Why Material Choice Actually Matters
When buyers contact us for the first time, material choice is often the last thing they think about. They know they want plastic wine cups. They know they want their logo on them. The material feels like a technical detail they'll figure out later.
It isn't. The material determines how your cup looks, how it feels in someone's hand, how long it lasts, and ultimately how your brand is perceived. Getting it wrong means cups that crack after two uses, colors that look dull, or a product that simply doesn't match what your customers expect.
We work with PP, PS, and AS every day. Here's what you actually need to know about each one.
The workhorse. Tough, flexible, and the most cost-effective option for reusable cups.
The clear choice. Exceptional transparency that mimics glass at a fraction of the cost.
The premium option. Glass-like clarity with superior scratch resistance and rigidity.
PP (Polypropylene) — The Durable Everyday Cup
PP is the most widely used plastic in reusable drinkware, and for good reason. It's tough, flexible, and resistant to both heat and impact. A PP cup can be dropped repeatedly, washed hundreds of times, and still hold its shape. If you're sourcing cups that need to survive repeated use — events, hospitality, outdoor venues — PP is usually the right starting point.
The tradeoff is clarity. PP has a naturally milky or semi-opaque appearance, which means it works beautifully in solid colors but won't give you the crystal-clear transparent look some buyers want. If your brand needs a cup that shows the color of the drink inside, PS or AS will serve you better.
PP is also the most affordable of the three materials, which makes it the go-to choice for large volume orders where cost per unit matters more than premium aesthetics.
PP is the right choice if:
PS (Polystyrene) — The Crystal-Clear Budget Option
PS is what most people picture when they think of a "plastic wine glass that looks like glass." It has excellent optical clarity straight out of the mold, which is why it's the dominant material for disposable and semi-disposable clear plastic cups worldwide.
The clarity of PS is genuinely impressive at first glance — it's hard to tell from glass at a distance. But PS is more brittle than PP, and it scratches more easily. For single-use or limited-use applications, this doesn't matter. For cups that will see heavy repeated use, PS will start showing wear faster.
PS is typically priced between PP and AS — more affordable than AS but with better clarity than PP. It's the right call when transparency is the priority and the cups won't be subjected to extreme conditions.
PS is the right choice if:
AS (Acrylonitrile Styrene) — The Premium Choice
AS is the material we recommend when buyers want the absolute closest experience to real glass — and are willing to pay for it. It has better clarity than PS, significantly better scratch resistance, and a rigidity that gives it a weight and feel closer to actual glassware.
The difference between PS and AS isn't dramatic in photographs, but it's immediately noticeable when you hold both cups. AS feels more substantial. The surface stays clearer after repeated washing. The walls have a slight thickness and rigidity that cheap plastic doesn't have.
"We switched our high-end event cups from PS to AS because customers kept asking if they were actually glass. That's the reaction you want."
AS is our most expensive material option, which means it's not the right call for every buyer. But for premium brands, high-end hospitality, and products where perceived quality matters, the price difference is worth it.
AS is the right choice if:
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Property | PP | PS | AS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clarity | Opaque / Semi-opaque | High transparency | Highest transparency |
| Durability | Excellent | Moderate | Very good |
| Scratch resistance | Moderate | Low | High |
| Dishwasher safe | Yes | Limited | Yes |
| Color options | Full range (solid colors) | Clear + tinted | Clear + tinted |
| Cost | Most affordable | Mid-range | Premium |
| Best for | Reusable, outdoor, solid colors | Events, retail, clear cups | Premium, hospitality, display |
So Which One Should You Order?
Quick decision guide
If you're still not sure, the easiest solution is to request samples of all three. The difference becomes immediately obvious when you hold them. We offer free samples for qualified buyers — just get in touch and tell us what you're working on.
And if you want our honest recommendation based on your specific use case, just describe what you need. After years of making cups in all three materials, we can usually tell you within a few minutes which direction makes the most sense.