Custom Lab Coats for Medical & Nursing Schools

Call or Text us: (929) 605-4397

HomeBlog › Custom Lab Coats for Medical & Nursing Schools

Nursing schools

Custom Lab Coats for Medical & Nursing Schools

04/10/2026

Nursing students wearing custom embroidered short lab coats with school crest during clinical training

A white coat is one of the first professional milestones a medical or nursing student earns, and the school crest embroidered on it is often the first piece of institutional branding a student wears in public. For programs running white-coat ceremonies, clinical rotations, or simulation labs, a custom lab coat program does three jobs at once: it builds cohort identity, it signals professionalism to patients and preceptors during rotations, and — run through the campus bookstore — it becomes a small, steady revenue line.

Here is how medical and nursing programs typically structure a coat program, and what to consider before you order for an incoming cohort.

Cohort identity and the white-coat ceremony

Most programs order a batch tied to a specific class year or cohort, embroidered with the school name or crest plus a designation like “Class of 2027” or the program name (BSN, PA, MD). Ordering by cohort rather than open-ended keeps the branding consistent for a ceremony photo line and gives every student the same coat on day one, regardless of when they joined the program.

Choosing between the Classic and Student coat styles

Our Student Lab Coat is cut and priced for programs ordering in volume every year, while the Classic Full-Length and Consultation (Short) styles suit programs that want their students in the same coat style faculty and staff wear. Many nursing programs prefer the short consultation-length coat for clinical rotation comfort, while medical schools more often choose the full-length coat to match the traditional white-coat ceremony look.

Decoration: embroidery is the standard for student programs

Embroidered school crests and program names hold up through a student’s full enrollment of repeated hot-water laundering — a meaningful consideration since many programs require coats to be laundered after every clinical shift. Heat-pressed decoration is a lower-cost alternative some programs choose for a single semester’s cohort or a smaller specialty track, where the coat’s usable life is short by design.

Sizing across a diverse student body

Student cohorts span a wide range of body types, and getting sizing right the first time avoids a scramble of exchanges during orientation week. We recommend collecting sizes directly from incoming students via a simple form (S–XXL, plus petite and tall options) before the order is placed, rather than guessing at a standard distribution.

Program typeTypical order sizeRecommended style
Small nursing cohort (30–60 students)30–75 coatsStudent Lab Coat
Medical school class100–250 coatsClassic Full-Length
PA / clinical specialty track25–60 coatsConsultation (Short)
Bookstore stock (year-round)50–150 coatsMixed sizes, Student Lab Coat

Running it through the bookstore

Programs that stock coats through the campus bookstore typically order a mixed-size batch at the start of the academic year, sized against historical enrollment, then re-order smaller top-up batches as sizes sell through. Keeping your artwork and size run on file with us makes a mid-year top-up order fast — no need to resend logo files or renegotiate pricing.

Choosing for your order

Order by cohort with a collected size list, pick embroidery if the coat needs to survive a full clinical rotation schedule, and keep your crest artwork on file for easy re-ordering each academic year. Our 25-unit minimum makes it realistic to order for a single specialty track or a full incoming class.

Key takeawayOrder student coats by cohort with sizes collected in advance, choose embroidery for anything that survives a clinical rotation schedule, and keep artwork on file for annual re-orders.

Planning a coat program for an incoming class? Get a custom quote — free mockups in 24–48 hours. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

More posts

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *