Rubber and PVC are the two most common conveyor belt materials in industrial use. Both handle bulk material, packaged goods, and process conveying, but they are built differently, perform differently, and cost differently. Choosing the wrong one means premature belt failure, unnecessary expense, or both.

This guide compares rubber and PVC conveyor belts side by side on every property that matters: temperature, abrasion, chemical resistance, tensile strength, weight, cost, splicing, and FDA compliance. It also covers when to consider a third option like urethane or modular plastic instead. Texas Belting stocks both rubber and PVC in dozens of specifications. Call 888-203-2358 if you need help choosing.

Not sure if rubber or PVC is right? Tell us your application and we will recommend the best material.

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Rubber vs PVC: Side-by-Side Comparison

Property Rubber (SBR/NR) PVC
Temperature range -25F to 225F standard. Up to 400F (HT) or 700F (Max HT) with specialty compounds. -10F to 160F standard. Some formulations to 200F. No high-temperature options.
Abrasion resistance Excellent. Grade 1 (DIN X) compounds handle the most abrasive materials: crushed rock, ore, sand, angular aggregate. Moderate. Adequate for packaged goods, light bulk, and grain. Not suitable for heavy aggregate or angular rock.
Impact resistance Excellent. Multi-ply rubber with breaker plies absorbs heavy impact from rocks, ore, and large lumps dropped from height. Low. PVC cracks or punctures under heavy impact. Not suitable for crusher discharge or heavy loading zones.
Cut and rip resistance Good to excellent. Cut-resistant compounds and rip-stop carcass available for sharp materials. Poor. PVC cuts easily from sharp objects. Not recommended where metal, glass, or sharp-edged material is present.
Chemical resistance Moderate. Standard SBR is vulnerable to oils and solvents. MOR and nitrile compounds add oil resistance. Neoprene adds broad chemical resistance. Good. PVC resists most acids, alkalis, and mild chemicals. Better baseline chemical resistance than standard SBR rubber.
Oil resistance Requires MOR, nitrile, or neoprene compounds. Standard SBR swells and degrades in oil. Good baseline oil resistance. Handles vegetable and mineral oils better than standard rubber.
Moisture resistance Good. Polyester carcass absorbs less moisture than nylon. Rubber covers shed water. Sealed edges recommended in wet environments. Excellent. PVC is non-absorbent. Does not wick moisture. Inherently resistant to mildew and rot.
Tensile strength (PIW) 150 to 660+ PIW in 2 to 6-ply. Steel cord for extreme lengths. Handles the heaviest loads over the longest distances. Typically 75 to 250 PIW. Adequate for light to medium duty. Not available in high-PIW constructions for heavy mining or long-distance conveying.
Belt weight Heavy. Rubber belts weigh significantly more per foot than PVC, especially at higher ply counts. Light. PVC belts are 30% to 50% lighter than equivalent rubber belts. Lower energy consumption. Easier handling.
Cost Higher per foot. Specialty compounds (HT, FR, MOR) add further cost. But longer life in heavy-duty applications lowers total cost of ownership. Lower per foot. Most economical option for light to medium duty. But shorter life in abrasive or high-impact applications increases replacement frequency.
Splicing Vulcanized finger splice (strongest, permanent). Mechanical lacing (Clipper, Alligator) for field repair. See Splicing Guide. Heat welded, overlap cemented, or mechanical lacing. No vulcanized splice. Simpler field installation.
FDA food grade Available in white nitrile and specialty compounds. Less common, higher cost. Widely available. FDA-compliant PVC is the most common food-grade belt material. Lower cost than FDA rubber.
Anti-static / FR Available. M-MOR-SC for grain elevators. FR for MSHA underground mining. Standard options. Available. SC/FR PVC for grain elevators and enclosed handling. Standard options.
Typical service life Longer in abrasive, high-impact, and high-temperature applications. Can last years in heavy aggregate. Longer in clean, light-duty, chemical, and moisture environments. Shorter life than rubber in abrasive service.

When to Use Rubber

Application Why Rubber Browse Belts
Aggregate, quarry, mining Maximum abrasion, impact, and cut resistance. Heavy loads, long distances, outdoor weather. Heavy Duty Rubber
Crusher discharge, loading zones Impact-rated breaker plies absorb large rocks dropped from height. PVC would crack. Heavy Duty Rubber
High temperature (over 160F) HT, Max HT, and EPDM compounds handle 225F to 700F. PVC softens above 160F. Oil/Chemical/Heat Resistant
Long-distance and overland conveyors High-PIW multi-ply (330 to 660+) or steel cord for extreme lengths and sustained tension. Standard & Straight Warp
Incline with heavy bulk material Rough top, chevron, and cleated rubber for steep-angle transport of aggregate, sand, and gravel. Incline / Decline
Underground mining (MSHA) FR + anti-static compounds that meet MSHA flame resistance and static conductivity standards. Oil/Chemical/Heat Resistant
Recycling with sharp material Cut and rip resistant compounds handle shredded metal, glass, wire, and construction debris. Heavy Duty Rubber

When to Use PVC

Application Why PVC Browse Belts
Food processing (FDA) FDA-compliant PVC is the most common and cost-effective food-grade belt material. Easy to clean. Food & FDA Belts
Package handling, distribution Lightweight, low cost, smooth surface for cartons, boxes, totes. Lower energy consumption. Light Duty Belts
Grain elevators (light to medium duty) PVC CBS elevator belts cost less than rubber CBS for light grain, feed, and seed handling. Elevator Belts
Wet environments, wash-down Non-absorbent. Does not wick moisture, mildew, or rot. Inherently moisture resistant. PVC & Thermoplastic
Chemical exposure (mild acids, alkalis) Better baseline chemical resistance than standard SBR rubber without needing specialty compounds. PVC & Thermoplastic
Mail and parcel sorting Smooth, lightweight, low friction for high-speed sortation and accumulation. Light Duty Belts
Pharmaceutical, cosmetics FDA-compliant, non-shedding, easy to sanitize, chemical resistant. FDA Thermoplastic

When to Consider a Third Option

Situation Better Option Browse
Food processing requiring easy sanitation, field repair, and spiral/curve capability Modular plastic (Modutech, Intralox). Non-porous, sprocket-driven, individual module replacement. Modular Belts
Metal stamping, die cutting, glass handling with extreme abrasion from sharp edges Urethane. Higher abrasion and cut/gouge resistance than rubber or PVC. Elastic memory. Urethane Belting
Bakery, confectionery, chocolate with non-stick and heat release requirements Silicone or PTFE (Teflon). Non-stick surface. Heat resistant. Clean release of dough, chocolate, sugar. Food & FDA Belts
Folder gluer machines, printing presses, paper converting at high speed Machine tape and folder gluer belts. Purpose-built for the corrugated and printing industry. Corrugated & Printing
Steep to vertical conveying without buckets Corrugated sidewall belting. Contains material on extreme inclines up to vertical. Elevator & Sidewall
The cheapest belt is not always the cheapest option. A PVC belt on a crusher discharge conveyor may cost half as much as rubber per foot, but it may last weeks instead of years. The cost of the belt change, the production downtime, and the maintenance labor often far exceed the belt material savings. Always match the belt material to the application severity, not the purchase order.

Quick Decision Guide

Answer these five questions to narrow your choice:

Question If Yes If No
Is material temperature over 160F? Rubber (HT, EPDM, or Max HT compound) Continue
Is material heavy, abrasive, or angular (rock, ore, sand, gravel)? Rubber (abrasion resistant, multi-ply) Continue
Is there impact from large lumps dropped from height? Rubber (impact-rated with breaker plies) Continue
Does the belt need FDA food contact compliance? PVC (most cost-effective FDA). Or modular plastic for sanitation. Continue
Is the application light to medium duty (packages, grain, mail, pharmaceuticals)? PVC (lower cost, lighter weight, good chemical resistance) Rubber for heavy duty

This is a starting point. Many applications fall between categories. Call 888-203-2358 with your conveyor specs and we will recommend the right material. For a broader selection walkthrough, see our Conveyor Belt Selection Guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is rubber or PVC better for food processing?

PVC is the most common and cost-effective food-grade belt material. FDA-compliant PVC provides a smooth, non-absorbent surface that is easy to clean and resists moisture, oils, and mild chemicals. Rubber is available in FDA white nitrile but costs more and is less common in food applications. For applications requiring frequent sanitation, non-stick release, or spiral/curve capability, modular plastic (Modutech, Intralox) may be the best choice. See our Food & FDA Belts page.

Can I use PVC on a mining or aggregate conveyor?

Generally no. PVC lacks the abrasion resistance, impact resistance, and cut resistance needed for angular rock, ore, and heavy aggregate. PVC will wear through rapidly and crack under impact from large lumps. Rubber with abrasion-resistant compound (Grade 1 / DIN X) and impact-rated breaker plies is the correct choice for mining and aggregate. See our Aggregate & Mining page.

Is PVC cheaper than rubber?

Yes, PVC costs less per foot than rubber for equivalent belt widths. PVC is also lighter, which reduces shipping cost and energy consumption. However, in abrasive or high-impact applications, PVC wears out faster and needs more frequent replacement. The total cost of ownership (belt cost + downtime + installation labor) often favors rubber in heavy-duty applications and PVC in light to medium duty.

Can rubber handle chemicals and oil?

Standard SBR rubber degrades when exposed to petroleum or vegetable oils. However, MOR (moderately oil resistant), nitrile, and neoprene rubber compounds are specifically formulated for oil and chemical exposure. If your application involves oily grain, petroleum products, solvents, or chemical processing, specify MOR or nitrile compound instead of standard SBR. See our Oil, Chemical & Heat Resistant family.

What about urethane? When is it better than rubber or PVC?

Urethane provides higher abrasion resistance, better cut/gouge resistance, and greater elastic memory than rubber or PVC. It is the best choice for metal stamping, die cutting, glass handling, recycling of sharp materials, and any application where the belt is exposed to sharp, abrasive objects that would cut rubber or PVC. Urethane is also available in FDA food-grade options. See our Urethane & Plastic Belting page.

Can Texas Belting help me choose the right material?

Yes. Tell us what you are conveying, your conveyor dimensions, operating temperature, any chemical or oil exposure, whether FDA compliance is needed, and whether the conveyor is horizontal or inclined. We will recommend the right belt material, compound, ply count, and cover thickness for your application. Call 888-203-2358 or request a quote online.

Related Pages

Not Sure Which Belt Material Is Right?

Texas Belting stocks rubber and PVC in dozens of specifications. Tell us your application, material, and conveyor dimensions and we will match the right belt.

Request a Quote Call 888-203-2358