You've invested in a mattress compression machine. You've optimized your vacuum settings. But if you choose the wrong stretch film? Your sealed mattress fails before it reaches the customer.
Here's what most manufacturers get wrong: they treat stretch film as a commodity. It's not.
For mattress packing — especially for export or vacuum compression — the wrong film means burst bags, moldy foam, and returned shipments.

Most industrial stretch film is designed for pallet wrapping. That's a different job. For mattress compression packing, you need film that handles:
Vacuum pressure (without collapsing or puncturing)
Sharp foam edges (some mattress borders cut through thin film)
Ocean container stacking (2m high loads crush weak film)
Humidity (monsoon conditions = moisture ingress if seal fails)
Standard 80-micron pallet film fails on all four.
| Thickness | Best For | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| 60–80 micron | Pallet wrapping only | Bursts under vacuum |
| 90–110 micron | Short-term storage (<7 days) | Tears in container stacking |
| 120–150 micron | Mattress export / vacuum compression | Minimal — industry standard |
| 160+ micron | Extreme heavy-duty | Overkill, higher cost |
Our recommendation: 120–150 micron for vacuum compressed mattresses shipped overseas.
| Type | Structure | Performance |
|---|---|---|
| Monolayer | Single material (usually LLDPE) | Tears easily, poor puncture resistance |
| Co-extruded (3–5 layers) | Nylon + PE + adhesive layers | High puncture resistance, better vacuum holding |
For vacuum packing, co-extruded nylon/PE film is non-negotiable. The nylon layer provides oxygen and moisture barrier. The PE layer provides heat sealability.
Ask your film supplier for Elmendorf tear strength numbers:
Target: ≥800 gf (grams-force) for export packing
Minimum: ≥500 gf for domestic storage
Most cheap films test at 300–400 gf. They will fail on mattress corners.
Your packing machine's sealing bars need compatible film. Check:
| Film Type | Ideal Seal Temperature |
|---|---|
| PE-only film | 120–150°C |
| Nylon/PE co-extruded | 150–200°C |
If your machine can't reach 180°C, co-extruded film won't seal properly. Verify your machine's sealing bar temperature range before buying film.
COF affects how film feeds through your machine:
Low COF (slippery): Film feeds easily but stacked rolls slide during container transport
Medium COF (0.2–0.4): Ideal balance for machine feeding + stack stability
High COF (grippy): Film jams in machine rollers
| Film Type | Vacuum Holding | Puncture Resistance | Cost | Best Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard LLDPE | Poor | Low | $ | Pallet wrap only |
| PE Blown Film | Medium | Medium | $$ | Short-term domestic |
| Nylon/PE Co-extruded | Excellent | High | $$$ | Export / ocean freight |
| EVOH Barrier Film | Excellent | High | $$$$ | Long-term storage (>6 months) |
For most mattress exporters, nylon/PE co-extruded at 120–150 micron is the sweet spot.
Here's what suppliers won't tell you: standard nylon/PE film absorbs moisture from humid air. After 30 days in a Mumbai warehouse, the film becomes brittle.
Solution: Use aluminum oxide coated nylon or add a desiccant pouch inside every bag. This doubles your safe storage window from 30 days to 90 days.
Run this simple 3-step test with any new film:
Vacuum hold test: Seal a bag with vacuum at -0.8 bar. Check pressure after 24 hours. Loss should be <10%.
Puncture drop test: Drop a 10kg weight with a mattress corner shape onto the film from 1m. No tear = pass.
Heat seal test: Seal 10 bags on your machine. Immerse in water for 1 hour. Any bubbles = failed seal.
| Mistake | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Buying cheapest film | Burst bags in transit | Test puncture resistance first |
| Ignoring seal temperature | Weak seals that open | Match film to machine temp range |
| Using same film year-round | Monsoon failures | Switch to thicker film for wet season |
| No desiccant inside bag | Moldy foam after 30 days | Add 10g silica gel pouch per mattress |
| Your Situation | Recommended Film |
|---|---|
| Domestic delivery (<7 days) | 100 micron PE blown film |
| Export to nearby country (<30 days) | 120 micron nylon/PE co-extruded |
| Export overseas (>30 days ocean) | 150 micron nylon/PE co-extruded + desiccant |
| High humidity market (India, SE Asia) | 150 micron with aluminum oxide coating |
| Automated packing line (high speed) | 120 micron, medium COF (0.25–0.35) |
Choosing industrial stretch film for mattress packing isn't complicated — but getting it wrong is expensive.
Your checklist:
✅ 120–150 micron thickness
✅ Nylon/PE co-extruded construction
✅ Elmendorf tear ≥800 gf
✅ Seal temperature matches your machine
✅ Add desiccant for humid markets
Test before you buy bulk. And when you find a film that works, stick with it. Changing films means re-testing seals, vacuum hold, and puncture resistance.
📧 Email: jenney@gdnaimei.com
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