Ready-to-Wear vs. Tailor-Made: The Honest Comparison
Every Pakistani woman has done the tailor cycle: buy fabric, find a darzi, explain the design, wait two weeks, hope it fits. Ready-to-wear promises to skip all of that — but is it actually better? An honest comparison.
Cost
Unstitched fabric plus stitching charges routinely lands above the price of a comparable ready-to-wear suit — before counting fuel, time, and the inevitable second tailor visit. Ready-to-wear is one price, all inclusive: at Pashmaal, complete 3-piece suits run Rs. 3,800–7,800.
Time
Tailoring: one to three weeks, longer before Eid when every darzi in Pakistan is buried. Ready-to-wear: 3–5 working days to your door, 1–2 in Karachi. For occasions on a date, this is usually the deciding factor.
Fit
This is the tailor’s strongest argument — a good darzi fits your exact body. But ready-to-wear sizing has caught up: a proper size chart (see how to measure) plus standard S–XL grading fits most bodies well, and minor alterations on a finished suit cost a fraction of full stitching.
Risk
With a tailor, you commit before you see the result — design misunderstandings are unreturnable. With ready-to-wear you see photos of the finished suit, and a 7-day exchange policy covers sizing surprises.
The honest verdict
Choose a tailor for non-standard measurements or a one-of-a-kind design vision. For everything else — everyday suits, Eid outfits on a deadline, gifts — ready-to-wear wins on price, speed, and certainty. Browse 3PC Suits or Luxury Lawn to see finished suits before you commit a rupee.
Common questions
Is ready-to-wear cheaper than tailoring?
Usually, once fabric, stitching charges, and trips to the tailor are added up. Ready-to-wear is one transparent price for the finished 3-piece suit.
What if a ready-to-wear suit does not fit perfectly?
Measure first using the size chart, and use the 7-day exchange policy if the size is wrong. Minor tweaks can be done by any local tailor cheaply.
Can a ready-to-wear suit be altered?
Yes — taking in a kameez or shortening a trouser is a quick, inexpensive alteration job, far simpler than stitching from scratch.