2026-03-20 · Michelle Liu
PLA vs PBS — Choosing the Right Biodegradable Bag for Your Brand
PLA and PBS are the two materials behind most "biodegradable" paper bags on the market. They behave differently — here's how to pick the right one.
When customers ask us for "a biodegradable bag," they usually mean one of two things — a bag with a **PLA** lining or a bag with a **PBS** lining. The names sound similar, but the materials behave differently in real-world use, and the right choice depends on what you're packing and where the bag will end up after use.
## PLA — corn-based, industrially compostable
**PLA (polylactic acid)** is made from fermented plant starch — usually corn. It's the more common of the two and is what most people picture when they hear "bioplastic."
**Strengths**
- Clear, glossy finish. Looks crisp on a shelf.
- Dry-goods friendly — bakery, dry tea, apparel, gift.
- Widely available, predictable pricing.
**Limitations**
- **Industrial composting only.** PLA needs ~60 °C and humidity to break down within 90–180 days. It will *not* meaningfully degrade in a backyard compost or landfill.
- Not heat-resistant — softens above 50 °C.
- Brittleness can be an issue for heavy contents.
PLA is the right answer when your customers are likely to dispose of the bag through a municipal composting program, or when "compostable" is a brand claim you can defend with the right disposal language.
## PBS — petrochemical-based, marine-degradable
**PBS (polybutylene succinate)** is more recent and behaves quite differently. Despite often being made from petrochemical feedstock, it degrades faster and in a wider range of environments — including marine water and home compost.
**Strengths**
- **Home-compostable** at standard ambient conditions (varies by formulation).
- Heat-tolerant up to ~80 °C — better for warm or humid contents.
- More flexible and tear-resistant than PLA.
- Marine-degradable formulations exist (relevant for coastal markets).
**Limitations**
- Less optical clarity — slight haze.
- 10–20% higher material cost than PLA, depending on order size.
- Smaller global supply base.
PBS is the better answer for warm-fill foods, fresh produce, flowers, or projects in coastal markets where stricter "marine-safe" claims are valuable.
## How to decide in 30 seconds
| Use case | Pick |
|---|---|
| Bakery, retail, gift, apparel — composted via municipal facility | **PLA** |
| Hot drinks, warm bakery, prepared food, flowers | **PBS** |
| Coastal market with marine-degradable claims | **PBS** |
| Lowest cost, dry-goods only | **PLA** |
| Backyard / home compost certification needed | **PBS** |
## What we ship at Starmi
We stock both. A typical custom run:
- **PLA bag**: 4–6 days for a sample, 10–12 days for production at 5,000 pcs.
- **PBS bag**: 5–7 days for a sample, 12–14 days for production at 5,000 pcs.
If you're not sure which fits, [send us your use case](/inquiry) — describe what's going in the bag, where customers will dispose of it, and any sustainability claims you want to make on-pack. We'll come back with a side-by-side comparison and a sample of each.
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