Custom badges, patches, and uniform insignia: every type compared
Owl Badges manufactures every product compared in this guide — metal badges, flex badges, embroidered patches, PVC rubber patches, subdued patches, name tapes, flag patches, lapel pins, challenge coins, and more. We’ve tried to present each material honestly, including the cases where one of our products isn’t the right fit. See our full methodology.
Material types covered
Attachment options compared
Years manufacturing
Agencies served
Picking the right material is a uniform decision, not just a purchasing one
A quartermaster ordering 80 patches for a new uniform contract, a chief approving an updated department patch, an officer replacing a duty badge, a Scout leader buying troop patches, a security firm rebranding after a name change — they all face the same first question. Which material? Metal, flex, embroidered, PVC, woven, printed, subdued? Each material has different durability, different appearance, different production time, different cost per unit, and different attachment options. The wrong material doesn’t always fail visibly — it fades after two summers, peels at the corners after twenty washes, looks cheap from across a room when it shouldn’t, or violates a regulation the buyer didn’t know existed.
This page is a reference for that decision. It compares every major badge, patch, and uniform insignia type Owl Badges manufactures, organized by how buyers actually use them. The comparison matrices, attachment guidance, and use-case sections are designed to answer the questions buyers ask before placing an order, not after.
Every badge and patch type, compared
This matrix covers the core badge, patch, and insignia categories. Production times reflect Owl Badges’ standard timelines and are typical of the industry — some manufacturers run faster on catalog shapes and slower on custom dies.
| Type | Best for | Durability | Detail level | Weather | Typical production |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metal badge | Duty wear, dress uniform, command staff | Excellent | High (die-struck) | Excellent | 8-12 weeks |
| Reverse enamel badge | Premium duty, ceremonial use | Excellent | Very high (color recessed) | Excellent | 8-12 weeks |
| Flex badge (TPU) | Tactical uniforms, external carriers | Very good | High (molded) | Excellent | 5-8 weeks |
| Embroidered patch | Shoulder patches, classic uniform look | Good | Medium-high | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| PVC rubber patch | Tactical gear, outdoor use, 3D designs | Excellent | Very high (3D) | Excellent | 3-6 weeks |
| Subdued patch | OCP, multicam, tactical operations | Good | Medium-high | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| ID patch | Back panels, chest IDs, tactical vests | Very good | Bold text focus | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| Chevron rank patch | Sleeve ranks, sergeant/corporal stripes | Good | Medium | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| Flag patch (US/state) | Shoulder placement per regulation | Good | Medium-high | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| Name tape | Chest identification, agency tape | Very good | Text focus | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| Hat / rocker patch | Headwear, curved placement | Good | Medium | Good | 3-6 weeks |
| Metal name tag | Dress uniform, professional ID | Excellent | Engraved text | Excellent | 8-12 weeks |
| Metal collar rank | Dress uniform rank insignia | Excellent | Sculpted metal | Excellent | 3-4 weeks |
| Lapel pin | Dress wear, commemorative, awards | Excellent | High (enamel/die-struck) | Excellent | 5-8 weeks |
| Challenge coin | Recognition, commemoration, gifts | Excellent | Very high (3D die-struck) | N/A (not worn) | 8-12 weeks |
Metal badges, flex badges, and where each one fits
The traditional duty badge. Die-struck from raw metal, hand-finished, and customized with the wearing agency’s seal, rank, title, and badge number. The premium feel of polished metal carries a presence that no other material reproduces. Available with safety pin (sewn to uniform), belt clip (for plainclothes carry), or wallet insert (for off-duty or detective use).
When metal makes sense: duty uniforms, dress uniforms, command staff, ceremonial wear, retirement presentations, and any context where the symbolic weight of a metal badge matters. When it doesn’t: tactical operations where weight matters, external carrier use where the rigid badge can damage the carrier, or training environments where badges get banged around.
A premium variant of the standard metal badge. The color areas of the design are recessed into the metal and filled with hard-fired enamel. The result is a flatter, more refined look with exceptional color durability — the enamel sits below the metal surface, so the design resists scratching and wear longer than a raised-color metal badge. Common for command staff, awards, and badges meant to be worn for many years without refinishing.
When reverse enamel makes sense: agencies that want the most durable finish available, ceremonial or presentation badges that should still look new in ten years, multi-color seals where color fidelity over time matters. When standard metal is better: budget-driven orders, departments wanting the traditional raised-color look.
A flexible thermoplastic polyurethane badge with a metallic finish. Worn primarily on tactical uniforms, plate carriers, and external body armor carriers where a rigid metal badge would be uncomfortable, would damage the carrier, or would catch on equipment. Flex badges deliver the visual authority of a metal badge — same seal, same rank, same numbers — without the weight or rigidity. Weather-resistant and lightweight.
When flex makes sense: tactical operations, external carrier use, training, SWAT, K9, anywhere durability matters more than the prestige weight of metal. When metal is better: dress uniform, ceremonial occasions, command staff visibility, anywhere the badge will be inspected up close.
Embroidered, PVC, subdued, and the materials behind each
The traditional uniform patch. Thread is stitched onto a twill backing in your department’s design, colors, and dimensions. Embroidered patches carry a classic, textured look that buyers associate with established uniformed services. They handle bold designs and large text well, hold their color through repeated washing, and remain the most common shoulder patch on police, fire, sheriff, and security uniforms.
When embroidered makes sense: standard shoulder patches, agency identification, classic uniform appearance, bold designs without fine sub-4mm text. When another material is better: highly detailed designs with small text or complex gradients (PVC or woven detail better), heavy outdoor/weather exposure with constant abrasion (PVC handles abuse better), tactical/subdued requirements (subdued versions cover this).
A flexible molded patch with a rubbery feel and a 3D raised surface. PVC patches resist water, dirt, fading, fraying, and abrasion — they handle conditions that destroy embroidered patches over time. The molding process allows for crisp small text, sharp graphic detail, and dimensional designs that thread can’t match. Increasingly common on tactical gear, plate carriers, K9 unit equipment, federal agency uniforms, and outdoor brand apparel.
When PVC makes sense: outdoor or tactical use, designs with fine text or detail, weather-exposed gear, identification patches that need to survive heavy wear. When embroidered is better: traditional dress uniform appearance, classic shoulder patches, budget-driven large orders with simple designs.
Embroidered or PVC patches in muted color palettes — black, olive drab, coyote tan, foliage green, OCP, multicam — designed to blend with tactical uniforms rather than stand out. Subdued patches are required on most military combat uniforms and many federal tactical units, and are increasingly used by SWAT teams and tactical police units where visibility from a distance is operationally undesirable.
When subdued makes sense: military uniforms (mandatory per branch regulations), federal tactical units, SWAT, plainclothes operations, tactical training, low-light operations. When full-color is better: standard patrol uniforms, dress uniforms, community-facing assignments, anywhere the agency wants high visibility and recognition.
ID patches, chevron ranks, name tapes, and metal name tags
High-visibility identification patches in two main sizes: large back panel (4″x12″ or 3″x9″) for plate carriers and tactical vests, and small chest ID (1″x5″ or 2″x6″) for front-panel identification. Text options include POLICE, SHERIFF, K9, SWAT, MEDIC, FIRE, SECURITY, and custom. Optional glow-in-dark thread improves nighttime identification. Wash-resistant and durable.
When ID patches make sense: tactical vests, plate carriers, raid jackets, K9 harnesses, scene-response identification, any context where role recognition from a distance matters. Many departments standardize on Velcro backing for ID patches so the same vest can be reconfigured between roles or shifts.
Embroidered chevron stripes for sleeve rank designation — corporal, sergeant, master sergeant, and department-specific rank variants. Available in standard military gold/black, department-specific colors, and subdued versions for tactical or military uniforms. Cross-references with metal collar rank insignia (for dress uniform) and rocker patches (for unit or specialty designation under the shoulder patch).
When chevrons make sense: enlisted ranks on most agency uniforms, military, fire department company officer ranks. When metal collar ranks are better: dress uniform, officer ranks (lieutenant and above), command staff. Many departments use both — chevron patches on daily wear, metal collar pins on dress uniform.
Professional embroidered name strips for chest identification. Standard military regulation sizing is 1″ x 5″ with 3/4″ lettering. Optional agency logo or state seal can be embroidered alongside the name. Available in standard colors (black text on tan, black text on OCP, white on navy) or fully custom color combinations. Most military and federal name tapes follow strict regulation specifications — Army AR 670-1, Air Force DAFI 36-2903, and equivalent service regulations. Civilian or non-LE applications (working dogs, service dogs, contractor identification, corporate security without LE wording) can use any styling.
When name tapes make sense: military uniforms (mandatory), most law enforcement uniforms, fire department uniforms, security uniforms, K9 handler identification, working dog vests, contractor identification.
Premium metal name tags for dress uniform, ceremonial wear, and professional identification contexts where a fabric name tape would look out of place. Engraved or printed names on polished or satin metal, with optional department logo or state seal in color. Frame options in gold or silver, and magnet backing (for shirts and blazers without pin holes) or traditional pin backing. Standard size is 5/8″ x 2.5″.
When metal name tags make sense: dress uniform, professional services (security at hotels, casinos, executive protection), corporate security, court appearances, anywhere a fabric tape doesn’t match the uniform’s formality.
American flag patches, state flag patches, hat patches, and rockers
Standard, subdued, thin blue line, and reverse-field American flag patches. Most military and law enforcement uniforms wear the flag on the right shoulder in reverse-field orientation (union of stars facing forward, so the flag appears to fly into the wind as the wearer moves forward). Subdued versions for tactical and military combat uniforms, full-color versions for dress and patrol uniforms, thin blue line variants for law enforcement solidarity wear.
When American flag patches make sense: military uniforms (regulation), most law enforcement agencies (per department policy), federal agencies, fire department dress uniforms, anywhere national identification is part of the uniform standard. Civilian use (Scouts, outdoor brands, motorcycle clubs, veteran apparel) is permitted and common.
Detailed embroidered state flag patches available for all 50 states, in three main variations: full-color (standard for patrol and dress uniforms), subdued (for tactical and military uniforms), and thin blue line (for law enforcement). Both standard versions (with state name text) and no-text versions (just the flag design) are available. State flag patches are commonly worn on the opposite shoulder from the U.S. flag, alongside the department patch, or on tactical gear.
When state flag patches make sense: state-level law enforcement (highway patrol, state police, state troopers), local agencies wanting state identification, military reservists, civilian use (Scouts, outdoor brands, motorcycle clubs, veteran groups, sports teams). No-text versions are common for civilian and corporate use; agency-versioned designs typically require credential verification.
Patches sized and shaped specifically for headwear (baseball caps, beanies, watch caps, boonies) and rocker patches with the curved shape designed to sit above or below a main shoulder patch. Hat patches often run smaller than shoulder patches and use heat-seal backing for cap fabrics. Rockers carry unit designations (K9, SWAT, FTO, motors, marine, mounted) or specialty designations that sit alongside the main department patch.
When hat patches make sense: department-issued caps, beanies for cold-weather patrol, K9 and specialty unit caps, off-duty branded headwear. When rockers make sense: unit identification on shoulder, specialty designations, layered patch arrangements per department uniform standards.
Lapel pins, collar pins, metal collar ranks, and challenge coins
Metal lapel pins for dress uniform, commemorative awards, recognition programs, and department-affiliated wear. Available in hard enamel (smooth surface, recessed color), 3D raised designs (sculpted detail), or die-struck antique finish. Pin styles include traditional butterfly clutch and military clutch (pull-back) backings. Standard sizes 3/4″ to 1.25″ with custom sizes on request. Optional epoxy dome coating for additional surface protection.
When lapel pins make sense: dress uniform recognition, retirement awards, service-year commemoration, department affiliation pins for off-duty wear, fundraising and memorial pins, training graduation pins.
Metal rank insignia for dress uniform collar placement — sergeant chevrons, lieutenant bars, captain bars, major oak leaves, colonel eagles, chief stars. Available in gold, silver, black, and two-tone finishes. Custom collar pins (letter or department abbreviation pins) handle department-specific designators (PD, SO, FD, EMS) or rank designators not covered by standard military insignia. Sharp screw-back fasteners hold securely through repeated wear.
When metal collar ranks make sense: officer ranks (lieutenant and above) on most law enforcement and fire agencies, dress uniform requirements, command staff identification. Chevron patches handle most enlisted-rank applications instead.
Custom challenge coins for recognition, commemoration, and presentation. Die-struck metal with custom artwork on both sides, available in 3D raised designs (sculpted relief), traditional mint style (flat with color fill), or double-sided custom art. Edge options include smooth, rope, cross-cut, and diamond-cut. Standard sizes 1.75″ and 2″ diameter with custom sizes available. Presentation boxes optional. Challenge coins are not part of the wearable uniform but sit alongside it as a recognition and unit-pride artifact.
When challenge coins make sense: agency-affiliation tokens, training graduation gifts, retirement presentations, commemoration of major operations or events, fundraising programs, unit-pride distribution. Military challenge coin tradition originated in WWI and now spans every uniformed service plus many civilian recognition programs.
How each material attaches to a uniform
The right attachment method depends on the material being attached and the use case. For an in-depth comparison of patch attachment methods (iron-on, sew-on, Velcro, adhesive), see our patch attachment methods comparison. For metal badge attachments (safety pin, belt clip, wallet insert), see the badge attachment methods reference. The summary below covers attachment by product category.
| Material | Sew-on | Iron-on | Velcro | Pin/clip/insert | Adhesive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metal badge | — | — | — | Pin / clip / wallet | — |
| Reverse enamel badge | — | — | — | Pin / clip / wallet | — |
| Flex badge | Yes | — | Yes | — | — |
| Embroidered patch | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| PVC patch | Yes | — | Yes | — | — |
| Subdued patch | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| ID patch | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| Chevron rank | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| Flag patch | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| Name tape | Yes | Yes | Yes | — | — |
| Hat patch | Yes | Heat-seal | — | — | — |
| Metal name tag | — | — | — | Pin / magnet | — |
| Metal collar rank | — | — | — | Screw-back | — |
| Lapel pin | — | — | — | Butterfly / military clutch | — |
| Jr. sticker badge | — | — | — | — | Yes |
Choosing by who wears it and where
Metal badge on chest, embroidered department patch on shoulders (both sides typically), American flag on right shoulder, name tape above right chest pocket, chevron ranks on sleeves for enlisted, metal collar ranks for officers. Flex badges substitute for metal on tactical and external carrier use. Routes to police badges and sheriff badges.
Metal badge on dress uniform, embroidered department patches on Class A and Class B uniforms, ID patches on bunker gear back panels and helmet shields, name tape on chest, rank chevrons or company-officer collar insignia. Reflective or specialty patches for high-visibility work. Routes to fire department badges.
Subdued or full-color patches depending on assignment, flex badges or external carrier ID patches for tactical, large back-panel ID patches identifying agency, name tapes per agency regulation, American flag in reverse-field on right shoulder. Routes to federal agency badges.
Generic SECURITY ID patches for shoulder and back panels, embroidered company patches with company-specific styling (most states require visible differentiation from police uniforms), name tapes, metal name tags for executive protection contexts. Many security products do not require credential verification. Routes to security officer badges.
EMS patches and PARAMEDIC/EMT chest IDs, MEDIC back panels on rescue gear, name tapes per agency regulation. Corrections officers typically wear metal badges on duty uniform, embroidered patches on shoulders, and large back-panel CORRECTIONS or DOC identification on tactical gear. Routes to EMS badges and corrections badges.
Two ways to start: design online or send your artwork
Every product in this guide can be ordered in one of two ways. The Owl Badges Badge Designer is a live in-browser tool for designing metal badges from scratch with real-time preview — pick a shape, add your seal, set rank and badge number, choose finish and attachment, and see the result before you order. It runs in any modern browser with no signup required and no design fees. For patches, the Owl Badges Patch Designer covers the same workflow for fabric and PVC patches — design online with unlimited color variations and instant preview.
The alternative is to send existing artwork. Agencies that already have an established patch design or a standardized badge typically send the vector or high-resolution artwork directly, along with specifications (size, attachment, quantities, ranks). Owl Badges produces a digital proof for approval before any production begins. The Badge Designer and Patch Designer paths are both no-minimum-order — single-unit production is supported.
What to expect from order to delivery
Production times across the catalog are summarized in the matrix above. The general pattern: patches (embroidered, PVC, subdued, ID, chevron, flag, name tape, hat, rocker) run 3-6 weeks. Flex badges and lapel pins run 5-8 weeks. Metal badges, reverse enamel badges, metal name tags, and challenge coins run 8-12 weeks because they require die work, hand finishing, and quality inspection. Metal collar ranks run 3-4 weeks since they use existing dies.
All orders include a digital proof for approval before production starts. The clock starts at proof approval, not at order placement. Agencies needing rush delivery for funeral, memorial, ceremony, or recruit-class deadlines should mention the deadline at order placement — rush handling may be available depending on product and queue.
Frequently asked questions
Metal badges (standard and reverse enamel) and challenge coins last the longest by a significant margin — they’re rigid metal that doesn’t fray, fade, or wear through. Among patches, PVC rubber patches handle abuse and weather better than embroidered patches, since the molded material doesn’t have threads to snag or fray. Embroidered patches with merrowed edges and dense stitching can still last for years of regular wear; the failure mode is usually edge wear and color fading rather than catastrophic damage.
Verification depends on the wording on the product, not the product type. Owl Badges requires credential verification on any product that carries law enforcement wording (POLICE, SHERIFF, an agency seal, etc.) — typically a copy of department ID, badge commission, or sworn-officer credential, or a department purchase order for agency orders. Products without law enforcement wording — generic name tapes, civilian flag patches, no-text state flag patches, hat patches without LE designations, Scout patches, sports patches, corporate name tags — are open to anyone.
Flex badges are flexible TPU (thermoplastic polyurethane) with a metallic appearance — they look like a metal badge from normal viewing distance but bend with the uniform, weigh much less, and don’t damage tactical carriers. Metal badges are die-struck solid metal — heavier, rigid, more authoritative up close, and the traditional duty badge. Most agencies that use both wear metal on dress and duty uniforms and flex on tactical gear and external carriers.
Yes. Owl Badges accepts single-unit orders across the catalog with no minimum. Individual officers ordering a personal duty badge, an officer’s replacement name tape, a single retirement lapel pin, or a one-off challenge coin all order through the same process as departments placing bulk orders. The Badge Designer and Patch Designer both support single-unit design and ordering.
Sew-on for permanent attachment on uniforms that won’t be reconfigured. Iron-on for temporary or moderate-duty attachment when sewing access isn’t available — note that iron-on isn’t authorized on most military uniforms per regulation. Velcro (hook and loop) for any patch that needs to be swapped between roles, units, or assignments — the standard for OCP military uniforms, tactical carriers, and any uniform with hook-loop panels. See the full attachment methods comparison for the detailed breakdown.
Yes, in some states. California Penal Code Section 830.10, for example, specifies that California law enforcement patches must include the agency name in bold letters, the state of California, the agency badge number, and the words “police” or “sheriff,” and must be in a shape distinct from other agencies. Other states have varying requirements — some specify minimum text height on security uniforms to differentiate from police, others restrict badges that could be confused with law enforcement. Agencies should check state-specific Private Security Act or POST commission requirements before finalizing any design.
About this reference
This guide describes products manufactured by Owl Badges. Specifications, production times, attachment options, and warranty terms reflect our standard offerings as of May 2026. We update this page annually or when product specifications change.
The use-case sections (police, fire, federal, security, EMS, corrections) summarize common configurations seen across the 5,000+ agencies Owl Badges has served since 1999. Specific department uniform standards take precedence over generalizations on this page — quartermasters should always cross-reference their department’s published uniform standards before placing an order. For state-specific regulatory questions, agencies should consult their state POST commission or private security licensing board.
Found an inaccuracy? Email corrections@owlbadges.com. See our full methodology and verification log for how we research and update these references.
