Fishing crew wearing custom performance fishing polos with a left-chest logo
Fishing Polos · Collared Uniform-Grade

Custom Fishing Polos, Collared and Crew-Ready.

Custom fishing polos from a fishing-only factory — a performance piqué build with a structured self-fabric collar that won't curl, a reinforced placket and a clean left-chest logo zone, so your crew, dealers and staff wear one uniform-grade shirt, decorated with your logo from 100 pcs per style.

Tee Polo  ·  a collar makes it a uniform
Part of our custom fishing shirts range →
UPF 50+
piqué torso
6
polo builds
3-button
reinforced placket
100
MOQ, pcs·style
The Polo Line

The fishing polo builds we make.

One collared standard, several builds — what changes is the knit, the sleeve length and the pocket, not the structured, uniform-grade collar underneath. Each runs on the same performance knit and QC discipline; the full range of tees, long-sleeves and other cuts lives on the all our fishing shirt styles page.

Custom performance piqué fishing polo shirt Flip
Core build

Performance Piqué Polo

Performance Piqué Polo

The core build: a textured, moisture-wicking piqué with a structured self-fabric collar and a UPF torso — the everyday crew and staff workhorse.

Custom smooth jersey fishing polo shirt for dealers Flip
Dealer & corporate

Smooth Jersey Polo

Smooth Jersey Polo

A softer, flatter interlock knit with a cleaner face for the crispest left-chest embroidery — the dealer, corporate and pro-shop pick.

Custom long-sleeve fishing polo shirt Flip
Cool-season

Long-Sleeve Polo

Long-Sleeve Polo

The same collar and placket, now with long sleeves for cool mornings and all-day sun — the guide and dealer cool-season shirt. (for a pull-over long-sleeve without a collar, see long sleeve fishing shirts.)

Long sleeve fishing shirts →
Custom pocket fishing polo shirt for working crew Flip
Working crew

Pocket Polo

Pocket Polo

The same build with a secured chest pocket for a pen, pliers or a phone — the working-crew and staff utility polo.

Custom sublimated color-block fishing polo shirt for dealers and pro-staff Flip
Dealer & pro-staff

Sublimated / Color-Block Polo

Sublimated / Color-Block Polo

Full-color dye-sublimation with sponsor-zone panels and color-blocked shoulders — the collared dealer, marine-brand and pro-staff polo. (for full-roster tournament team jerseys, see tournament team apparel.)

Tournament team apparel →
Women's and youth cut fishing polo shirt Flip
Full grade

Women's & Youth Cut

Women's & Youth Cut

The same collared, structured build graded to women's and youth patterns.

See sizing →
The Collar Standard

What makes a fishing polo a polo: the collar and placket.

A fishing polo isn't a tee with a collar sewn on. What makes it read uniform-grade — and hold that look all season — is how the collar, placket and chest are built. Here's what a polo build actually adds, part by part. (Factory-stated construction; figures are representative.)

Fishing polo shirt showing the collar, placket and left-chest badge zone
Crew tee Collared polo
  • The self-fabric collar — knit to match, built to stand.

    A polo's collar is a flat-knit, self-fabric collar, knitted and set on separately so it stands off the shoulders and reads "dressed," where a tee stops at a crew neck. That one feature is what turns a performance shirt into a uniform-grade one — a shirt a crew, a dealer floor or resort staff can wear as their standard. (the collar toggle raises it here.)

  • Anti-curl collar construction — it still looks sharp on the tenth wash.

    A cheap polo dies at the collar: it curls at the points, waves at the edge and goes limp. Ours is tipped and interlined so the collar holds its shape and lies flat wash after wash — the difference between a crew that looks kitted and one that looks worn out. This is the polo-specific build point a plain tee never has to solve.

  • The reinforced placket — a clean throat that opens and closes right.

    A short front placket with a reinforced, secured 3-button run (a 2-button set on request) opens at the throat for air and buttons up clean for a put-together look; the buttons are set to survive a season on the water, not pop on the first snag.

  • The clean left-chest badge zone — a polo's natural logo home.

    A flat piqué or jersey chest is the crispest place on any shirt to carry an embroidered mark, so a dealer, crew or resort logo sits sharp, dimensional and centered — the placement a polo is built to show. (decoration methods are detailed under custom decoration; where every mark lands is in the branding section below.)

Every polo build above is built to this same collar-and-placket standard — you pick the knit, the sleeve and the pocket; the structured, uniform-grade collar comes standard.

A fishing crew and marine dealer staff in collared uniform fishing polos on the dock
The Uniform Case

Why a crew reaches for a polo over a tee.

The build above is the how. This is the why — the on-the-water and on-the-floor reasons buyers spec a collared polo for their team instead of a tee. (Use-case, not construction — how the polo is built is in the section above.)

You're putting a crew or staff in a uniform.

A collar reads "guide, crew, staff" where a tee reads "spectator" — a polo is the shirt that makes a team look kitted and professional, on the boat or on the floor.

You sell boats, gear or a marine brand.

A collared, chest-logo polo is the standard dealer and rep shirt — the one a sales floor, a boat show and reps wear to look like a brand instead of a booth.

You run a resort, lodge or pro shop.

Guest-facing staff need a shirt that's branded, collared and still performance — a polo covers the dock, the shop and the dining room in one, where a tee is too casual for the guest side.

You need a shirt that crosses from the boat to the clubhouse.

A polo dresses up where a tee can't — the same shirt works for a charter run in the morning and a sponsor dinner that night.

You want the cleanest logo showcase you can get.

A flat piqué or jersey chest holds a crisp embroidered mark better than a textured tee, so a dealer or crew logo lands sharp — the reason a polo is the go-to branded shirt. (for a casual, un-collared team shirt at a lower price point, a fishing tee is the lighter pick.)

The Knit Underneath

The performance knit a fishing polo is built on.

A polo has to breathe, hold a collar's structure and give a clean face for a logo. Three build points matter; the full fiber, weight and weave numbers live under fabric technology. (Factory-stated; confirmed on the sample.)

Performance piqué knit for fishing polo shirts

Performance piqué

A textured, moisture-wicking knit whose waffle surface moves air while giving the collar and body enough structure to sit clean; the classic polo base. (How the knit breathes is covered on the fishing tees page.)

Smooth interlock jersey knit for dealer fishing polos

Smooth interlock jersey

A softer, flatter knit with a clean face for when you want the crispest possible embroidered or printed logo; the dealer and corporate polo base.

Light UPF 50+ knit for the fishing polo torso

Light UPF 50+ knit

A light sun-protection knit option over the torso — tight-weave, dyed-in, survives repeated wash. Grades and weights: fabric technology; UPF ratings explained under UPF apparel.

Where Your Mark Lands

Where your logo goes on a fishing polo.

A polo has the placement it's known for — a clean left chest, a sleeve badge and a back panel. Here's where a mark lands on a polo build; the decoration methods themselves are detailed under custom decoration.

Fishing polo logo placement zones: left chest, sleeve badge, back yoke, nape, collar tip Left chest · signature Sleeve badge Back yoke Nape label Collar / placket tip
  • Left-chest embroidery is the polo signature

    A flat piqué or jersey chest is built to carry a clean, dimensional embroidered logo that reads as dealer, crew or resort identity; it's the mark a polo is made to show, and where most polo orders put their brand.

  • Polo placement zones

    Beyond the left chest: a sleeve badge, the back yoke/panel (sponsor-ready across the shoulders), a nape / back-neck label and a collar or placket-tip accent; tell us the zone and size and we digitize and lock it to your file.

  • Method routed by fabric & zone

    Piqué and jersey take embroidery for a crisp chest mark, a full-color or color-block polo takes dye-sublimation with sponsor panels, and cotton/blends and dark garments route to screen, DTF or DTG — point-named here, spec'd on your tech pack.

  • Free fish-artwork starting library

    A set of fish silhouettes (marlin, tarpon, redfish, snook and more) to build a chest or sleeve mark around, or send your own art.

  • The mark holds through the wash

    An embroidered chest logo is stitched into the garment, so a dealer or crew polo worn and washed all season keeps its mark sharp. (Durability mechanism detailed under custom decoration.)

Fit & Grading

Fishing polo fit across men's, women's and youth.

A polo has two fit notes a tee doesn't — the collar set and the body cut for a tucked or untucked wear. Full measurement tables are on the size charts; here's what's specific to a polo. (Factory-stated grading.)

Collar and placket set per size

The collar and placket are graded so they sit clean and centered at the throat across the whole run, not gaping on an XL or choking on an S.

Body cut for tucked or untucked

The body is graded to wear tucked for a dressed look or untucked on the boat, with a hem and side that stay put either way.

Men's S–5XL, plus women's & youth

The same collared, structured build graded to women's (XS–3XL) and youth patterns, in the same fabric.

Mix the grid to the minimum

Spread the 100-pc per-style minimum across sizes and all three cuts, so a first polo order kits a whole crew. Full measurements: fishing shirt size charts.

Fishing polo fit across men's, women's and youth
Before You Order

Custom fishing polo questions, answered.

The questions buyers ask before a first polo order.

From 100 pcs per style, and you can mix sizes and men's/women's/youth cuts to reach it. Reorders run from about half that.
No — the collar is a flat-knit, self-fabric collar that's tipped and interlined to hold its shape and lie flat wash after wash, so a crew polo still looks kitted at the end of a season instead of curling at the points.
Yes — a flat piqué or jersey chest is built for a crisp, dimensional left-chest embroidered mark; that's the signature polo placement. Sleeve, back-yoke and nape marks are available too.
Yes — a performance piqué polo, a smooth jersey polo, a long-sleeve polo, a pocket polo and a full-color sublimated / color-block polo all run on the same collared build; you pick the knit, the sleeve and the pocket.
No — the UPF 50+ option comes from weave density plus a dyed-in treatment (tested to AATCC 183), and the wicking is built into the knit, so both survive repeated wash rather than washing off.
Yes — the same collared, structured build grades to a true women's cut and a youth run in the same fabric; see the sizing notes above.
A first polo order runs roughly 5–8 weeks brief-to-ship; repeats are faster. The step-by-step timeline is on the home page.
Fishing apparel factory producing custom fishing polos
Start Your Order

Start your custom fishing polo order.

Send us the build, target quantity, fabric preference and your logo — you'll hear back within 24 hours, in plain English.

  • Response within 24 hours (GMT+8)
  • Sample fee credited back against your bulk order
  • From 100 pcs per style, mixed sizes and cuts
  • Worldwide shipping — DDP / DDU

Get a Fishing Polo Quote

Build + quantity + fabric + logo — we reply within 24 hours.