Sialkot is the world’s largest single-city cluster for hand-stitched sports goods, and Oxfit Sports has manufactured here since 1998. This page gathers the public industry numbers we use when buyers ask “why source from Sialkot?” and “why Oxfit specifically?” โ€” Pakistan’s sports-goods export figures, the city’s workforce, the product categories Sialkot dominates, the certifications commonly held, and exactly where Oxfit’s 16,335 sq ft factory fits within that 130-year-old industry. All sources cited.

Quick facts

Metric Number Source
Pakistan’s annual sports-goods exports (FY 2023โ€“24) ~USD 354 million Pakistan Bureau of Statistics, Trade Development Authority of Pakistan
Share of those exports originating in Sialkot ~95% Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry (SCCI)
Estimated direct workforce in Sialkot sports-goods sector ~250,000 people Pakistan Sports Goods Manufacturers and Exporters Association (PSGMEA)
Registered sports-goods exporting firms in Sialkot ~400+ PSGMEA membership directory
World’s hand-stitched footballs share from Sialkot ~70% WFSGI (World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry) industry reports
Footballs supplied for the 2022 FIFA World Cup made in Sialkot Yes (made in Sialkot) FIFA, multiple news outlets
Footballs supplied for Euro 2024 (Adidas Fussballliebe) Yes (made in Sialkot) UEFA, public announcements

Where Oxfit Sports fits within this industry

Of the ~400 registered sports-goods exporting firms in Sialkot, Oxfit Sports is one of the longer-running mid-sized factories. Founded in 1998 by Muhammad, we started in a 5,445 sq ft apparel and sportswear unit and expanded to our current 16,335 sq ft factory at Nar-Gate Street in 2004. The second generation joined the business in 2009. Today the factory employs 125โ€“150 craftspeople and ships to 25+ countries.

Industry metric Sialkot total Oxfit Sports
Registered exporting firms ~400+ 1 of those, since 1998
Sector workforce ~250,000 people 125โ€“150 craftspeople in our factory
Annual sports-goods exports (Pakistan) ~USD 354 million Wholesale + OEM share of that, shipped to 25+ countries
Years of continuous operation Industry: ~140 years Oxfit: 28 years (founded 1998)
Factory footprint Sialkot factories range 1,000 to 100,000+ sq ft Oxfit: 16,335 sq ft (3ร— our original size)
Family-owned share Majority of Sialkot manufacturers are family-run Oxfit is family-owned, second generation since 2009

Where Oxfit specialises within the broader Sialkot industry: combat sports (boxing, MMA, martial arts) plus the original apparel and fitness lines we started in. Within combat sports we cover boxing gloves (training, sparring, professional, competition), MMA gloves, hand wraps, focus pads, head guards, shin guards, punching bags, BJJ gis, karate gis, taekwondo dobok, judo gis, and rash guards. On the apparel side we still make the training vests, gym shirts, and shorts that were our first product lines in 1998 โ€” we never stopped.

Why Sialkot, specifically

Sialkot’s dominance in fight gear and hand-stitched sports goods isn’t a coincidence โ€” it’s a 130-year compounding advantage that benefits every operator working here, including Oxfit Sports. Three things underwrite it:

1. A 130-year unbroken craft chain

The first Sialkot sports-goods workshops opened in the 1880s when British Army garrisons stationed in nearby Sialkot Cantonment commissioned cricket balls, footballs, and polo gear. By 1922, the city was supplying the official cricket balls for India-Australia Test matches. After 1947, the workshops continued seamlessly โ€” same families, same techniques, scaled up. The current generation of stitchers learnt from grandfathers who learnt from theirs.

2. A specialised supplier ecosystem within walking distance

A single boxing glove requires: leather (tannery), foam (chemical compounder), thread (cotton mill), eyelets (small metal works), labels (textile printer), polybag (plastic converter), carton (corrugator). In Sialkot, all seven sit within a 4 km radius โ€” and Oxfit’s factory in Nar-Gate Street is in the middle of that cluster. Lead times that would be 6โ€“8 weeks in a fragmented supply chain become 25โ€“35 days for our wholesale buyers. This is why Oxfit can run 50-piece MOQ orders cost-effectively when Chinese factories typically need 500+ pieces.

3. Specialisation in hand-stitched product categories

Where machines do the work (rubber footballs, plastic shin guards), Sialkot is no cheaper than China. Where human hands do the work (multi-panel leather boxing gloves, hand-stitched gis, full-grain leather weightlifting belts), Sialkot’s hourly cost ร— hand-stitching speed ร— experience curve produces a 30โ€“40% landed-cost advantage with better quality. The city’s deliberate specialisation in hand-stitched categories is the moat โ€” and it is exactly the moat Oxfit Sports has invested in since 1998. Over 90% of stitching on our premium boxing gloves is hand-saddle-stitched on traditional kharad benches by craftspeople with 10โ€“25 years of experience.

Product categories Sialkot dominates globally

Category Sialkot global share (est.) Notes
Hand-stitched match footballs ~70% WFSGI annual industry reports
Professional boxing gloves (hand-stitched leather) 40โ€“55% Most premium brands source from Sialkot OEMs
BJJ gis & martial arts uniforms 30โ€“45% Major share of mid-tier brands
Leather cricket balls ~60% Long-standing speciality
Surgical instruments (parallel industry, same skills) ~20% Sialkot also exports ~USD 400M in surgical instruments annually

Source: WFSGI annual industry reports, PSGMEA exporter data, FBR (Federal Board of Revenue Pakistan) trade statistics.

Export destinations

Top destination countries for Pakistani sports goods (FY 2023โ€“24, by value). Oxfit Sports ships regularly to all top-10 destinations below, plus 15 other countries:

Rank Country Share of total
1 United States ~25%
2 Germany ~10%
3 United Kingdom ~9%
4 France ~5%
5 Netherlands ~4%
6โ€“10 Italy, Australia, Spain, Canada, Belgium ~3% each

Source: Trade Development Authority of Pakistan, State Bank of Pakistan trade balance data.

Certifications and compliance standards in the Sialkot industry

The compliance frameworks commonly held by Sialkot exporters working with European, North American, and Middle East retail buyers. Oxfit Sports operates within these frameworks and can supply audit-ready documentation on serious wholesale enquiries.

  • ISO 9001 (Quality Management Systems) โ€” held by most exporting firms above 50 employees
  • BSCI (amfori Business Social Compliance Initiative) โ€” widely held by firms exporting to EU retail
  • SA8000 (Social Accountability) โ€” held by firms exporting to North American retail chains
  • Sedex SMETA โ€” common for UK supermarket and high-street brand suppliers
  • WFSGI Pledge Against Child Labour โ€” signed by the majority of PSGMEA member factories since 1997
  • CE marking for personal protective equipment categories (e.g. head guards) โ€” held by exporters into the EU

Source: amfori BSCI, Sedex, SA8000 public auditor databases; WFSGI 1997 Atlanta Agreement.

The 1997 Atlanta Agreement (background context buyers occasionally ask about)

In 1997 the WFSGI, ILO, UNICEF, and PSGMEA signed an agreement at the Atlanta Olympic Committee meeting committing Sialkot’s sports-goods industry to eliminating child labour. The implementation involved relocating stitching work from individual home-based contractors to monitored “stitching centres” with verified-age workforces. Three decades later, the framework still operates โ€” every major Sialkot exporter has third-party social audits documenting compliance. Buyers in EU and North American retail typically require these audit reports as a baseline.

Source: WFSGI 1997 Atlanta Agreement; ILO IPEC programme documentation; SCCI compliance records.

Lead times you can expect from Oxfit

Working in Sialkot’s clustered supply chain, these are the lead times Oxfit Sports commits to on every wholesale quote:

Order stage Time
Quote response (after spec submitted) 24 hours
Design mockup (for OEM/private-label orders) 2โ€“4 working days
Sample production after artwork sign-off 7โ€“14 days
Bulk production (50โ€“500 pieces) 25โ€“35 days from 30% deposit
Bulk production (500โ€“5,000 pieces) 30โ€“45 days from 30% deposit
Sea freight (Karachi โ†’ Hamburg / Felixstowe / NY) 25โ€“40 days
Air freight (Lahore / Sialkot โ†’ destination airport) 5โ€“10 working days
Express courier (DHL, FedEx for samples) 3โ€“6 working days

Wage and cost structure context (public information)

Pakistan’s federal minimum wage for unskilled labour was raised to PKR 37,000/month in Budget 2024โ€“25 (~USD 130/month at then-current exchange rates). Skilled stitchers in Sialkot earn meaningfully above minimum โ€” typical compensation for an experienced boxing-glove stitcher is PKR 50,000โ€“80,000/month (~USD 175โ€“280/month) plus piece-rate bonuses for high-output weeks. At Oxfit, several of our most senior hand-stitchers have been with the factory since the 2004 expansion or earlier. This wage structure, combined with the clustered supply chain, is what produces the 30โ€“40% landed-cost advantage Oxfit delivers over Chinese hand-stitched equivalents on small-batch orders.

Source: Government of Pakistan Finance Division Budget Documents 2024โ€“25; PSGMEA wage surveys; Pakistan Bureau of Statistics Labour Force Survey.

Trade associations and oversight bodies

  • PSGMEA โ€” Pakistan Sports Goods Manufacturers & Exporters Association. Sialkot-based; mandatory for sports-goods exporters. Publishes member directory.
  • SCCI โ€” Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Cross-industry chamber covering all Sialkot-based exporters.
  • TDAP โ€” Trade Development Authority of Pakistan. Federal export-promotion body; maintains the official Pakistan Exporter Directory.
  • WFSGI โ€” World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry. Geneva-based international body; co-signed the 1997 Atlanta Agreement.
  • FBR / SBP โ€” Federal Board of Revenue + State Bank of Pakistan publish quarterly trade balance and export data.

Sources cited on this page

  • Pakistan Bureau of Statistics โ€” Foreign Trade Statistics (publicly available)
  • Trade Development Authority of Pakistan (tdap.gov.pk) โ€” exporter data and country breakdown
  • Sialkot Chamber of Commerce and Industry (scci.com.pk)
  • Pakistan Sports Goods Manufacturers and Exporters Association (PSGMEA)
  • World Federation of the Sporting Goods Industry (wfsgi.org) โ€” global market reports
  • Federal Board of Revenue Pakistan (fbr.gov.pk)
  • State Bank of Pakistan trade balance data (sbp.org.pk)
  • 1997 WFSGIโ€“PSGMEAโ€“ILOโ€“UNICEF Atlanta Agreement (public ILO records)
  • Government of Pakistan Budget Documents 2024โ€“25
  • FIFA and UEFA public announcements regarding tournament ball suppliers

Numbers presented are rounded for readability. For exact figures on any line item, follow the source link or email info@oxfitsports.com and we will share our working notes.

About this page

Oxfit Sports maintains this page as a public reference because the same questions about Sialkot’s industry come up in nearly every wholesale buyer conversation we have. We update it annually when fresh trade-balance data is published (typically Julyโ€“August for the previous fiscal year). If you spot an out-of-date figure or want a topic added, email info@oxfitsports.com with subject line “Industry Page”.

Want to source from Sialkot directly? Oxfit Sports has shipped from this factory since 1998 to 25+ countries โ€” send us your spec for a 24-hour wholesale quote, free design mockup if OEM, MOQ from 50 pieces.

Related reading: About Oxfit Sports โ€” our history, Full buyer resource library, How boxing gloves are made โ€” Oxfit factory walkthrough, Why source from Oxfit Sialkot vs China.