Overview #
Flat pouches and sachets sit at the intersection of two demanding requirements: print quality that sells the product on shelf, and ink compliance that keeps the product — and the brand — safe. When brand partners brief us on a new flat pouch project, the first two questions we ask are always the same: what is the fill product, and what is the target market? Those two answers determine the entire ink system, laminate structure, and compliance documentation stack before we even open a print file. This guide covers how we select between gravure and flexo printing for flat pouch substrates, how we specify food-contact ink systems for FDA and EU markets, and what quality parameters we hold on our production lines.
Gravure vs Flexo: How We Choose for Flat Pouch Production #
The print process decision for a flat pouch is not a preference — it is driven by run volume, substrate type, and the colour complexity of the design.
Gravure excels on long runs. Our gravure lines run at 150–300 m/min on BOPP, PET, and BOPA substrates, and cylinder engraving costs are only justified above approximately 300,000 linear metres per order. Colour consistency across a run is exceptional: we hold ΔE ≤ 1.5 (CIE Lab, measured against approved proof) across a full gravure production run, which matters enormously for brand colour standards. Dot reproduction on gravure is continuous-tone, making it the right choice for photographic imagery and fine gradient fills.
Flexo is our recommendation for short-to-medium runs — typically 50,000 to 250,000 linear metres — and for water-based ink systems where solvent residual limits are a compliance priority. Our CI (central impression) flexo lines run at 100–200 m/min and hold register tolerance of ±0.3 mm on flexible film substrates. Plate costs are significantly lower than gravure cylinders, which makes flexo the economically correct choice for SKU proliferation projects where a brand is running 8–12 variants of the same pouch format.
| Parameter | Gravure | CI Flexo |
|---|---|---|
| Typical run length (linear metres) | ≥ 300,000 | 50,000–250,000 |
| Line speed (m/min) | 150–300 | 100–200 |
| Register tolerance | ±0.2 mm | ±0.3 mm |
| Colour consistency (ΔE CIE Lab) | ≤ 1.5 | ≤ 2.0 |
| Tooling cost relative | High (cylinders) | Low–Medium (plates) |
| Ink system options | Solvent, water-based | Water-based, UV-LED |
| Best substrate | PET, BOPP, BOPA | BOPP, PE, paper/film |
For food-contact flat pouches, we increasingly specify water-based or UV-LED cured flexo inks — not because gravure solvent inks cannot comply, but because residual solvent management is simpler and more auditable with water-based systems, which is a point regulators and brand compliance teams both appreciate.
Food-Contact Ink Compliance: FDA, EU, and What We Actually Specify #
Ink compliance for flat pouches is not a single standard — it is a layered system, and the applicable layer depends on where the product is sold.
US market (FDA): We formulate and source inks compliant with FDA 21 CFR 175.300 (resinous and polymeric coatings) and 21 CFR 178.3570 (lubricants with incidental food contact). For indirect food-contact applications — where the printed layer is laminated and separated from the food by a functional barrier — we require a minimum barrier layer of 12 µm LDPE or 15 µm CPP between the printed substrate and the food-contact surface. This barrier thickness is not arbitrary: migration testing under EN 1186 and ASTM F1249 confirms that a 12 µm LDPE layer reduces ink component migration to below the 10 ppb specific migration limit (SML) threshold for most low-molecular-weight ink components.
EU market: We comply with EU Regulation 10/2011 on plastic materials and articles intended to contact food, and with the Swiss Ordinance SR 817.023.21 (which many EU brand partners also require for completeness). Our ink suppliers provide full positive-list declarations confirming that all substances used are either listed in Annex I of EU 10/2011 or are covered by a valid national authorisation. For inks containing photoinitiators — relevant to UV-LED flexo systems — we specifically screen against the EUPIA Exclusion List and confirm compliance with the low-migration ink (LMI) specification, targeting photoinitiator migration below 0.01 mg/kg in the food simulant.
REACH and restricted substances: All ink systems we use for export orders are screened against REACH Regulation (EC) No 1907/2006 SVHC (Substances of Very High Concern) candidate list. We maintain a current REACH declaration from each ink supplier, updated annually or whenever the SVHC list is revised. For aromatic amine content — a specific concern with azo pigments — we test to EN 14362-1 and hold the limit at < 30 mg/kg per restricted amine, consistent with EU Directive 2002/61/EC requirements.
Quality Control Parameters and AQL Inspection for Flat Pouches #
Quality control on flat pouch production runs across three stages: incoming substrate inspection, inline print inspection, and finished goods AQL sampling.
Incoming substrate: We verify film caliper (target ±5% of nominal), tensile strength per ASTM D882, and oxygen transmission rate (OTR) per ASTM F1927 or ISO 15105-2 for barrier films. A standard retort pouch structure targeting OTR ≤ 1.0 cc/m²/day at 23°C/0% RH must be confirmed on every incoming roll lot — we do not accept supplier CoA alone for barrier-critical structures.
Inline print inspection: Our gravure and flexo lines run 100% camera-based vision systems. The system flags register deviation > 0.3 mm, colour ΔE > 2.5 against the approved standard, and any streak, hickey, or void defect larger than 0.5 mm². Flagged reels are quarantined and reviewed before proceeding to lamination.
Finished goods AQL: We apply ANSI/ASQ Z1.4 (equivalent to ISO 2859-1) sampling plans for finished pouch inspection. Our standard inspection level is General Inspection Level II with the following AQL classifications:
| Defect Class | Examples | AQL Level |
|---|---|---|
| Critical | Food-contact ink migration risk, seal failure, barrier breach | 0 (100% inspection) |
| Major | Colour ΔE > 3.0, misregister > 0.5 mm, incomplete seal | 1.0 |
| Minor | Surface scuff < 5 mm², minor colour variation within ΔE 2.0–3.0 | 4.0 |
Seal integrity is tested per ASTM F2096 (internal pressurisation) and ASTM F1140 (burst test). Our minimum acceptable seal strength for a standard food-grade flat pouch is 25 N/15 mm width, tested at 23°C after a 24-hour conditioning period.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a flat pouch project, we need the following before we can develop an accurate quote and sample: fill product type and weight, target market (US, EU, or other — this determines the compliance documentation stack), required shelf life and storage conditions (which drives barrier specification), pouch dimensions and seal width, and whether the design includes photographic imagery or fine gradients (which influences the gravure vs flexo recommendation).
The most common brief mistake we see is brands specifying a substrate structure based on a previous supplier’s spec without confirming the OTR or WVTR values that structure actually achieves. We always ask for the product’s moisture and oxygen sensitivity data and back-calculate the required barrier from shelf-life targets — not from a previous spec sheet.
Our typical process: digital colour proof in 3–5 working days, physical print and structure sample in 12–15 working days, production lead time 25–35 working days after sample approval and purchase order. Compliance documentation (FDA declaration, EU 10/2011 declaration, REACH declaration, CoA for film and ink) is prepared in parallel with production and delivered with the first shipment.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What barrier film thickness do you specify to meet the 10 ppb migration limit for food-contact flat pouches?
A: We specify a minimum 12 µm LDPE or 15 µm CPP functional barrier layer between the printed substrate and the food-contact surface. At these thicknesses, migration testing under EN 1186 confirms ink component migration stays below the 10 ppb SML threshold for most low-molecular-weight ink components. Thinner barrier layers require individual migration testing, which adds 4–6 weeks to the compliance process.
Q2: What is your MOQ and lead time for a gravure-printed flat pouch?
A: Gravure is cost-effective from approximately 300,000 linear metres per order due to cylinder engraving costs. Production lead time after sample approval is 25–35 working days. For smaller runs below that threshold, we recommend CI flexo, which is viable from 50,000 linear metres with lower tooling cost and the same food-contact compliance capability.
Q3: Which regulatory standards cover your food-contact ink systems for EU market pouches?
A: Our EU-market ink systems comply with EU Regulation 10/2011 on plastic food-contact materials and the Swiss Ordinance SR 817.023.21. For UV-LED flexo inks, we additionally screen all photoinitiators against the EUPIA Exclusion List and target migration below 0.01 mg/kg in food simulant. Full positive-list declarations from our ink suppliers are available as part of the compliance documentation package.
Q4: Can you print metallic or matte finishes on flat pouches, and does that affect compliance?
A: Yes — we run metallic inks (aluminium pigment-based) and matte OPV coatings on both gravure and flexo lines. Metallic inks for food-contact applications are sourced from suppliers with specific FDA 21 CFR and EU 10/2011 declarations covering the aluminium pigment grade used. Matte OPV coatings are applied at 2.5–4.0 g/m² dry weight and do not contact food in a standard laminate structure, so they fall outside the direct migration scope but are still REACH-screened.
Q5: What is the most common quality failure you see on flat pouch production runs, and how do you prevent it?
A: The most common issue is seal contamination — product residue or film dust on the seal zone during filling, which drops seal strength below our 25 N/15 mm minimum. On our production side, we prevent this by specifying a 3 mm seal-zone exclusion for any surface coating or OPV application, and we test seal strength per ASTM F1140 on every production lot. We also recommend brand partners conduct seal integrity testing on their own filling line before full production launch, since filling machine jaw temperature and dwell time both affect final seal performance.
Planning a flat pouch project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
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