material Materials and products 9 min read

MS polymer sealants: paintable, isocyanate-free, what they replace

MS polymer (modified silane) sealants for Australian builders: paintable, isocyanate-free, broad substrate range. Sikaflex MS, Soudaseal, X'traseal, Bostik SMP.

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TL;DR

MS polymer (modified silane, also called silyl-modified polymer or SMP) sealants are a hybrid chemistry that sits between silicone and polyurethane: isocyanate-free like silicone, but paintable and substrate-tolerant like polyurethane. They cure by moisture reacting with silane endgroups on a polyether backbone, producing a flexible, UV-stable bead with no acid (acetoxy) or solvent byproduct. The two things to confirm on selection: the ISO 11600 movement class on the data sheet (Sikaflex MS is F-25LM, Soudaseal 240 FC is F20HM), and that the product is rated for the specific substrate stack (low-modulus formulations for facade joints, high-modulus for adhesive-grade bonding). The most common site misuse: using MS polymer where structural silicone is required (glazing curtain walls), or where continuous water immersion will degrade the bond.

What it is

MS polymer sealant is a one-component, moisture-curing elastomeric sealant based on a silyl-terminated polyether backbone. The “MS” stands for “Modified Silane” (or “Silyl-Modified”); some manufacturers also call it “Modified Silicone Polymer,” which is a marketing-friendly misnomer because the product contains no silicone polymer, only silane endgroups on a polyether chain (verified 2026-05-13, Bostik SMP technology page).

The chemistry was developed in the 1980s as a way to combine the durability and weather resistance of silicone with the paintability, adhesion, and mechanical properties of polyurethane, while eliminating the two main handling problems of those chemistries: silicone’s substrate incompatibility (stone, copper, bituminous membranes) and polyurethane’s reliance on isocyanate curing.

Cure reaction: the silane endgroups react with atmospheric or substrate moisture, releasing methanol or ethanol (very low quantities, typically odourless), to form a flexible, cross-linked elastomer. No acetic acid (acetoxy silicone), no isocyanate volatiles (polyurethane), no solvent flash-off (solvent-based products).

Properties

PropertyTypical range
Application temperature5 to 40 degrees C
Service temperature-40 to 90 degrees C (some grades to 120 degrees)
Skin time10 to 25 minutes (23 degrees C, 50% RH)
Full cure24 to 72 hours, depending on bead depth and humidity
Movement capabilityF-20 to F-25 (ISO 11600), ± 20-25% joint movement
ModulusLow modulus (LM) for joint sealing, high modulus (HM) for adhesive bonding
Shore A hardness30 to 60 (grade-dependent)
Open time5 to 15 minutes
Format290 to 600 ml cartridges; 600 ml sausages for high-volume use
PaintableYes, with water-based, solvent-based, and most coatings (once skinned)
VOCVery low (most products < 50 g/L); compliant with green-building schemes

How it compares to silicone and polyurethane

PropertyMS polymerSiliconePolyurethane
PaintableYesNo (even after cure)Yes, after full cure
Isocyanate-freeYesYesNo
Adhesion to stone, copper, brassYesNeutral cure onlyYes
UV stabilityHighHighestModerate (yellows over time on exterior)
Wet area / drinking-water contactConfirm AS/NZS 4020 gradeAS/NZS 4020 grades availableGenerally not for potable contact
Cure byproductMethanol (trace)Acetic acid (acetoxy) or alcohol (neutral)CO2 (foaming risk if over-applied)
Substrate moisture toleranceHigh (cures on damp substrates)Low (substrate must be dry)Low to moderate
Cost (cartridge, 2026 ex-GST)$14 to $28$10 to $22$9 to $18

The substrate moisture tolerance is the line that decides many specifications. Polyurethane will foam if it meets a wet substrate; silicone’s adhesion fails if the substrate is damp at application. MS polymer cures cleanly on damp masonry, freshly cleaned tile, or condensation-affected metal flashings, which makes it the residential builder’s go-to for window perimeter sealing in cool, damp conditions.

Grades and variants

GradeWhat it isWhere to use
Low-modulus (LM)Soft, high-elongation; absorbs cyclic joint movementMovement joints in masonry and concrete, facade and curtain-wall perimeter joints, expansion joints
High-modulus (HM)Stiffer, higher bond strengthAdhesive-grade bonding (cladding panels, trim to masonry, MDF skirting to render); not for joints subject to high cyclic movement
High-tack (grab)Very high initial grip; sets quicklyVertical bonding without mechanical fasteners; the chemistry used in Soudal Fix All, Selleys 3-in-1, and X’traseal MS-609
Underwater / wet-areaFormulated to bond and cure submerged or on wet substratesPool surrounds, balcony drains, wet-area expansion joints; confirm AS/NZS 4020 if drinking-water contact

Most major brands offer two grades: a sealing grade (LM, in a colour range from white through bronze) and an adhesive grade (HM, typically white or grey). The high-tack hybrids (Soudal Fix All, Selleys 3-in-1, X’traseal MS-609) sit at the adhesive end of the range and replace mechanical fasteners on many residential trim, cladding, and panel applications.

Where MS polymer is the right specification

  • Window and door perimeter sealing: paintable, tolerates damp substrates, won’t lift mineral-fibre cement or fibre-cement sheet edges over time. The default exterior perimeter sealant on residential rebuilds where the trim is to be painted in.
  • Facade and cladding expansion joints: LM grade absorbs thermal cycling on Class A2 mineral-cement panels, ACM (post-Grenfell rated), and weatherboard cladding terminations.
  • Movement joints in masonry and concrete: ISO 11600 F-25 grades handle wall-and-floor joint cyclic movement without cracking. Compatible with concrete and brick without primer in most cases (always confirm on data sheet).
  • Roof and gutter detailing where butyl is too soft: MS polymer bonds to most metal flashing materials including zincalume and Colorbond, where butyl mastic creeps and acetoxy silicone is incompatible.
  • Low-VOC interior environments: hospitals, schools, kitchens, allergen-sensitive residential builds. VOCs typically under 50 g/L, often Green Star compliant.

Where MS polymer is wrong

  • Structural silicone glazing: curtain-wall and shop-front glass-to-frame structural bonds require purpose-tested structural silicone systems (DGU edge seals, two-stage glazing tape and silicone bead). MS polymer does not have the long-term structural silicone test history.
  • Continuous water immersion: spa, pool, and submerged drain joints subject to permanent immersion need underwater-rated MS polymer grade or a polyurethane with submerged service rating. Standard MS polymer in continuous immersion can soften over time.
  • High-modulus joints that need to move: using a high-tack adhesive-grade MS polymer in an expansion joint loses joint movement capability. The grade must match the application; the same chemistry name covers very different mechanical behaviour.
  • Hot continuous-service environments above 100 degrees C: behind ovens, on flue penetrations, in solar hot-water plant rooms. Use silicone or a high-temp polyurethane.

Common defects to look for

  • Wrong grade in a joint: HM adhesive used where LM sealant is needed; the joint cracks at the first thermal cycle. Specify the modulus on the SoW.
  • Paint over uncured sealant: skin must be fully formed (typically 30 to 60 minutes) before any coating. Paint cracks if applied during the cure phase.
  • Bond breaker missing in three-sided adhesion: a sealant joint that bonds to all three sides (two faces and the back) cannot accommodate joint movement; it cracks. Apply a bond breaker tape or backing rod in any joint over 6 mm deep.
  • Wrong size joint: the recommended joint geometry for MS polymer is approximately 2:1 width-to-depth ratio. Beads applied too deep or too shallow fail prematurely.
  • Open-time exceeded on adhesive grades: high-tack MS polymer has 5 to 15 minutes open time before skinning. Pressing a panel onto a skinned bead leaves no bond at the contact zone.
  • Storage and shelf life: cartridges have a typical 12-month shelf life from manufacture. Check the date code; old cartridges may cure in the tube or fail to fully cure on the substrate.

Health and safety

MS polymer is one of the least hazardous sealant chemistries in residential use. Isocyanate-free eliminates the respiratory sensitisation risk that polyurethane raw materials carry; solvent-free formulations reduce VOC exposure inside enclosed spaces. The methanol byproduct of cure is in trace amounts and below detection in normal ventilated conditions.

PPE: standard nitrile gloves for skin contact; safety glasses for overhead application or pressure-gun use. SDS-mandated PPE per product, but no specialised respirator requirement for ventilated residential work.

Pricing and selection

Brand / productClass290 ml cartridge price (2026, ex-GST, indicative)Where common
Sikaflex MS (Sika)F-25LM$22-28Specifier / commercial residential
Soudaseal 240 FC (Soudal)F-20HM$18-22General residential trade
Soudal Fix All CrystalHigh-tack$14-18Grab applications, panel and trim
Selleys 3-in-1High-tack$14-18Retail and residential trade
Bostik SMP rangeLM and HM$16-24Commercial residential, façade
X’traseal MS-609 (Adheseal)High-tack$14-18Industrial and residential adhesive

Confirm the specific data sheet for ISO 11600 class, AS/NZS 4020 if drinking-water adjacent, and substrate compatibility before ordering for a large job. Hybrid product names are marketing terms; the data sheet is the only source of truth.

References

  1. International Organisation for Standardisation, ISO 11600:2002 Building construction, Jointing products, Classification and requirements for sealants. https://www.iso.org/standard/26956.html (verified 2026-05-13). Adopted in Australia via Standards Australia sealant classification references.
  2. Bostik Australia, Silyl Modified Polymer (SMP) technology. https://www.bostik.com/australia/en_AU/our-adhesive-technologies/silyl-modified-polymer-adhesive/ (verified 2026-05-13).
  3. Sika New Zealand, Sikaflex MS product data sheet. https://nzl.sika.com/dam/dms/nz01/b/sikaflex_ms.pdf (verified 2026-05-13).
  4. Australian Building Codes Board, NCC 2022 Volume Two Part H2 Damp and weatherproofing (the AS 4654.2:2012 DTS path that calls up MS polymer sealants for membrane termination). https://ncc.abcb.gov.au/editions/ncc-2022/adopted/volume-two/h-class-1-and-10-buildings/part-h2-damp-and-weatherproofing (verified 2026-05-13).

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-13. Verified: 2026-05-13. Quarterly review for product prices and ISO 11600 class designations.