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PETG print settings Polyethylene Terephthalate Glycol

The practical step up from PLA: tougher, more temperature- and chemical-resistant, and still printable without an enclosure. The catch is stringing and oozing — PETG likes a hotter nozzle, slower travel, and careful retraction. Mild moisture sensitivity. A common all-round choice for functional parts.

Nozzle (all brands)
220–260 °C
Bed (all brands)
55–90 °C
Enclosure
Helpful
Cooling fan
low
Starting points, not gospel. PETG settings vary by brand, printer and slicer. Run a temperature tower on each new spool. Every per-brand number below is the manufacturer's own published recommendation with a dated source.

PETG settings by brand

FilamentMaterialNozzleBedMax speedEnclosureSource
Prusament PETGPrusament PETG 240–260 °C 70–90 °C ≤ 200 Not needed src Achecked 2026-06-10
Polymaker PolyLite PETGPolymaker PETG 230–240 °C 70–80 °C ≤ 50 Not needed src Achecked 2026-06-10
Bambu Lab PETG HFBambu Lab PETG 230–260 °C 65–75 °C ≤ 300 Not needed src Achecked 2026-06-10
Overture PETGOverture PETG 230–250 °C 80–90 °C n/p Not needed src Bchecked 2026-06-10
HATCHBOX PETGHATCHBOX PETG 230–260 °C 55–85 °C n/p Not needed src Bchecked 2026-06-10
SUNLU PETGSUNLU PETG 220–250 °C 60–80 °C ≤ 100 Not needed src Bchecked 2026-06-10

Click any filament for the full spec sheet and source link. “n/p” = not published by the manufacturer.

What PETG is good (and bad) for

Good for
  • Functional/mechanical parts
  • Outdoor parts (better UV/weather than PLA)
  • Food-adjacent and watertight prints
  • Brackets, fixtures, enclosures
Avoid for
  • Fine detail at high speed (stringing)
  • Tight bridging without tuned cooling

Drying & storage

PETG is moderately hygroscopic. Wet PETG strings badly and pops. Dry 60–70 °C for 6–8 h if you see bubbling or excessive stringing; store sealed.

Bed adhesion

Sticks aggressively to smooth PEI/glass — use a thin glue-stick release layer or a textured plate, and let the bed cool before removing or you may tear the plate coating.

Heat resistance

Moderate. Glass transition ~75–80 °C — handles a warm car better than PLA but is not for high heat.

Compare PETG with other materials

PETG FAQ

What temperature do you print PETG at?

Across the 6 PETG filaments in this database, manufacturers recommend nozzle temperatures of 220–260 °C and bed temperatures of 55–90 °C. Exact values are per-brand (see the table); always run a temperature tower on a new spool.

Does PETG need an enclosure?

Not required, but helpful. PETG prints on open-frame printers; an enclosure improves consistency on larger parts.

How do you dry PETG?

PETG is moderately hygroscopic. Wet PETG strings badly and pops. Dry 60–70 °C for 6–8 h if you see bubbling or excessive stringing; store sealed.

How heat-resistant is PETG?

Moderate. Glass transition ~75–80 °C — handles a warm car better than PLA but is not for high heat.