Hard vs. Soft UV Ink: How to Pick the Right One for Your Printer (Before You Waste $500 on the Wrong Formula)
Hard vs. Soft UV Ink: How to Pick the Right One for Your Printer (Before You Waste $500 on the Wrong Formula)
Last updated: April 10, 2026 | Author: iColorPro Technical Team
We get this email at least twice a week: "I bought hard UV ink for my Ricoh Gen5 printer and now nothing sticks to my substrates. What did I do wrong?"
The answer is almost always the same — they picked the wrong ink type. Not a bad brand, not a defective printer. Just the wrong formula for their application. And the fix usually involves flushing the entire ink system, which wastes $200-400 in ink and a full day of downtime.
UV ink selection isn't complicated once you understand the basics. But there's a lot of conflicting information out there, and most suppliers don't explain the differences clearly. So let's fix that.
Hard UV Ink vs. Soft UV Ink: What's Actually Different?
Every UV curable ink has two main components: the pigment (color) and the resin system (the carrier that hardens under UV light). The resin system is what determines whether an ink is "hard" or "soft."
Hard UV ink cures to a rigid, scratch-resistant finish. It's designed for printing directly onto hard surfaces — acrylic, glass, metal, wood, ceramic, phone cases, rigid signage. The cured film is tough, but it has almost no flexibility. If you try to bend it, it cracks.
Soft UV ink (also called flexible UV ink) cures to a finish that can stretch and flex without cracking. It's designed for printing on flexible materials — vinyl, film, leather, fabric, packaging, anything that needs to bend, roll, or stretch after printing.
That's the core difference. Hard = rigid surfaces. Soft = flexible surfaces. Get this wrong and you get one of two problems: hard ink on flexible media cracks and peels, or soft ink on hard surfaces scratches off too easily.
What Happens When You Use the Wrong Type
| Mistake | Symptom | Why It Happens |
|---|---|---|
| Hard ink on flexible media | Ink cracks when the material is bent, rolled, or stretched. Peels at edges. | Rigid cured film can't flex with the substrate |
| Soft ink on hard surfaces | Ink scratches easily, fingerprints show, adhesion is weak on non-porous surfaces | Softer film has less surface hardness and chemical resistance |
| Hard ink on soft-touch or textured surfaces | Ink sits on top without conforming to texture, looks plasticky | Rigid film doesn't follow surface contours |
| Soft ink for outdoor signage | Faster UV degradation, colors fade quicker | Soft resin systems typically have less UV resistance |
The most expensive mistake is the first one. If you print a job on vinyl with hard ink and the customer rolls it up for shipping, the ink cracks along every fold. You reprint the whole job, eat the material cost, and lose a day. We've heard stories of shops losing $500+ on a single mis-ordered ink bottle.
Neutral UV Ink: The Middle Ground
There's a third category that a lot of operators don't know about: neutral UV ink. This is formulated to work on both hard and soft surfaces. It's not as hard as hard ink and not as flexible as soft ink — it sits in the middle.
Neutral ink is a good choice if:
- You print on a mix of hard and soft substrates and don't want to flush between ink types
- You're a small shop that can't stock multiple ink lines
- Your most common jobs are on semi-rigid materials like corrugated board, thin acrylic, or coated cardboard
The tradeoff: neutral ink won't perform as well as a dedicated hard or soft formula on extreme applications. If you're printing on glass (needs hard) or stretchable film (needs soft), use the specialized ink. But for general-purpose work, neutral is a solid time-saver.
We carry several neutral options: SAKATA THV05, Korean IT UVRC3, and SAKATA JHV05 all work well across a range of substrates.
Matching Ink to Your Print Head
Ink type isn't the only variable. Your print head determines which ink formulations are compatible. Using ink formulated for the wrong head type can cause nozzle clogging, poor adhesion, or premature head wear.
Here's the compatibility breakdown for the most common heads:
| Print Head | Compatible Ink Types | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Epson i3200-U1 | Hard, Soft, Neutral | Most versatile. Wide ink compatibility. |
| Epson XP600 | Hard, Soft, Neutral | Good compatibility. Check viscosity specs. |
| Ricoh Gen5 | Hard, Soft, Neutral | Requires Ricoh-compatible viscosity range. |
| Ricoh Gen5i | Hard, Neutral | Fewer soft ink options available. |
| Konica 1024 MHB | Hard, Soft, Neutral | Good range. Check ink channel size compatibility. |
| Kyocera KJ4A | Hard, Soft | Higher viscosity requirement. Neutral options limited. |
When switching ink brands or types, always check the viscosity rating against your head's specifications. A mismatch of even a few centipoise can cause inconsistent droplet formation and poor print quality.
UV Ink Brands We Carry (And What They're Best For)
We stock UV inks from a dozen manufacturers. Here's our honest take on each:
| Brand | Best For | Hard/Soft/Neutral | Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| TongJou Epson Hard | Acrylic, glass, metal — Epson heads | Hard | Budget |
| TongJou Epson Soft | Vinyl, film, flexible substrates — Epson heads | Soft | Budget |
| TongJou Ricoh Hard | Hard substrates — Ricoh/Konica heads | Hard | Budget |
| NaZdar Nem600 | Production UV, wide head compatibility | Neutral | Mid |
| NaZdar Nem500 | Epson-head UV, good all-around | Neutral | Mid |
| SAKATA THV05 | General purpose, Ricoh heads | Neutral | Mid |
| TOYO Hard | High-end hard substrate printing | Hard | Premium |
| TOYO Soft | Flexible media, packaging | Soft | Premium |
| Korean IT UVRC3 | Mid-range neutral, Ricoh heads | Neutral | Mid |
| AGFA K3 | Industrial UV, wide format | Neutral | Premium |
Our general recommendation: if you're just starting with UV printing, TongJou is the most affordable way to get going. As your volume grows and you need more consistency, NaZdar or SAKATA are solid mid-range upgrades. For high-production shops where color consistency is critical, TOYO or AGFA are worth the premium.
How to Test If Your Ink Is Right for Your Substrate
Before committing to a full tank of a new ink, run these three tests:
1. Adhesion test (tape test). Print a solid patch on your target substrate. Let it cure fully. Apply a piece of packing tape firmly over the print, then rip it off quickly. If ink comes off with the tape, the adhesion is poor — either the ink is wrong for this substrate, or you need to adjust your UV power/speed settings.
2. Flex test. Print on your substrate, cure it, then bend the material 180 degrees. If the ink cracks or flakes, it's too hard for this application. If it stays intact, the flexibility is adequate.
3. Scratch test. Use your fingernail to scratch the cured print with moderate pressure. Hard ink on a hard surface should resist scratching entirely. Soft ink on a flexible surface may show minor marks but shouldn't flake off.
These three tests take 5 minutes and can save you from a full tank of unusable ink.
Storage and Handling Tips
UV ink is sensitive to light and temperature. A few rules that will save you money:
- Store between 15°C and 30°C (59°F - 86°F). Below 15°C the ink thickens and pigment settles faster. Above 30°C the carrier fluid can separate.
- Keep away from direct sunlight. UV light will start curing the ink even through the container. Store in a dark cabinet or use opaque containers.
- Shake before use. Even hard ink benefits from a good shake before loading. Pigment settles during storage regardless of ink type.
- Don't mix brands. Even if two inks are both "hard UV," their chemical formulations are different. Mixing them can cause clumping, poor curing, or nozzle clogs. Flush the system completely before switching brands.
- Check expiration dates. UV ink typically has a 12-month shelf life. Expired ink may still print but curing performance degrades — you'll see tacky prints, poor scratch resistance, or inconsistent color.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use hard UV ink for everything if I just need durability?
No. Durability and flexibility are opposing properties in UV ink. Hard ink is more scratch-resistant, but it will crack on any substrate that bends. If you're printing on something that will be rolled, folded, or stretched, you need soft ink regardless of how "durable" you want the print to be.
What if I need both scratch resistance AND flexibility?
This is the most common compromise question. The answer: use soft ink on flexible substrates and accept slightly less scratch resistance, or use neutral ink as a middle ground. There's no UV ink that's both rock-hard and highly flexible — the chemistry doesn't allow it. If you absolutely need both properties, consider a UV varnish topcoat over a soft ink base. We carry iColorPro UV Varnish and NaZdar UV Varnish for this purpose.
How do I know if my ink is curing properly?
Three signs of good cure: (1) the surface is dry to the touch immediately after passing under the UV lamp, (2) the ink passes the tape adhesion test, (3) the ink passes the scratch test for your application. If the print feels tacky or sticky after curing, increase UV power or slow down your print speed. If it's still tacky after adjusting, the ink formulation may be incompatible with your lamp wavelength.
Can I switch from hard to soft ink without flushing the system?
Absolutely not. Even small amounts of residual hard ink mixed with soft ink will cause curing problems and adhesion failures. You need to flush the entire ink path — tanks, lines, dampers, and head — with cleaning solution before switching ink types. It's tedious, but skipping this step guarantees problems.
Is more expensive UV ink always better?
Not always, but there's a correlation. Premium inks (TOYO, AGFA) use finer pigment particles, better dispersants, and more consistent resin formulations. This translates to more consistent color, fewer nozzle clogs, and longer shelf life. Budget inks (TongJou) work fine for most applications but may require more frequent cleaning cycles and have less color consistency between batches. For production shops where consistency matters, the premium pays for itself. For occasional use or prototyping, budget inks are perfectly fine.
Not sure which ink is right for your setup? Contact us with your printer model and what you're printing on — we'll recommend the right formula so you don't waste money on the wrong one.


