Heat transfer vinyl designs ready to press are pre-cut, pre-weeded HTV graphics that you can apply to a garment with a heat press in 10–15 seconds. No cutter time, no weeding, no design setup. You order the design, peel the carrier, press at 305°F, and ship the shirt.
That’s the short version. The longer version is what separates a shop that turns ready-to-press HTV into a profit center from one that ends up with peeling logos and reorder requests.
This guide is for working decorators. We’ll cover what ready-to-press HTV actually is, when it beats cutting your own, the press settings that matter, the vinyl types worth carrying, and the specific products we stock for shops running daily volume.
What is ready-to-press heat transfer vinyl?
Ready-to-press heat transfer vinyl is HTV that’s been plotted, weeded, and masked on a carrier sheet before it gets to you. The work that normally happens on your cutter and weeding table is done. You’re paying for finished art on a release liner, sized to the garment.
There are two main flavors:
- Cut HTV transfers. Solid-color vinyl (polyurethane or PVC) cut into shapes, names, numbers, or logos. Think team rosters, single-color graphics, or athletic numbering.
- Printed HTV transfers. Full-color graphics printed onto printable HTV (eco-solvent, inkjet, or sublimation onto printable HTV) and contour-cut. These cover photographic art, gradients, and anything with more than 3–4 colors.
Both press the same way: position, press, peel. The difference is what’s on the carrier and how it was produced.
When ready-to-press beats cutting your own
Cutting your own HTV makes sense for some jobs. Ready-to-press wins on others. The honest math:
| Scenario | Cut Your Own | Ready to Press |
|---|---|---|
| Single-color logo, 1–12 shirts | Cheaper if you have a cutter | Faster, no weeding |
| Athletic numbering, 50+ shirts | Time-heavy on weeding | Order pre-cut numbers |
| Full-color photographic art | Not possible with solid HTV | Printed HTV is the only option |
| Variable names on jerseys | Doable, slow | Faster, fewer mistakes |
| Rush job, no setup time | Setup eats the deadline | Order, press, ship |
| Test designs / prototypes | Iterate fast on your cutter | Slower turnaround |
For most shops, the move is to keep rolls of HTV in stock for daily one-offs and order ready-to-press transfers for bulk team orders, multi-color art, and anything that would take more than 30 minutes to weed.
How to press ready-to-press HTV
The application is simple, but the variables matter. Here’s the working sequence:
- Pre-press the garment. 5 seconds at your press temp to drive out moisture and flatten the fabric. Skip this and you’ll get edge lift on cotton/poly blends.
- Position the transfer. Carrier side up, vinyl side down on the shirt. A heat-resistant ruler or alignment T helps for chest logos.
- Press at the manufacturer’s spec. Most cut HTV runs 305°F for 10–15 seconds at medium pressure (around 40–50 psi). Printed HTV is often 300°F for 12–15 seconds.
- Peel the carrier. Hot peel or cold peel depends on the vinyl. Wrong peel temp ruins the print.
- Post-press for 5 seconds with a Teflon sheet or parchment paper over the design. This locks the adhesive and improves wash durability.
Every roll of HTV ships with its own application spec. Read the sheet. A vinyl rated for 320°F at 15 seconds will scorch poly at 305°F if you over-dwell.
Hot peel vs cold peel
| Peel Type | When to Peel | Common Vinyls | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot peel | Immediately after press | Most modern PU HTV, B-Flex Gimmie 5 | Faster workflow, less downtime |
| Warm peel | After 5–10 seconds | Some glitter, holographic | Carrier needs to cool slightly |
| Cold peel | Fully cooled (30+ seconds) | Older PVC HTV, some specialty films | Slower, but durable |
If you don’t know the peel spec, test on a scrap. Lifting a hot-peel carrier cold tears the print; lifting a cold-peel carrier hot pulls vinyl off the shirt.
Press temperature and time by HTV type
The ranges below are working defaults. Always confirm against the manufacturer sheet for the specific vinyl.
| HTV Type | Temp (°F) | Time (sec) | Pressure | Peel |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard PU (cotton/poly) | 305 | 10–15 | Medium | Hot |
| Glitter HTV | 320 | 15–20 | Medium-firm | Cold |
| Holographic | 305 | 10–15 | Medium | Warm |
| Metallic | 305 | 10–15 | Medium | Hot |
| Flock | 320 | 15 | Firm | Cold |
| Reflective | 305 | 10–15 | Medium | Cold |
| Printable HTV (inkjet) | 305 | 15 | Medium | Cold |
| Sublimation HTV (on poly) | 385 | 45 | Firm | Cold |
| Puff HTV | 320 | 15 | Light-medium | Hot |
Note the puff HTV row. Press too hard and the puff effect collapses. Light to medium pressure preserves the lift.
The HTV types worth carrying
If you’re stocking vinyl for your own work or ordering ready-to-press designs in different finishes, here’s what each type does and where it earns its money.
Standard PU HTV
This is your everyday workhorse. Polyurethane HTV is thin (around 75–90 microns), stretchy, and bonds to cotton, polyester, and most blends. Use it for single-color logos, names, and any job where you don’t need a special finish.
Our pick: B-Flex Gimmie 5 Heat Transfer Vinyl 15” x 1 yd at $9.49. It’s hot peel, presses at 305°F in 10 seconds, and holds through 50+ wash cycles in our testing. We also carry it in 12” and 20” widths for different cutter beds.
Metallic HTV
Metallic vinyl gets you gold, silver, rose gold, and chrome finishes without going to foil. It’s thicker than standard PU and reflects light like a brushed metal surface. Used for cheer, dance, drill teams, and any logo where the customer wants shine without the fragility of foil.
The B-Flex Gimmie 5 Metallic 15” x 1 yd is our standard at $9.49. Also stocked in 12” and 20” widths.
Neon HTV
Safety colors, summer camp shirts, 5K race tees. Neon HTV pops under daylight and shows up reasonably well under UV. The pigments are brighter than standard PU.
We stock B-Flex Gimmie 5 Neon in 12”, 15”, and 20” widths.
Flock HTV
Flock has a fuzzy, velvet-like surface. It’s the same texture you’ve seen on vintage band tees from the 1970s. Used for retro logos, varsity-style designs, and any job where the customer wants a tactile finish. Presses at 320°F and needs firm pressure to embed the adhesive.
Holographic HTV
Holographic vinyl has a metallic film with a refractive pattern. Move the shirt and the color shifts. Drill teams, dance squads, and birthday merch eat this up. It’s more expensive than standard PU and harder to weed in fine detail, which is why ready-to-press holographic designs are popular.
Reflective HTV
Reflective vinyl bounces light back at the source. Run clubs, construction crews, road safety apparel. It’s pricier per yard than standard HTV but mandatory for any garment that needs to be visible in low light.
Puff HTV
Puff vinyl rises when heat is applied, creating a raised 3D effect. The trick is the press settings: too much pressure flattens it, too little doesn’t activate the foaming agent. 320°F at 15 seconds with light-medium pressure is the working starting point.
Printable HTV (inkjet and eco-solvent)
This is white HTV with a coated surface that accepts printer ink. You print your art, contour-cut around it, weed the excess, and press. It opens up full-color and photographic designs without going to DTF or screen printing.
The major players are Siser EasyColor DTV for inkjet and Siser printable HTV for eco-solvent. Quality varies by printer and ink set; test before committing to a 500-piece order.
Sublimation HTV
Sublimation HTV is a white printable vinyl designed to receive dye-sublimation ink. You sublimate the design onto the HTV, then heat-press the HTV onto cotton (or any fabric sublimation can’t normally bond to). It’s the workaround for printing sublimation art on cotton tees, which sublimation alone can’t do.
Best HTV for shirts: what to stock
If you’re building out a vinyl inventory for daily decoration work, the practical stock list is shorter than the catalog makes it look.
Tier 1 (must have): - Standard PU in white, black, red, navy, and athletic gold. Most logos use one of these five. - Two widths: 15” for chest logos and names, 20” for full-front and back prints.
Tier 2 (high-margin add-ons): - Metallic gold and silver. Cheer/dance/drill teams pay a premium for the finish. - Neon yellow and pink. Camp shirts and safety apparel.
Tier 3 (specialty / order on demand): - Holographic, flock, puff, reflective. Order by the yard for specific jobs. Don’t tie up shelf space.
For all three tiers, B-Flex Gimmie 5 is our recommended standard. Hot peel, soft hand, holds through 50+ wash cycles, and it cuts cleanly on Roland, Graphtec, and Cricut cutters.
How to cut heat transfer vinyl
If you’re plotting your own instead of ordering ready-to-press, the basics:
- Mirror your design. HTV is loaded carrier-side down on the cutter, so the design needs to be flipped horizontally before cutting. Every ready-to-press transfer comes pre-mirrored.
- Set the blade depth to just kick through the vinyl layer, not the carrier. On a Roland, that’s usually 30–60 grams of force with a 45° blade. On a Cricut, the “iron on” setting is the baseline.
- Test cut a small square. The vinyl should weed cleanly and the carrier should stay intact.
- Cut, weed, mask if needed. Weeding pulls the excess vinyl off the carrier, leaving just your design.
The most common mistake: cutting too deep. If you slice through the carrier, the design won’t transfer cleanly and you’ll waste vinyl.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl?
Yes. Always mirror HTV before cutting. The vinyl side faces the cutter blade, but the carrier side is what loads onto the mat. When you weed and press, the design flips back to read correctly on the shirt. The only HTV you don’t mirror is printable HTV that’s printed on the top side; that one cuts and presses without flipping.
Which side goes down on the press?
The carrier (clear or glossy plastic sheet) goes up. The vinyl side, with the adhesive, goes down against the fabric. If you press it backward, the design sticks to your upper platen and you’ve ruined the shirt and the transfer.
Troubleshooting common HTV problems
Edges lifting after wash
Three causes, in order of frequency: 1. Under-pressed. Bump time up by 3 seconds or pressure up one notch. 2. No pre-press. Moisture in the garment kills adhesion. Always pre-press 5 seconds. 3. Wrong temp for the fabric. Polyester needs lower temps (around 270°F) than 100% cotton. Check the garment care label.
Carrier won’t peel cleanly
If the carrier is fighting you, you’re peeling at the wrong temp. Hot peel vinyl peels right after the press cycle; cold peel needs to fully cool. Trying to cold-peel a hot-peel vinyl pulls the design with the carrier. Trying to hot-peel a cold-peel vinyl tears the print.
Design shrinks or distorts after press
You over-dwelled or over-temped. PU vinyl shrinks slightly under heat. If you’re holding it at 320°F for 25 seconds when the spec says 305°F for 12, the vinyl bunches and the edges curl.
Vinyl scorches the shirt
Polyester scorches around 290°F. If you’re pressing a poly-blend at 320°F, you’ll get a press box outline on the shirt. Drop your temp, extend the time, and use a Teflon sheet for protection.
How to remove heat transfer vinyl
Mistakes happen. Wrong size, wrong name, customer changed their mind. Removing HTV from a garment without trashing the shirt is a workable process if you have the right remover.
The two products we carry for this:
- OPTI Remove HTV Remover, 20 oz. Our house-brand remover at $21.99. Brush it on the back side of the print, wait 3–5 minutes, then peel the vinyl off the front with a putty knife or scraper. Wash the garment afterward to remove residue.
- Vinyl Liftoff 6 oz, AlbaChem. A 6 oz applicator bottle at $12.59. Smaller format, good for shops that pull HTV off one shirt at a time instead of running batches.
For both removers, work in a ventilated space and wear gloves. The active ingredients soften the adhesive but they’ll also dry your skin.
HTV on polyester: what changes
Polyester is heat-sensitive. The two issues you’ll hit:
- Scorch marks. The press platen leaves an outline if the temp is too high. Drop to 270–290°F and extend the time to 15–20 seconds. Use a Teflon cover sheet or parchment.
- Dye migration. Red, royal blue, and maroon polyester garments leach dye into light-colored HTV under heat. The vinyl turns pink or purple within a few washes. The fix is dye-blocker HTV (Siser EasySubli Mask, Stahls’ Sublistop) or low-temp HTV rated for poly.
For 100% cotton, you’ve got more thermal headroom and dye migration isn’t a concern.
White HTV: the most-used color in your roll
White HTV is the foundation of most decoration work. It’s the base layer for layered designs, the contrast color on dark garments, and the carrier for printable HTV. Stock more white than any other color; you’ll burn through it twice as fast as the second-most-used.
Standard 15” PU white in B-Flex Gimmie 5 is the daily driver. For larger prints, the 20” roll gives you full-back coverage without a seam.
Custom heat transfer vinyl designs: when to outsource
If a customer asks for a custom design that you can plot and weed in 15 minutes, do it in-house. If the design has fine detail, multiple colors, or requires the same art across 100+ shirts, ordering ready-to-press from a transfer house usually pencils out.
The math we run: in-house cost is (vinyl yardage × cost per yard) + (cutter time × shop rate) + (weeding time × labor rate). Ready-to-press cost is the per-transfer price plus shipping. For team orders over 50 pieces with multi-color art, ready-to-press is often cheaper and always faster.
That said, the vinyl you press onto the shirt matters more than where it was cut. A high-quality PU film pressed correctly outperforms a cheap film cut perfectly. Source matters.
Frequently asked questions
What temperature do you press heat transfer vinyl at?
Most standard PU heat transfer vinyl presses at 305°F for 10–15 seconds at medium pressure. Specialty vinyls vary: glitter and flock run at 320°F, sublimation HTV at 385°F, and printable HTV typically at 300–305°F. Always check the manufacturer’s application sheet for the exact specs of the vinyl you’re using.
Do you mirror heat transfer vinyl before cutting?
Yes. Mirror your design horizontally before sending it to the cutter. HTV is loaded with the carrier side against the cutting mat, so the vinyl gets cut in reverse. When you weed and press, the design flips to read correctly on the garment. The exception is printable HTV that has art printed on the top surface, which doesn’t need mirroring.
Which side of HTV goes down on the press?
The vinyl side (with the adhesive) goes down against the fabric. The carrier sheet, which is the clear or glossy plastic backing, faces up toward the heat platen. If you press it backward, the design transfers to your platen instead of the shirt.
How long does heat transfer vinyl last on a shirt?
A properly pressed PU heat transfer vinyl will hold up through 50+ wash cycles without significant cracking or peeling. Quality of the vinyl, press settings, and wash conditions all affect lifespan. Wash garments inside out in cold water and tumble dry low to extend the life of HTV prints.
Can you put heat transfer vinyl on polyester?
Yes, but you need to press at a lower temperature (270–290°F) and watch for dye migration on colored polyester. Red, royal blue, and maroon poly garments often leach dye into the vinyl over time. For those, use dye-blocker HTV or a low-temp polyester-rated film.
What’s the difference between iron-on and heat transfer vinyl?
They’re the same product. “Iron-on” is the consumer-facing name (Cricut markets it that way), and “heat transfer vinyl” or “HTV” is the industry term. The application is identical: heat activates the adhesive, which bonds the vinyl to the fabric. A commercial heat press gives better, more consistent results than a household iron.
How do you remove heat transfer vinyl without ruining the shirt?
Use a vinyl remover like OPTI Remove or AlbaChem Vinyl Liftoff. Apply the remover to the back side of the printed area, let it sit for 3–5 minutes, then scrape or peel the vinyl off the front. Wash the garment afterward to remove any residual chemical and adhesive.
Is printable heat transfer vinyl any good for full-color designs?
Printable HTV works well for short runs of full-color art on cotton and poly. Print quality depends on your printer and ink set. Inkjet versions like Siser EasyColor DTV produce vivid color but have lower wash durability than DTF or screen printing. For runs over 100 pieces with photographic art, DTF transfers usually outperform printable HTV on cost and durability.
What’s the best HTV for stretchy fabrics?
Thin polyurethane HTV (around 75–90 microns) stretches with the fabric without cracking. B-Flex Gimmie 5 and similar PU films are designed for athletic apparel, leggings, and performance wear. Avoid thick PVC vinyls on high-stretch fabrics; they’ll crack at the first wash.
Can you layer heat transfer vinyl?
Yes. Press the base color first for the full time, then add the second layer and press for the full time again. Don’t layer more than 3 colors deep; the stack gets stiff and prone to lift. For complex multi-color work, printed HTV or DTF is a better path than layered cut vinyl.
How do you store heat transfer vinyl rolls?
Store HTV rolls vertically or flat in a cool, dry space below 75°F. Heat and humidity degrade the adhesive over time. Keep rolls in their original packaging or in a sealed bag to block UV. Properly stored vinyl stays usable for 2–3 years from the manufacture date.
What’s the strongest heat transfer vinyl for workwear?
For heavy-duty workwear like hi-vis vests, uniforms, and bag prints, a thicker PU or polyurethane-coated polyester HTV holds up best. Look for vinyls rated for industrial laundering (60+ commercial wash cycles). Reflective HTV is often required for safety apparel and has its own application specs.
If you’re pressing ready-to-press transfers in volume, the single biggest thing you can do this week is verify your press temp with a laser thermometer. Most platens drift 10–20°F from the dial setting, and that’s where the edge-lift complaints come from. Knock that out and you’ll see the difference on the next wash test.
We stock B-Flex Gimmie 5 across widths and finishes, plus OPTI Remove for the jobs that need to come back off. Give us a shout if you want help spec’ing a vinyl program for your shop.