formal tech pack. We can guide development from reference images, target support level and brand goals. A tech pack helps but isn’t required to start.





