
The main difference between an extruded tube and a laminated tube is that an extruded tube usually has a seamless tube body, while a laminated tube normally has a visible or semi-visible side seam. This structural difference affects the overall aesthetics, decoration options, brand positioning, and consumer perception of the packaging.
In simple terms, extruded tubes look cleaner and more seamless, making them popular for premium cosmetic, skincare, sunscreen, and personal care products. Laminated tubes offer excellent barrier performance and cost efficiency, but because they are made from laminated web material that is formed into a tube, they usually have a longitudinal side seam.
What Is an Extruded Tube?
An extruded tube is produced by extruding plastic material into a continuous cylindrical tube body. Because the tube body is formed directly rather than wrapped from a flat laminate sheet, it typically does not have a vertical side seam. This gives the tube a smooth, clean, and more premium appearance.
- Main aesthetic advantage: Seamless body appearance.
- Best for: Skincare, sunscreen, hand cream, facial cleanser, makeup, and premium cosmetic products.
- Typical materials: PE, PCR PE, sugarcane PE, multi-layer co-extruded PE, EVOH barrier structures.
- Visual impression: Clean, modern, soft, cosmetic-grade packaging feel.
What Is a Laminated Tube?
A laminated tube is made from a flat laminate sheet that is formed into a cylindrical body and sealed along the side. This creates a side seam, which may be visible depending on the laminate structure, artwork design, seam position, printing method, and tube color. Laminated tubes are widely used for toothpaste, oral care, pharmaceuticals, food paste, and functional cosmetic products that need stronger barrier performance.
- Main structural feature: A side seam is usually present.
- Best for: Toothpaste, medicated paste, functional skincare, barrier-sensitive formulas, and high-volume personal care.
- Typical materials: ABL, PBL, aluminum barrier laminate, plastic barrier laminate.
- Visual impression: Functional, protective, efficient, and barrier-focused.
Side Seam Comparison
| Item | Extruded Tube | Laminated Tube |
|---|---|---|
| Side seam | Usually no visible side seam on the tube body | Usually has a vertical side seam |
| Body appearance | Smooth and seamless | May show a seam line or overlap area |
| Artwork continuity | Better for clean 360-degree visual design | Artwork must consider the seam position |
| Premium cosmetic feel | Usually stronger | Can still look premium, but seam management is important |
| Barrier positioning | Good with co-extruded or EVOH structures | Very strong with ABL or PBL laminate structures |
How the Side Seam Affects Aesthetics
The side seam is one of the biggest visual differences between extruded and laminated tubes. On an extruded tube, the surface feels continuous and uninterrupted, which is helpful for minimalist skincare designs, large logo layouts, gradient printing, metallic decoration, and premium shelf presentation.
On a laminated tube, the side seam needs to be managed carefully. If the design uses full-wrap artwork, fine patterns, or continuous background graphics, the seam area may interrupt the visual flow. However, with good artwork planning, the seam can often be hidden on the back side of the tube or integrated into the design.
Which Tube Looks More Premium?
| Aesthetic Requirement | Better Choice | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Clean seamless body | Extruded tube | No obvious side seam on the body |
| Luxury skincare appearance | Extruded tube | Smoother surface and better cosmetic feel |
| Traditional toothpaste look | Laminated tube | Common and accepted in oral-care packaging |
| Maximum barrier impression | Laminated tube | ABL and PBL structures are strongly associated with barrier protection |
| Full-wrap graphics without seam interruption | Extruded tube | Better for continuous body decoration |
Artwork Design Considerations
- For extruded tubes: You have more freedom to create seamless-looking 360-degree decoration.
- For laminated tubes: Keep important logos, claims, and fine graphics away from the side seam.
- For full-wrap designs: Extruded tubes usually provide a cleaner final appearance.
- For toothpaste-style layouts: Laminated tubes can work very well because the seam can be placed at the back.
- For minimalist branding: Extruded tubes often look more refined and premium.
Printing and Decoration Differences
| Decoration Factor | Extruded Tube | Laminated Tube |
|---|---|---|
| Silk screen printing | Common for premium cosmetic effects | Possible, depending on tube and process |
| Offset printing | Common for multi-color cosmetic designs | Common for high-volume printed laminate designs |
| Hot stamping | Strong premium effect on seamless body | Possible, but seam and laminate surface must be considered |
| 360-degree artwork | Cleaner and more continuous | Needs seam-position planning |
| Photo-realistic graphics | Possible with suitable printing method | Often strong when printed on laminate web before tube forming |
When to Choose an Extruded Tube
Choose an extruded tube when brand appearance, seamless aesthetics, soft hand feel, and premium cosmetic positioning are important. Extruded tubes are especially suitable for skincare, sunscreen, hand cream, facial cleanser, makeup, and other beauty products where the package is part of the brand experience.
- Premium skincare or beauty packaging
- Minimalist logo design
- Soft-touch, matte, glossy, or pearlized finishes
- Designs that need a clean body without visible seam interruption
- Products where shelf appearance is a major selling point
When to Choose a Laminated Tube
Choose a laminated tube when barrier performance, long shelf life, formula protection, and production efficiency are more important than a completely seamless body. Laminated tubes are especially common for toothpaste, oral care, pharmaceutical-style pastes, functional skincare, and formulas that need ABL or PBL protection.
- Toothpaste and oral-care products
- Functional skincare with stronger barrier needs
- ABL or PBL barrier packaging projects
- High-volume products where laminate printing efficiency matters
- Products where the seam can be hidden or accepted as normal packaging structure
Common Misunderstandings
| Misunderstanding | Correct Explanation |
|---|---|
| “A laminated tube is lower quality because it has a seam.” | Not necessarily. The seam is a normal result of laminate tube construction, and laminated tubes can provide excellent barrier protection. |
| “Extruded tubes always have better barrier.” | Not always. Standard PE extruded tubes have basic barrier, while laminated ABL or PBL tubes can provide stronger protection. |
| “The seam will always ruin the design.” | Good artwork planning can place the seam at the back or avoid critical graphics near the seam area. |
| “Only extruded tubes can look premium.” | Laminated tubes can also look premium, but seam placement, material choice, printing quality, and finishing must be carefully managed. |
Best Practical Recommendation
If your priority is seamless appearance, luxury skincare positioning, and clean 360-degree decoration, an extruded tube is usually the better choice. If your priority is high barrier protection, toothpaste-style packaging, or ABL/PBL laminate performance, a laminated tube is often the better choice.
For beauty brands, the best decision should balance both function and appearance. A premium sunscreen or skincare product may prefer an extruded EVOH tube for a seamless cosmetic look, while toothpaste or highly barrier-sensitive functional paste may prefer an ABL or PBL laminated tube.
Summary
The biggest side-seam and aesthetic difference is simple: extruded tubes usually have a seamless tube body, while laminated tubes usually have a side seam. Extruded tubes often look cleaner, softer, and more premium for cosmetic packaging. Laminated tubes usually provide strong barrier performance and production efficiency, but the seam must be considered in artwork design.
Choose extruded tubes for seamless beauty aesthetics. Choose laminated tubes when barrier protection and laminate structure are more important than a completely seamless body.
Learn more: PE Tubes vs Laminated Tubes, Laminate Tubes, ABL Tubes, PBL Tubes, Co-Extruded Cosmetic Tubes Guide, Tube Decoration.
Need Help Choosing Extruded or Laminated Tubes?
Xinfly Packaging helps brands compare extruded PE, co-extruded EVOH, ABL, and PBL laminated tubes based on side-seam appearance, barrier performance, decoration style, formula sensitivity, and brand positioning.


