Seasonal

Last-minute personalized Father’s Day gifts include LEGO figures, custom balls

Three personalized Father’s Day gifts still work on a tight clock: a custom LEGO minifigure, Titleist balls, and Maker’s Mark labels, each built for a different kind of dad.

Ava Richardson··4 min read
Published
Listen to this article0:00 min
Last-minute personalized Father’s Day gifts include LEGO figures, custom balls
Photo illustration
This article contains affiliate links, marked with a blue dot. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

The smartest last-minute Father’s Day gifts solve the same problem in different ways: they look bespoke without requiring a weeks-long scavenger hunt. Father’s Day falls on Sunday, June 21, 2026, and with the holiday landing so soon after Yahoo Shopping’s June 5 roundup, the best options are the ones that build the personalization into the product itself. That matters in a year when the National Retail Federation expects Father’s Day spending to hit a record $24 billion and says 48% of consumers plan to buy for a father or stepfather. It also fits a holiday that became a national holiday on April 24, 1972, when Richard Nixon signed the legislation, and has since become one of the most reliable moments in the year for customized retail.

Build a mini-me with LEGO

The most playful pick in the group is LEGO’s Minifigure Factory, which lets you create a custom minifigure from selectable faces, outfits, and accessories. That makes it an especially good fit for a new dad, a dad who keeps a desk toy within reach, or the father who appreciates a gift with a little self-aware humor rather than a heavy-handed tribute. The appeal is not just that it is customized, but that the customization is visible in every layer, from the face to the clothes to the tiny prop in hand.

For a last-minute shopper, this is the kind of personalized gift that feels deliberate without demanding a complicated build. LEGO’s Create a Minifigure tools take the same idea further, letting you assemble a mini version one detail at a time, which is exactly why it works for Father’s Day: it is specific enough to feel like a portrait, but light enough to keep the mood fun. If you want a gift that lands somewhere between collectible and inside joke, this is the cleanest way to get there without defaulting to the usual mug or wallet.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Print the golfer’s name on something he will actually use

Titleist custom golf balls are the most straightforward pick for the dad who would rather unwrap something useful than decorative. Titleist says the custom balls can include a special play number, logo, personalization message, or mark, which gives you several ways to tailor the gift beyond a simple monogram. That flexibility matters because golf gear can easily become generic, but a sleeve of balls marked with a family name, a note, or even a tiny logo turns an everyday practice item into something specific to him.

There is also a quiet practicality to the way Titleist handles the order. Custom balls ordered on Titleist.com are printed at Acushnet’s facility in New Bedford, Massachusetts, so the gift is not just personalized in theory, it is produced in a dedicated custom pipeline. That makes it a sharper choice than the more obvious apparel gift, especially if the recipient is the type who actually notices the brand and ball number he reaches for. If your father’s day shopping list includes a golfer, this is the kind of customization that gets used on the course instead of sitting on a shelf.

Related photo
Source: i.etsystatic.com

Choose the bottle when the message matters most

Maker’s Mark takes the personalized route in a more restrained, grown-up direction. The brand says personalized labels are available on the classic 750ml bottle, and the labels are complimentary, which is a nice contrast to the premium pricing that often comes with engraving or monogramming elsewhere. The catch is timing: the personalized labels can take up to three weeks for printing and shipping, which makes this the most precarious of the three options if you are ordering close to Father’s Day.

That long lead time is exactly why the bottle works best for shoppers who are willing to move immediately, or who are buying for a dad-type who values the message and presentation as much as the bourbon itself. The bottle comes from Maker’s Mark in Loretto, Kentucky, but what makes it useful as a gift is not geography, it is the fact that the customization is built into the label rather than bolted on at the end. In a crowded market, where the global personalized gifts category is estimated at $34.03 billion in 2026 and projected to reach $61.66 billion by 2035, that kind of built-in personalization is what separates a memorable gift from a rushed one. The best last-minute Father’s Day gifts do not just add a name, they make the naming feel like the whole point.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

Know something we missed? Have a correction or additional information?

Submit a Tip

Never miss a story.

Get Personalized Gifts updates weekly. The top stories delivered to your inbox.

Free forever · Unsubscribe anytime

Discussion

More Personalized Gifts News