If you are sourcing insect screens for your market — whether for residential windows, commercial buildings, or agricultural applications — one question comes up every time:
Should I choose fiberglass or polyester insect screen?
Both materials are widely used worldwide. Both have their loyal customers. But they are not interchangeable. The right choice depends on your climate, your customers’ expectations, and your price point.
As a manufacturer that produces both fiberglass and polyester insect screens, CredenTex has a front-row seat to how these materials perform in real-world conditions across different markets. Here is what we have learned.
1. Material Composition & Manufacturing
Fiberglass insect screen is woven from 100% fiberglass yarn, then coated with PVC (polyvinyl chloride) to give it flexibility and durability. The fiberglass core provides excellent dimensional stability — it does not stretch or sag over time.
Polyester insect screen is made from polyester monofilament yarn. It is woven into mesh and can be used with or without additional coating. Polyester is inherently flexible and resistant to chemicals.
| Property | Fiberglass | Polyester |
|---|---|---|
| Base Material | Fiberglass yarn + PVC coating | Polyester monofilament |
| Typical Mesh Count | 18×16 / 30×30 mesh | 18×14 / 25×25 mesh |
| Weight Range | 120–180 g/m² | 90–150 g/m² |
| Manufacturing Complexity | Higher (coating + curing required) | Lower (weaving is the final step) |
| Color Options | Black, grey, dark brown, etc. | Black, white, grey, green, etc. |
2. Key Performance Comparison
Strength and Durability
Fiberglass insect screen has excellent tensile strength due to its glass fiber core. It resists stretching under tension, keeping the screen taut in the frame over years of use. This is critical for large window openings where sagging is a common complaint.
Polyester screen, while still strong, is more elastic. It can stretch under sustained tension, especially in hot climates. However, polyester is less likely to tear from a sharp impact — it tends to flex rather than break.
| Performance | Fiberglass | Polyester |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile Strength | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| Tear Resistance | ⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Dimensional Stability | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| Elasticity | ⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
UV Resistance & Weathering
This is where the two materials diverge most significantly.
Fiberglass screen with quality PVC coating can last 5–8 years in direct sunlight. The UV degradation happens primarily in the PVC coating — once the coating degrades, the glass fibers become brittle and the mesh may crack.
Polyester screen naturally resists UV better at a fiber level. High-quality polyester yarns with UV stabilizers can last 6–10 years without significant degradation. However, cheaper polyester mesh without adequate UV stabilization will become brittle and crack within 2–3 years.
For tropical and equatorial markets (Africa, Southeast Asia, South America), high-quality polyester insect screen is often the preferred choice due to the harsh year-round UV exposure.
For temperate markets (Europe, North America), fiberglass insect screen is more than adequate and offers better value.
Chemical and Environmental Resistance
Polyester has superior chemical resistance. It withstands cleaning agents, salt spray, and acidic environments better than fiberglass. This makes it ideal for:
- Coastal homes with salt air
- Industrial areas with chemical exposure
- Agricultural settings with fertilizer/pesticide contact
Fiberglass is more sensitive to strong alkalis and acids, which can degrade the PVC coating and attack the glass fibers over time.
Installation and Handling
Fiberglass screen is easier to install because it holds its shape. It splines into frames smoothly, stays flat, and does not require pre-stretching. This is a major advantage for window screen manufacturers who value production efficiency.
Polyester screen is more slippery and can be trickier to spline. It also requires proper tensioning because it can sag if not stretched adequately during framing.
3. Cost and Market Positioning
| Factor | Fiberglass | Polyester |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Material Cost | Lower | Medium |
| Manufacturing Cost | Higher (coating & curing) | Lower |
| End-User Price | Medium | Medium-High |
| Target Market | Mainstream residential, developer projects | Premium residential, coastal/industrial |
| Lead Time | Standard (3–4 weeks) | Standard (3–4 weeks) |
Fiberglass offers the best value for money for the vast majority of applications. It is the industry standard for window screening globally.
Polyester commands a premium in niche segments where its specific properties (UV resistance, chemical resistance, flexibility) justify the higher cost.
4. Which One Should You Choose?
For B2B buyers, the decision matrix looks like this:
Choose fiberglass insect screen if:
- Your market is in temperate climates (Europe, North America, parts of South America)
- You are equipping standard residential or commercial buildings
- Production efficiency (easy framing) matters to you
- You want a proven, widely accepted product
- Your budget-conscious customers want good performance at moderate cost
Choose polyester insect screen if:
- Your market is in tropical/equatorial regions with intense sun (Africa, Southeast Asia, Middle East)
- Your application is coastal (salt spray) or industrial (chemical exposure)
- Your customers prioritize maximum longevity over initial cost
- You are supplying premium/high-end projects
5. What About Mixed Product Lines?
Many of our customers carry both in their catalog — fiberglass for mainstream products and polyester for their premium range. This is a practical strategy that lets you serve different price segments while keeping inventory manageable.
CredenTex offers both fiberglass and polyester insect screens in a wide range of mesh counts, wire diameters, roll widths, and colors. We also support OEM/ODM packaging so you can sell under your own brand.
Key Takeaway
There is no single “best” insect screen material. The best choice is the one that fits your market’s climate, your customers’ budget, and your product positioning.
Fiberglass is the reliable workhorse. Polyester is the specialized performer. Knowing when to recommend each one makes you a better supplier to your customers.
Need samples of both to compare? Contact us and we will send you a comparison kit.
