Most successful print on demand sellers start with $20-50 per day on Facebook ads. This gives you enough data to learn what works without burning through your savings. The real minimum is about $300-500 total to properly test your first few designs—enough to run 3-5 ad sets through Facebook’s learning phase and make informed decisions.
Here’s what happens to most people: they spend weeks perfecting their store, finally launch an ad with $5/day, see no sales after 48 hours, and declare Facebook ads “don’t work.”
The problem isn’t their budget—it’s their expectations. Facebook’s algorithm needs roughly 50 optimization events (usually purchases) per week to fully optimize your ads. At $5/day selling $30 shirts, that math doesn’t work.
But here’s the thing: you don’t need full optimization when you’re starting out. You need enough data to make decisions.

Matt Schmitt, who’s coached thousands of POD sellers through Skup, breaks it down simply:
“Don’t think about daily budget. Think about what you’re willing to spend to learn if a design sells. That number is usually $50-100 per design test.”
Here’s how that breaks down in practice:
The key insight: your first ad spend isn’t about profit. It’s tuition for learning what your audience responds to.

If you have $500 to start (a reasonable amount for most beginners), here’s how to split it:
Run 4 different designs at $50 each. Use interest targeting based on your niche. Look for early signals: clicks, add-to-carts, and engagement. Kill anything with zero engagement after $25 spent.
Take your best 1-2 performers and test new audiences. Try lookalike audiences if you’ve gotten any purchases. Increase daily budget slightly on winners.
If you have a winner: increase budget 20% every 2-3 days. If nothing worked: analyze what got the most engagement and create similar designs.
Forget vanity metrics. Here’s what to watch when you’re budget-conscious:
If your CPC is above $2 and CTR below 0.5%, the problem is your creative—not your budget.

After reviewing thousands of student ad accounts, these are the budget mistakes that kill momentum:
You can still start—just adjust expectations. With $100:
Many Skup Incubator students started with tight budgets and found winners within their first few tests. The key is treating every dollar as a learning investment, not a gamble.
Technically yes, but you’ll struggle to get meaningful data. At $5/day, you might reach 200-400 people—not enough to know if your design has potential. $20/day is the realistic minimum for useful insights.
Give each ad at least 3-4 days and $50-75 in spend before making decisions. Facebook’s learning phase needs time, and early results are often misleading. Look for engagement trends, not just sales.
Start with ad set budgets (ABO) so you control exactly how much each design gets. CBO can starve new tests before they get a fair shot. Switch to CBO only after you have proven winners.
The real question isn’t “how much should I spend?”—it’s “how much am I willing to invest in learning?” Most successful POD sellers budget $300-500 for their first month of testing, spending $20-50 per day across multiple design tests.
Start with what you can afford to lose, track your numbers religiously, and remember: your first winning design pays for all the tests that came before it.
If you want structured guidance on exactly how to run these tests—including when to kill ads, how to read your data, and what makes a design worth scaling—the Apparel Cloning System walks you through the entire process step by step.