The material used for a cosmetic squeeze tube influences much more than its appearance. It determines how easily the tube can be squeezed, how quickly it recovers its shape, how well it protects the formula and how the finished package performs during filling, transport and consumer use.
A lightweight facial cleanser may work well in a standard PE tube, while an oxidation-sensitive vitamin C cream, retinol formula, essential-oil product or high-active sunscreen may require a stronger barrier structure.
The best choice must balance formula protection, consumer experience, printing requirements, sustainability goals, order quantity and cost.
There is no single best tube material for every cosmetic formula
LDPE offers softness, HDPE adds rigidity, LLDPE improves toughness, EVOH provides additional oxygen protection, ABL provides a strong aluminum barrier, PBL offers a stable plastic laminate surface, and PCR or sugarcane PE can support sustainability objectives.
Quick Comparison of Cosmetic Squeeze Tube Materials
The ratings below are general purchasing references. Actual performance depends on resin grade, wall thickness, layer ratio, cap, shoulder, decoration and formula compatibility.
| Material or Structure | Flexibility | Barrier Level | Appearance | Relative Cost | Best Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LDPE | Smooth, flexible and squeezable | Low to medium | Lotions, cleansers and hand creams | ||
| HDPE | Crisp shape and firmer feel | Low to medium | Dense creams and shape-retaining tubes | ||
| LLDPE | Flexible with improved toughness | Low to medium | Flexible tubes exposed to repeated squeezing | ||
| Blended PE | Balanced softness and recovery | Medium | General skincare and personal care | ||
| Multi-Layer PE | Premium extruded appearance | Medium | Premium skincare and sunscreen | ||
| EVOH Barrier PE | Seamless extruded appearance | Medium to high | Vitamin C, retinol and active skincare | ||
| ABL | Metallic barrier with visible side seam | Medium to high | Toothpaste, pharmaceutical and sensitive formulas | ||
| PBL | Flat laminate decoration surface | Medium to high | Premium skincare, oral care and sunscreen | ||
| PCR PE | Possible natural color variation | Medium to high | Sustainability-focused beauty brands | ||
| Sugarcane PE | Similar to conventional PE | Medium to high | Bio-based packaging programs |
Four Factors to Review Before Selecting a Tube Material
Formula compatibility
Review oils, alcohol, fragrance, active ingredients, UV filters, pH, pigments, surfactants and filling temperature.
Required barrier
Determine whether the formula needs basic protection or additional oxygen, moisture, aroma and light resistance.
Consumer experience
Consider squeeze force, shape recovery, dispensing control, product evacuation and one-handed use.
Sustainability objective
Separate recycled content, renewable feedstock, lightweighting and design-for-recycling into measurable project requirements.
LDPE — Low-Density Polyethylene
LDPE is one of the most common materials used in cosmetic tube manufacturing. Its soft structure allows consumers to dispense lotions, creams and gels without applying excessive force.
The tube normally recovers its shape after squeezing, making LDPE appropriate for products that are used repeatedly over several weeks or months.
Main advantages
- Soft and comfortable to squeeze
- Good flexibility at practical wall thicknesses
- Suitable for many skincare formulas
- Supports custom colors and decoration
- Available across many tube diameters
Possible limitations
- Limited oxygen barrier by itself
- Can feel too soft for some premium concepts
- May deform under excessive stacking pressure
- Not automatically suitable for aggressive formulas
- Wall thickness must match tube size
HDPE — High-Density Polyethylene
HDPE is more rigid than LDPE and can provide a crisper, more structured tube shape. It may be used as a single material or blended with softer PE grades to adjust squeeze force.
A high HDPE percentage can make a tube difficult to squeeze, especially for older consumers or thick formulas. The material ratio should therefore be developed according to the tube diameter, wall thickness and product viscosity.
Main advantages
- Improved rigidity and shape retention
- Higher stiffness than LDPE
- Useful for crisp premium silhouettes
- Can improve moisture resistance
- Suitable for mono-PE design concepts
Possible limitations
- Requires greater squeeze force
- May create stress whitening when bent
- Can feel less comfortable in larger tubes
- Not a replacement for a high oxygen barrier
- Blend ratio must be carefully controlled
LLDPE — Linear Low-Density Polyethylene
LLDPE combines softness with improved toughness and is often used in PE blends rather than as the only tube-body resin. It can help improve resistance to repeated bending, squeezing and minor impact.
The material may be useful for tubes exposed to demanding transportation or frequent consumer handling.
Main advantages
- Good flexibility and toughness
- Resistance to repeated deformation
- Can improve tube-wall durability
- Useful in customized PE blends
- Supports soft squeeze performance
Possible limitations
- Usually not specified alone by buyers
- Barrier remains limited without added layers
- Surface behavior depends on the blend
- Printing requires proper surface treatment
- Performance varies by resin grade
Blended PE — LDPE, HDPE and LLDPE Combination
Many cosmetic tubes are not manufactured from only one PE grade. Manufacturers blend LDPE, HDPE and LLDPE to create the required squeeze force, wall strength, surface finish and shape recovery.
A well-developed blend can provide a better consumer experience than specifying one resin in isolation.
Main advantages
- Customizable squeeze force
- Balanced softness and rigidity
- Good suitability for general cosmetics
- Supports glossy and matte finishes
- Available in many sizes and colors
Possible limitations
- Exact formulation may be proprietary
- Batch consistency must be controlled
- Does not automatically add oxygen barrier
- Performance depends on wall thickness
- Approved samples must be retained
Multi-Layer Co-Extruded PE
Multi-layer co-extruded tubes use two or more material layers to provide different internal, structural and external properties. The inner layer can support formula contact, the middle layers can improve stiffness or barrier, and the outer layer can optimize decoration and appearance.
A multi-layer tube does not automatically contain EVOH. Buyers should request the actual layer structure in writing.
Main advantages
- Separate functional layers
- Customizable stiffness and softness
- Improved premium appearance
- Can incorporate PCR in selected layers
- Supports EVOH barrier structures
Possible limitations
- Higher complexity than single-layer PE
- Actual layer ratios must be verified
- Not every structure is equally recyclable
- Higher setup requirements may apply
- Compatibility depends on the inner layer
EVOH Barrier Co-Extruded PE
EVOH is commonly incorporated as a thin functional layer inside a multi-layer PE tube. It can significantly improve resistance to oxygen transmission while maintaining the seamless appearance and squeeze recovery of an extruded plastic tube.
It can be considered for formulas containing oxidation-sensitive active ingredients, fragrances or ingredients requiring improved protection compared with standard PE.
Main advantages
- Improved oxygen barrier
- Seamless extruded tube appearance
- Flexible squeeze and recovery
- Suitable for premium decoration
- Can be combined with opaque PE layers
Possible limitations
- Higher cost than basic PE
- Barrier performance depends on layer thickness
- Moisture conditions affect EVOH performance
- Recyclability requires full-structure review
- Does not automatically provide complete light blocking
ABL — Aluminum Barrier Laminate
ABL tubes contain a thin aluminum layer laminated between plastic layers. The aluminum provides strong protection against oxygen, moisture, light and aroma transmission.
Unlike co-extruded tubes, ABL tubes are formed from a flat laminate web, which creates a visible side seam. The tube generally remains collapsed after dispensing rather than fully recovering its shape.
Main advantages
- Excellent oxygen barrier
- Strong light and moisture protection
- Reduces formula exposure after dispensing
- Stable laminate printing surface
- Suitable for sensitive formulas
Possible limitations
- Visible side seam
- Limited shape recovery
- Can crease during use
- Complex multi-material recycling profile
- Higher MOQ may apply
PBL — Plastic Barrier Laminate
PBL tubes use a plastic-based barrier structure instead of an aluminum foil layer. They provide a smooth laminate decoration surface and can offer strong formula protection while maintaining a softer plastic appearance.
PBL tubes still have a side seam because they are manufactured from a flat laminate web.
Main advantages
- Strong plastic barrier structure
- Excellent print-registration potential
- Smooth premium appearance
- More flexible appearance than ABL
- Available for many skincare applications
Possible limitations
- Visible laminate side seam
- Higher complexity than standard PE
- Barrier varies by laminate structure
- Recycling compatibility must be verified
- May require higher production quantities
PCR PE — Post-Consumer Recycled Polyethylene
PCR PE is produced from previously used plastic that has been collected, processed and converted into recycled resin. It can reduce the amount of virgin fossil-based plastic used in a cosmetic tube.
PCR percentage, color, odor, mechanical properties and regulatory suitability vary according to the recycled feedstock and tube structure. Some projects use PCR only in the outer layer to reduce direct formula-contact concerns.
Main advantages
- Reduces virgin-plastic consumption
- Supports measurable recycled-content claims
- Can be used in multi-layer tube structures
- Available in several PCR percentages
- Supports circular-packaging objectives
Possible limitations
- Color variation may be more visible
- Possible odor requires evaluation
- Mechanical behavior can differ from virgin PE
- Supply consistency must be confirmed
- Certification scope must match the project
Sugarcane-Based Bio-PE
Sugarcane-based PE is chemically similar to conventional fossil-based polyethylene, but its feedstock is derived from a renewable plant source.
Because it remains polyethylene, it can generally be processed using familiar tube-manufacturing methods. Bio-based does not mean biodegradable or compostable.
Main advantages
- Renewable feedstock content
- PE-like squeeze and decoration performance
- Can fit PE recycling streams by design
- Suitable for conventional extrusion
- Supports bio-based packaging stories
Possible limitations
- Not biodegradable
- Higher material cost may apply
- Feedstock traceability should be documented
- Barrier remains structure dependent
- Availability may vary by grade and region
Which Cosmetic Tube Material Should You Choose?
Use these simplified recommendations for initial project planning. Final selection should follow physical sampling and compatibility tests.
Common Mistakes When Selecting Tube Materials
Material names alone do not provide enough information to approve cosmetic packaging for mass production.
Recommended Materials by Cosmetic Application
These are starting recommendations, not replacements for formula testing or regulatory review.
Blended PE or LDPE
Soft squeeze performance with good suitability for gel, cream and foaming cleanser formats.
LDPE or Multi-Layer PE
Comfortable dispensing with optional premium surface finishes and improved tube recovery.
Multi-Layer PE, EVOH, ABL or PBL
Selection depends on UV filters, oils, light sensitivity, barrier requirements and formula stability.
EVOH, ABL or PBL
Stronger oxygen and light protection may help reduce the risk of premature formula discoloration.
Blended PE
A practical balance of softness, wall strength, recovery and cost for high-capacity tubes.
PCR PE or Sugarcane PE
Choose according to whether the priority is recycled content or renewable feedstock.
Need Help Selecting the Right Cosmetic Tube Material?
Send Xinfly Packaging your formula type, filling capacity, viscosity, active ingredients, expected shelf life, target market and sustainability requirements. Our team will help you compare PE, PCR, EVOH, ABL and PBL tube structures before sampling.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about materials used for custom cosmetic squeeze tube packaging.
What is the most common material for cosmetic squeeze tubes?
Polyethylene is the most common material family. Many tubes use a customized blend of LDPE, HDPE and LLDPE to balance softness, rigidity, toughness and shape recovery.
Is LDPE or HDPE better for cosmetic tubes?
LDPE is softer and easier to squeeze, while HDPE is firmer and provides stronger shape retention. Many cosmetic tubes use a blend rather than choosing only one resin.
What is the best tube material for vitamin C cream?
EVOH co-extruded PE, ABL or PBL may be considered when the vitamin C formula requires stronger oxygen or light protection. Final selection should follow formula stability and compatibility tests.
Are PCR cosmetic tubes fully recyclable?
Recycled content and recyclability are different concepts. A tube containing PCR is not automatically recyclable. The complete structure, including the tube body, shoulder, cap, barrier, ink and decoration, must be reviewed.
Is sugarcane PE biodegradable?
No. Sugarcane PE is generally chemically equivalent to conventional polyethylene. It uses renewable feedstock but is not automatically biodegradable or compostable.
What is the difference between ABL and PBL tubes?
ABL contains an aluminum barrier layer, while PBL uses a plastic-based barrier laminate. ABL generally offers very strong light and oxygen protection, while PBL provides a plastic appearance and stable laminate decoration surface.
Does a five-layer cosmetic tube always contain EVOH?
No. Five-layer describes the number of layers, not their materials. Buyers should request a written layer structure confirming whether EVOH or another functional barrier is present.