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Pad Printing vs UV Printing

Comparing Post-Processing Options for Molded Parts

Compare the advantages and applications for pad printing and UV printing on your injection-molded parts
There are a few factors to consider when choosing between UV and pad printing for your injection-molded parts. Before choosing, it’s important to define each method and outline its strengths and tradeoffs. That guidance will help you decide when to use one over the other to meet your needs.

What is Pad Printing?

Pad printing is an industrial printing process that uses a flexible, custom-shaped silicone pad to transfer an inked image from an etched metal or plastic plate called a cliché onto a surface. It was invented in the 1960s and has become ubiquitous as a printing method for most industries. Pad printing supports a wide range of solid colors, with precise Pantone matching commonly available through ink systems.

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Advantages and Limitations of Pad Printing

Pad printing is a traditional, widely used process that excels at smooth, crisp, solid graphics and accurate Pantone color matching. Durability is generally comparable to UV printing in similar use conditions, and specialty inks can address niche needs such as certain food-contact requirements.
One notable limitation of pad printing is that it cannot produce gradient effects because it relies on transferring ink from a tray via a pad. It also requires more setup—cutting a cliché and building fixtures to hold parts—so set up and changeovers are slower. This has implications for batch size and serialization, with pad printing being more convenient for large batches requiring identical prints. Geometry of the injection-molded part matters: If curvature is too great, the pad may not reach the surface evenly and the graphics can distort. Notably, material options are often narrower for pad printing due to adhesion constraints. 

Primary Applications of Pad Printing

As an established printing technique, pad printing is used across a wide range of industries, including medical, automotive, cosmetics, electronics, and aerospace. It’s tough to find an industry where pad printing is not used; even the keys on your keyboard are likely pad printed!

Some common applications of pad printing for injection-molded parts are branded graphics, instructional text, and indicator marks. 

What is UV Printing?

UV printing is a digital, non-contact process that deposits ink onto parts and instantly cures it with ultraviolet light for a durable result. UV printing was invented in the late 1970s but didn’t become popular until positioning techniques were perfected in the 2000s. Because the print head does not touch the part in UV printing, fixturing is often unnecessary, which allows for rapid setup and straightforward changeovers. 
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Advantages and Limitations of UV Printing

UV printing minimizes upfront setup—with no clichés or dedicated fixtures—so it’s well suited to quick iterations, frequent graphic changes, and small batches. It supports gradients and more complex imagery than pad printing. Results are consistent, and overall cost can be lower than pad printing for short runs. Because a physical cliché is not needed, UV printing allows for variable data such as serialization numbers.

UV printing does have some limitations as it can face adhesion challenges on rubbery substrates or with incompatible material chemistries. It shares similar size and curvature constraints with pad printing, in which graphics may distort if parts are too curved. In addition, primers or sealers may leave a slight texture on the surface, which could create an issue for parts that require an absolutely smooth finish. Because the output of a UV printer is dot-based (commonly up to 1200 DPI resolution), there can be a faint pixelation effect—though usually this is not visible to the human eye.  

Finally, because UV printing is a newer technology than pad printing, some companies may be less comfortable using it. 

Primary Applications for UV Printing

UV printing serves the same core needs as pad printing, such as marking, branding, and instructional text. It’s especially useful for creating gradient or photographic effects, which are popular in toys and consumer products, and for variable data applications such as serialization or versioning. 

Design Considerations for Printing on Injection-Molded Parts

Both methods are sensitive to surface geometry: excessive curvature or deep recesses can stretch or degrade graphics, and maximum printable areas are similar. Material selection affects adhesion for either process, with rubbery substrates more challenging for both UV printing and pad printing. It’s best to stick with materials with proven results. Fixturing is typically required for pad printing due to physical contact, whereas UV printing usually does not, and UV prints may have a slightly more tactile feel. 

When to Use Pad Printing vs. UV Printing

Choose pad printing when:

  • Established standards specify pad printing
  • Exact Pantone color matching and extreme smooth, crisp, solid graphics are the priority
  • Setup costs can be spared over larger production runs

Choose UV printing when:

  • Gradients or complex imagery are needed
  • Printing variable data such as serialization and want fast changes with minimal setup
  • Production small quantities or prototypes
Need  Print Why
Gradients or photographic effects UV printing Supports gradients and complex imagery via digital process
Exact Pantone-matched solid colors Pad printing Delivers precise solid-color matching and smooth fills
Small quantities or prototypes UV printing Minimal setup; fast, low-cost changeovers
Large, stable production runs Pad printing Higher setup amortized over volume; cost-competitive at scale
Variable data or serialization UV printing Easy to change artwork and print unique IDs per part
Fast turnaround without tooling  UV printing No clichés/fixtures; rapid setup
Smoothest, least tactile surface Pad printing Typically leaves a smoother feel than UV (which can be slightly raised)
Tight brand color tolerance on solids Pad printing Excellent consistency for solid Pantone colors
Rubbery substrates or tricky chemistries Pad printing (for testing) UV adhesion can be challenging; pad and/or pretreatments may perform better—test first
High curvature or deep recesses Neither ideal (evaluate) Both have similar curvature/depth limits; consider redesign or alternative marking
Cost sensitivity on short runs UV printing Lower upfront cost; generally cheaper for small batches

Contact us

More Suport Pc 拷贝 2

Manufacturer of professional digital printer in China. 

Provide DTF,UV-DTF,UV,ECO & Sublimation printer.

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+86 86 136 3637 3534
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Manufacturer of professional digital printer in China. 

Provide DTF,UV-DTF,UV,ECO & Sublimation printer.

Whatsapp

+86 147 5184 4970
🔒 All your information is secure and confidential ! We won't send you spam emails. You will get our reply within 24 hours . If not please check your spam box. Never spam mail. Thank you very mach .