The main difference is the material: flex refers to a PVC-coated polyester fabric used as the printing substrate, while "banner printing" is a broader term describing the process of printing large-format graphics onto any banner material — which may or may not be flex. In short, all flex printing is banner printing, but not all banner printing uses flex material.
| Feature | Flex Printing | Banner Printing (General) |
| Material | PVC-coated polyester (flex) | Flex, vinyl, fabric, mesh, etc. |
| Print Method | Solvent / eco-solvent inkjet | Various (inkjet, UV, dye-sub) |
| Typical Use | Outdoor advertising, signage | Indoor & outdoor displays |
| Durability | 3–5 years outdoors | Varies by material |
| Cost | Low to moderate | Low to high |
Flex printing uses a coated PVC-polyester composite sheet as the base. The surface accepts solvent-based or eco-solvent inks, producing vivid, weather-resistant graphics. It is the dominant format for large outdoor advertising in many regions because of its low cost per square meter and wide availability.
Common print resolution for flex ranges from 720 dpi to 1440 dpi, sufficient for large-format viewing distances of 1 meter or more.
Banner printing is the general process of producing large-format prints on any flexible substrate intended to be hung, stretched, or displayed. The substrate could be flex, mesh vinyl, polyester fabric, or laminated paper, depending on the application.
Flex material requires solvent or eco-solvent inks that bond with the PVC coating. Other banner substrates may use UV-curable inks, latex inks, or dye-sublimation, each delivering different color gamut and scratch resistance levels. Eco-solvent inks on flex typically offer outdoor durability of 2–3 years unlaminated, extending to 5+ years with lamination.
A standard 440 gsm flex banner weighs approximately 440 grams per square meter. A comparable polyester fabric banner may weigh only 110–150 gsm, making fabric significantly more portable for repeated transport.
A printable flex banner is the most cost-effective solution for large outdoor displays, billboards, and promotional signage. Before placing an order, consider the following:
| Grade | Weight | Best For |
| Economy | 280–350 gsm | Short-term indoor events |
| Standard | 440–500 gsm | Outdoor signage, 6–18 months |
| Heavy Duty | 550–650 gsm | Permanent billboard, 3–5 years |
Not exactly. Flex is a PVC-coated polyester composite, while vinyl banner typically refers to a heavier, fully PVC sheet. Both are waterproof and used outdoors, but flex is generally lighter and lower cost.
72–150 dpi at the final print dimensions is standard. For close-viewing displays (under 1 m), use 150–200 dpi.
2–3 years unlaminated with eco-solvent inks; up to 5 years with UV-protective lamination.
No. Flex printing requires wide-format solvent or eco-solvent printers, which are industrial machines not available for home use. Use a professional print service.
Grommets are typically placed every 50 cm along hemmed edges, with one in each corner.
Standard PVC flex is not biodegradable. Eco-solvent inks reduce harmful emissions compared to traditional solvent inks, and some recycled or PVC-free flex alternatives are available for environmentally conscious projects.