Polyester batts in Australian construction: allergen-free insulation alternative
Polyester insulation batts for Australian builders: recycled PET, no fibre irritation, AS/NZS 4859, Bradford Autex Pink Batts, R-values, defects.
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Polyester insulation batts are the volume alternative to glasswool batts on Australian builds (Class 1a houses, Class 2 low-rise apartments, and Class 3-9 commercial fitouts where allergen-sensitivity or wet-area resilience drives the spec): recycled polyester (PET, the same plastic as soft-drink bottles) heat-bonded into resilient mats with no fibre irritation, no respiratory hazard at install, and equivalent R-value performance to glasswool at the same thickness. The trade-off is cost: polyester typically runs 30 to 60% more expensive than glasswool at equivalent R-value. Where polyester is the right call: allergen-sensitive households, DIY install without respiratory PPE risk, wet-area or splash-zone applications (PET is hydrophobic and recovers from wet exposure better than glasswool), and acoustic-critical applications (slightly better acoustic performance per unit thickness in some product lines). The volume manufacturers are Bradford Insulation (Polymax brand, also Optimo high-density), Autex (Greenstuf, the heritage NZ-AU polyester brand), and Pink Batts (polyester variant). All comply with AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 and install per AS/NZS 3999:2015. The two job-killers are the same as glasswool: compressing batts during install (loses R-value proportionally), and leaving gaps at junctions (thermal short-circuit). On NCC compliance, the wall, ceiling, and floor Total R-value targets are identical regardless of insulation type, and polyester delivers them at the same product R-value rating as glasswool.
What it is
Polyester insulation is made from recycled PET (polyethylene terephthalate) fibres, typically 65 to 85% post-consumer recycled content. The PET is melted, extruded into fine fibres, blended with a low-percentage virgin polyester binder fibre, and heat-bonded into a resilient mat without chemical adhesive. The fibres trap still air (the actual insulating element) the same way glasswool fibres do.
The differences from glasswool:
- Chemistry: hydrophobic polyester vs glasswool’s silica fibre
- Skin and respiratory irritation: minimal (PET fibres are too thick to enter respiratory tract); compare to glasswool’s fibre irritation
- Mould and rot resistance: polyester is mould-resistant; the PET fibre doesn’t support fungal growth
- Recyclability: polyester batts can be recycled at end of life; glasswool typically goes to landfill
- Cost: polyester is materially more expensive
Note that polyester is not better at thermal insulation per thickness than glasswool. R-value per centimetre is essentially equivalent. The benefit is install experience, allergen-friendliness, and recyclability, not thermal performance.
The Australian standard is AS/NZS 4859.1:2018; install practice is AS/NZS 3999:2015.
When polyester is the right call
| Reason | Where it matters |
|---|---|
| Allergy-sensitive household: respiratory sensitivities, asthma, eczema | Bedroom, family room, child’s room walls/ceilings |
| Owner-builder DIY install: no PPE/respirator infrastructure | Self-install residential, granny flat, owner-builder cottage |
| Wet area or splash zone: bathroom, laundry, ensuite | Polyester recovers from a wet event; glasswool retains moisture |
| Acoustic-critical: home theatre, music studio, party wall | Higher-density polyester products give slightly better acoustic Rw vs glasswool of equivalent density |
| Sustainability spec: green-star ratings, high-recycled-content target | PET 65%+ recycled content reads better than virgin glasswool |
| Renovation where existing insulation has been water-damaged | Polyester replacement maintains the upgrade while accepting future moisture events |
When glasswool is preferred
- Budget-driven volume residential: glasswool is 30-60% cheaper; the cost saving outweighs install comfort
- Tradesperson install with full PPE: glasswool is easier to handle in bulk on large jobs once gloves and respirator are in use
- Fire-rated walls and inter-tenancy separation: glasswool’s higher density variants and acoustic properties are well-tested for FRL ratings; some polyester products require specific testing
- Very high R-value at minimum thickness: glasswool’s compression resistance at higher densities is slightly better, allowing thinner profiles
R-values and sizing
R-values match the glasswool range. The thickness for a given R-value is essentially the same (a polyester R3.5 ceiling batt is around 175 mm thick, same as glasswool R3.5).
| R-value (product label) | Typical thickness | Typical application |
|---|---|---|
| R1.5 | 70-85 mm | Thin partition |
| R2.0 | 90 mm | Standard external wall |
| R2.5 | 90-110 mm | High-performance wall |
| R2.7 | 110-140 mm | High-spec wall, climate zone 6+ |
| R3.5 | 170-180 mm | Standard ceiling |
| R5.0 | 240-250 mm | Cool-climate ceiling |
| R6.0 | 285-300 mm | Cold-climate ceiling |
Product variants follow the same logic as glasswool: wall batts (snug-fit width), ceiling batts (wider rolls or batts), underfloor (higher density), and acoustic (high-density).
Australian manufacturers
| Brand | Range | Where supplied |
|---|---|---|
| Bradford Polymax (CSR) | Wall, ceiling, sound; consumer-friendly retail packaging | National |
| Autex Greenstuf | Wall, ceiling, acoustic; NZ-AU heritage polyester brand; strong on acoustic products | National |
| Pink Batts Polyester (Fletcher Building) | Wall, ceiling; legacy retail brand extension into polyester | National |
| Fletcher Insulation Earthsmart | Wall, ceiling; range expansion alternative | National |
| EcoWool / NextGen | Wall, ceiling; smaller manufacturers, specialist supply | Regional |
All comply with AS/NZS 4859. Product-to-product comparison at equivalent R-value is essentially a cost comparison; thermal performance is comparable across brands.
NCC compliance
The NCC Part H6 Total R-value targets apply equally to polyester and glasswool (see glasswool-batts for the climate zone table). The product R-value to specify is determined by the Total R-value target for the building element, not by the insulation type. A wall needing Total R2.8 in climate zone 5 (Sydney metro) uses R2.5 product whether that product is polyester or glasswool.
Install requirements
Install rules are identical to glasswool. AS/NZS 3999:2015 governs both. The main differences are install experience:
- No respirator typically needed: polyester fibres are not respiratory irritants at install
- No protective coveralls needed: minor skin irritation from binder; gloves recommended but not mandatory
- Cut with regular scissors or knife: polyester cuts cleanly; glasswool needs a scoring blade
- Wider product range in stiffer formats: some polyester products come pre-cut to wall-stud width, stiffened for friction-fit, easier to handle than the limp glasswool equivalent
The compression and gap rules from glasswool (compression reduces R-value proportionally; gaps short-circuit the insulation envelope) apply identically.
Common defects and on-site issues
- Compression in tight cavities: same as glasswool; a 240 mm R5.0 batt forced into a 180 mm joist depth loses ~25% R-value
- Gaps at junctions: 5% gap area drops effective R by ~50%; install must cover every cavity face
- Wrong product variant for application: low-density wall product installed in ceiling sags; high-density ceiling product installed in wall doesn’t conform
- Polyester compressed under flooring on suspended floor: polyester underfloor batts can compress more than glasswool if the floor sags or is loaded. Use specifically rated underfloor product.
- Static electricity attracting dust at install: polyester fibres pick up dust during cutting. Wipe down hands and PPE before moving to clean areas of the build.
- Polyester next to halogen downlights: same 50 mm clearance rule as glasswool; LED IC-F rated downlights allow contact
- Mistaken assumption that polyester is fire-rated: standard polyester batts have a Group 3 fire classification under AS/NZS 1530.3. For fire-rated walls (e.g. inter-tenancy boundary), use a specifically tested fire-rated batt (glasswool is the more common choice for FRL applications).
Pricing (2026 indicative, ex-GST, supply only)
| Product | Per square metre |
|---|---|
| R2.0 wall batt | $11-16 |
| R2.5 wall batt | $13-19 |
| R3.5 ceiling batt | $17-25 |
| R5.0 ceiling batt | $25-36 |
| R6.0 ceiling batt | $34-48 |
| Acoustic (high-density, R2.5) | $20-30 |
| Underfloor batt | $20-30 |
| Stiffened wall batt (pre-cut to stud width) | +$3-5/m2 over standard |
Compare to glasswool equivalent (from materials/glasswool-batts): polyester is roughly 30 to 60% more expensive at equivalent R-value. For a typical 200 m2 residential build with R2.5 wall and R5.0 ceiling, the polyester premium adds approximately $1,200 to $2,400 to the insulation budget.
Standards and references
- Standards Australia, AS/NZS 4859.1:2018 Thermal insulation materials for buildings, Part 1: General criteria and technical provisions. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Standards Australia, AS/NZS 3999:2015 Bulk thermal insulation, Installation. https://store.standards.org.au (verified 2026-05-13).
- Australian Building Codes Board, NCC 2022 Volume Two Part H6 Energy efficiency. https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/editions/ncc-2022/adopted/volume-two/h-class-1-and-10-buildings/part-h6-energy-efficiency (verified 2026-05-13).
Related
- Glasswool batts
- Insulation: where to use what (practical)
- NCC NatHERS energy (compliance)
- AS/NZS 4859 thermal insulation (compliance)
- Insulation installer (trade)
- R-value (glossary)
See also
- Thermal bridge (glossary)
- Condensation (glossary)
- ABCB Housing Provisions (glossary)
- NatHERS (glossary)
- Total R-value (glossary)
- Recycled content (glossary)
Last updated: 2026-05-13. Verified: 2026-05-13. Quarterly review for AS/NZS 4859 currency and pricing.