Tech Pack Excel Export

Export to
Excel. 
Factories Love It.

If you're figuring out how to make a tech pack, Excel can still be the file you send. Build the pack with AI first, then export clean spreadsheets for factories and teams who still prefer working in Excel.

Included with Pro and Studio plans for production spreadsheet exports

Need the tech pack template guide first? Open the factory-ready workflow
Summer_Tshirt_V2.xlsx
BOM
Measurements
Costing
Summary
TypeItemSpec
FabricMain BodyCotton Jersey 180g
FabricRib1x1 Rib 220g
TrimMain LabelWoven 30x15mm
TrimCare LabelSatin printed
.xlsx

What You Can Export

Choose individual sheets or download everything as one workbook.

Bill of Materials

Complete BOM spreadsheet with all components organized by category.

Fabrics & GSM
Trims & hardware
Labels & tags
Threads & colors

Measurement Tables

Size specs with grading across your full size range.

All measurement points
Size grading
Tolerance specs
Multiple size ranges

Costing Sheets

Cost breakdowns for production planning and budgeting.

Material costs
Labor estimates
MOQ calculations
Price per unit

All-in-One Workbook

Complete Excel workbook with multiple sheets — everything in one file.

BOM sheet
Measurements sheet
Costing sheet
Summary page
Excel Vs AI

Keep Excel as the output,
not the place you build everything.

The friction usually isn't the spreadsheet itself. It's the manual workflow behind it: drawing flats in Illustrator, duplicating specs in Excel, exporting PDFs, and chasing revisions across multiple files. AI Tech Packs lets you create the pack in one workflow, then export Excel only when your factory actually needs it.

Manual Excel + Illustrator

Create or revise flats in Illustrator every time the garment changes.
Re-enter BOMs, size specs, and callouts across separate Excel tabs.
Check formulas, copy-paste blocks, and naming conventions by hand.
Export another PDF and resend files whenever a sampling note changes.

AI Tech Packs + Excel Export

Generate the first draft from one garment image instead of rebuilding the pack manually.
Edit measurements, BOM items, labels, artwork, and notes in one place.
Keep one current source of truth before exporting anything for suppliers.
Send Excel only when the pack is already organized and factory-ready.

Why Factories Prefer Excel

PDFs are great for sharing. Excel is great for working.

🌍

Universal Format

Every factory, supplier, and team member knows how to work with Excel. No learning curve.

✏️

Easy to Annotate

Factories can add notes, highlight cells, and mark changes directly in the spreadsheet.

📴

Works Offline

Download once, access anywhere. No internet needed to review specs on the factory floor.

🔄

Fits Existing Workflows

Integrates with ERP systems, costing tools, and whatever your factory already uses.

Pro & Studio Feature

Unlimited Excel Exports

Unlimited Excel exports are included with the Pro and Studio plans. Studio adds Adobe Illustrator integration, Factory Share links, and MAX mode.

Studio Plan Includes:

Everything in Pro Plan (incl. unlimited Excel)
Adobe Illustrator Export + Plugin
Factory Share Links
MAX mode (Pro image model)

Tech Pack Excel Export Questions

Common questions about exporting BOMs, specs, and costing sheets to Excel after the tech pack is ready.

Yes. AI Tech Packs can export tech pack Excel files with BOMs, measurement tables, costing sheets, and summary tabs for factories that still rely on spreadsheets.

The export can include bill of materials details, size specs, grading information, costing data, and other summary information in a workbook format your team or factory can review.

The faster workflow is to build and edit the pack in AI Tech Packs, then export to Excel once the details are organized. That keeps Excel as the output format instead of the place where every revision happens.

Yes. Factories can open the Excel file, annotate cells, add comments, and work in the spreadsheet format they already use during costing or production review.

Ready to export to Excel?

Create your tech pack, then export it in the format your factory prefers.