Choosing a resin is really about trading off a handful of requirements against cost and processability. Work through these five questions in order and you'll narrow thousands of grades down to a short list quickly.
1. What does the part have to do mechanically?
Start with the dominant load. Need stiffness and strength? Look at glass-filled nylon, PBT or acetal. Need impact toughness? Polycarbonate, PC/ABS and impact-copolymer PP. Need flexibility? TPE/TPU or polyethylene. Be specific about whether you need stiffness (modulus), strength (yield) or toughness (impact) — they push you toward different materials.
2. What's the thermal environment?
Continuous-use temperature, not just peak, drives material choice. Commodity resins like PP and PE top out fairly low; engineering resins like nylon and PBT handle more, especially glass-filled; and high-temp specialty polymers (PEEK, PEI, PSU) take the extremes. Glass reinforcement raises heat deflection substantially.
3. What will it be exposed to?
Chemicals, UV, moisture and food contact all narrow the field. Polyolefins (PP, PE) shrug off most chemicals; acetal resists fuels and solvents; polycarbonate needs care around certain solvents. For outdoors, choose ASA or UV-stabilized grades rather than standard ABS. For food or medical contact, specify FDA-compliant or medical grades up front.
4. Are there regulatory or certification requirements?
Flame rating (UL 94), FDA food-contact, RoHS/REACH, automotive specs — identify these early, because they restrict you to specific certified grades and affect lead time and price. Ask your supplier for the documentation before you commit.
5. What's the cost and volume reality?
Resin is a raw material; small spec changes move price a lot at volume. Commodity grades are cheapest, engineering grades cost more for performance, and specialty grades carry a premium. Match the grade to the requirement — over-specifying wastes money on every part you make.
Then: certify, sample, and qualify a backup
Once you have a short list, get a certified sample, run it on your process, and confirm it performs. And qualify a second source on the grades you depend on — supply disruptions are when single-sourced programs get hurt. Not sure where to start? Our resin selector turns three questions into a short list, or just send us your requirements and we'll spec it.
