PETG vs PLA: The Ultimate Strength Comparison Guide for 3D Printing

Article author: Sergio Peciña
Article published at: Jul 9, 2025
Article comments count: 0 comments
Article tag: Comparison Article tag: PETG Article tag: PLA

When choosing between PETG and PLA filaments for your next 3D printing project, understanding their mechanical properties can make the difference between a successful print and a failed one. At Eolas Prints, we manufacture both materials in-house in Cantabria, Spain, ensuring consistent quality backed by our ISO 9001 and ISO 14001 certifications.

Understanding the Strength Fundamentals

Tensile Strength: The Numbers Tell Part of the Story

PLA typically demonstrates higher raw tensile strength at around 50-60 MPa, while PETG ranges from 40-50 MPa. However, these numbers only tell part of the story. PLA's strength comes with a critical weakness - brittleness. When PLA reaches its limit, it fails catastrophically, shattering rather than deforming.

PETG, despite lower tensile numbers, exhibits superior toughness. It can absorb significantly more impact energy before failure, making it ideal for functional parts that need to withstand real-world stress.

Impact Resistance: Where PETG Shines

The most significant difference between these materials lies in their impact resistance. PETG's flexibility allows it to bend and deform under stress rather than breaking. This makes it perfect for protective cases and housings, tool handles and grips, mechanical components subject to vibration, and parts that might be dropped or knocked around.

PLA's rigidity makes it excellent for structural components that need to maintain their shape, but poor for applications requiring shock absorption.

Temperature Performance: A Critical Factor

PLA begins softening around 60°C (140°F). PETG maintains integrity up to 80°C (176°F). This 20°C difference opens up entirely different application possibilities. PETG works for automotive interior parts, outdoor summer applications, and kitchen accessories, while PLA is limited to stable, room-temperature environments.

Real-World Application Testing

For Prototyping: PLA excels due to its ease of printing, minimal warping, and excellent surface finish. The brittleness isn't a concern for visual prototypes or fit-testing parts.

For Functional Parts: PETG dominates with its chemical resistance, impact toughness, and temperature stability. It's ideal for brackets, housings, containers, and mechanical components.

For Educational Projects: PLA's forgiveness during printing makes it perfect for beginners, while PETG rewards experienced users with more durable results.

Chemical and Environmental Resistance

PETG demonstrates superior resistance to common household chemicals, cleaning agents, and oils. It also handles UV exposure better than PLA, though neither is ideal for long-term outdoor use without UV-resistant additives.

Making the Right Choice for Your Project

Choose PLA when learning 3D printing, creating prototypes or decorative items, working in temperature-controlled environments, or when ease of printing is the priority.

Choose PETG when creating functional parts requiring durability, applications involve temperatures above 50°C, parts need impact resistance, or chemical resistance is important.

Expert Recommendations from Eolas Prints

After extensive testing with both materials in our Cantabria facility, we recommend PETG for functional parts, protective components, and applications requiring longevity. PLA remains excellent for prototyping, educational use, and decorative applications.

Our technical support team can help you select the right material for your specific application. With free shipping over €100 to most EU countries and next-day delivery within Spain, you can start your project with confidence.

Conclusion

While PLA offers higher raw tensile strength and easier printing, PETG provides superior impact resistance, temperature stability, and overall durability for functional applications. The choice depends on your specific project requirements, printing experience, and intended use.


Ready to start your next project? Browse our PLA and PETG filament collections, all manufactured in-house in Cantabria, Spain.

Shop the range: PETG Filament | PLA Filament 1.75mm | PETG UV Resistant — made in Spain.

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