FR Fabric
Selection
Guide
How to choose the right flame retardant fabric for your protective clothing — from hazard analysis to final specification.
Who This Guide Is For
Whether you are a workwear manufacturer sourcing fabric for your next collection, a procurement manager specifying protective clothing for your workforce, or a brand entering the safety garment market — this guide is written for you.
Workwear Manufacturers
Specifying FR fabric for new garment lines or replacing an existing supplier. Needs reliable certification, consistent quality, and competitive pricing.
Procurement Managers
Buying protective clothing for a workforce. Needs to understand which certifications are required and how to compare fabrics across competing tenders.
Safety & Brand Teams
Developing or updating a corporate PPE specification. Needs to align protection requirements, corporate identity, and total cost of ownership.
XM FireLine™ is the FR fabric brand of XM Textiles — a manufacturer founded in 2002 and supplying over 2,000 customers across 53+ countries. FR fabrics certified to EN ISO 11612, EN ISO 11611, EN 1149, EN 61482, EN 13034 and more. All fabrics tested for washfastness after 50 or 100 industrial wash cycles. European warehouses in Romania, Italy, Poland and Portugal.
Start With the Hazard,
Not the Fabric
A common mistake in FR fabric procurement is starting with a product rather than a problem. Before evaluating any fabric, you must understand what hazards the end wearer will actually face on the job. The fabric specification should follow from that analysis — not precede it.
1.1 The Role of Risk Assessment
A risk assessment is a systematic review of the work environment to identify potential sources of injury or harm, determine whether each risk can be eliminated, and if not, define the protective measures required. In the context of protective clothing, this directly informs which FR performance level you need and which certifications are relevant.
In Europe, Directive 89/391/EEC establishes the legal framework for risk assessments. Similar obligations exist under OSHA in North America. For FR clothing, the PPE Regulation (EU) 2016/425 requires garments to be certified to the relevant EN standards based on assessed risks.
What is the source of ignition or heat energy in this environment? Is flame, radiant heat, molten metal, electric arc, or chemical exposure the primary hazard — or a combination? How frequent and how severe is potential exposure? What body areas require protection? Are secondary hazards present (e.g. static electricity in a flammable atmosphere)?
1.2 Hazard Categories and Corresponding Standards
Each type of thermal or fire-related hazard in the workplace is addressed by a specific standard. The table below maps the most common industrial hazards to the relevant certification frameworks:
| Standard | Protection Against | Typical Industries |
|---|---|---|
| EN ISO 11612 | Heat & flames (general) | Oil & Gas, Utilities, Petrochemical |
| EN ISO 11611 | Welding & allied processes | Metal fabrication, Shipbuilding |
| EN IEC 61482-1-1/2 | Electric arc flash | Energy distribution, Electrical installation |
| EN 1149-5 | Electrostatic discharge | ATEX environments, Chemicals, Fuel |
| EN 13034 (Type 6) | Limited chemical splash | Chemicals, Agriculture, Pharma |
| EN 14116 | Limited flame spread (index 1) | Utilities, Public service, Low-risk FR |
| NFPA 2112 | Flash fire | Oil & Gas, Mining (USA / Canada) |
Understanding
FR Fabric Types
Once you know which hazards and standards apply, the next decision is fabric type. There are two fundamentally different approaches to making a fabric flame retardant, and the choice between them has significant implications for performance, longevity, and cost.
2.1 FR-Treated Fabrics
FR-treated fabrics start life as conventional textile substrates — most commonly cotton or cotton-polyester — and receive a chemical flame retardant treatment during finishing. The most widely used technology for durable FR treatment is THPC (tetrakis hydroxymethyl phosphonium chloride), which reacts with the fibre to create a permanent crosslinked FR network within the fabric structure.
XM FireLine™ uses Double FR-Treatment (THPC) technology on all treated fabric lines. This means the fabric undergoes two treatment passes rather than one, significantly improving the durability and evenness of the FR finish — and extending the useful life of the garment.
All XM FireLine™ FR-treated fabrics are tested after 50 or 100 industrial wash cycles (depending on the product line) according to ISO 15797 at 75°C. Only fabrics that pass the vertical burn test (ISO 15025) after the full wash sequence retain their certification. This gives manufacturers and buyers a reliable baseline for real-world garment lifetime.
2.2 FR-Inherent Fabrics
Inherent FR fabrics are constructed from fibres that are flame resistant by their chemical nature — not as a result of a surface treatment. Common inherent FR fibres include Modacrylic, Aramid (Meta-aramid and Para-aramid), and certain Lyocell-based compositions. Because the FR property is intrinsic to the polymer structure, it cannot wash out over the lifetime of the garment.
XM FireLine™ offers inherent FR fabrics based on Modacrylic/Cotton blends and Aramid-based compositions — particularly suited to environments with extreme or unpredictable heat exposure.
2.3 Fabric Compositions in the XM FireLine™ Range
The XM FireLine™ collection includes fabrics across the following compositions, each suited to different performance requirements and price points:
100% Cotton FR
Classic choice for general industrial FR workwear. Good comfort, good dyeability, widely accepted across industries. Available 250–350 g/m².
Cotton/Polyester FR
Improved abrasion resistance and shape retention. Suitable for heavy-duty industrial environments. Cotton-dominant blends (80/20) maintain FR-treatability.
Cotton/Nylon FR
Nylon adds strength and tear resistance. Ideal for outdoor and utility work where the garment faces both mechanical stress and heat exposure.
Modacrylic/Cotton Inherent
Inherent FR performance with excellent comfort. Very good arc flash and flame resistance without the weight penalty of Aramid. Ideal for utilities and oil & gas.
Aramid-based Inherent
Highest level of thermal protection. M-Aramid/P-Aramid blends provide exceptional heat resistance for extreme environments and very high arc flash ratings.
FR Knit & Fleece
For underlayers, base layers, and cold-weather protective wear. Provides FR comfort in multi-layer garment systems.
Standards &
Certifications Explained
Certifications are not just compliance checkboxes — they provide quantifiable, comparable performance data that allows buyers to make informed decisions. This section explains the most important standards in the XM FireLine™ certification portfolio and what they mean in practice.
EN ISO 11612 is the foundational standard for flame retardant protective clothing in industrial environments. To achieve certification, a fabric must pass the mandatory A1/A2 flame spread test and at least one of the following:
Performance is expressed as a code — for example, A1 B1 C1 E2 — allowing buyers to compare fabrics directly. XM FireLine™ fabrics are published with full performance codes so manufacturers can make precise specifications.
EN ISO 11611 covers protective clothing for welding, plasma cutting, gouging, and similar processes. Unlike EN ISO 11612’s modular structure, EN ISO 11611 requires all four tests to be passed: radiant heat, molten metal drops, flame spread, and electrical resistance.
The standard distinguishes two classes. Class 1 covers lower-risk processes such as gas welding. Class 2 covers higher-risk processes: MMA welding (basic or cellulose-covered electrodes), MAG welding, and MIG welding with high current. The class of certification must match the welding activities in your environment.
Arc flash events can generate temperatures up to 19,000°C — nearly four times the surface temperature of the sun — along with a pressure blast wave. Protective clothing certified to EN IEC 61482 provides a measured barrier against this thermal energy.
Two test methods exist. The open arc method (61482-1-1) produces an ATPV or ELIM value in cal/cm² — the maximum incident energy at which there is a 50% probability of a second-degree burn. The box test (61482-1-2) classifies fabrics as Class 1 (4 kA) or Class 2 (7 kA). XM FireLine™ arc flash fabrics provide clear published ATPV values for system-level hazard analysis.
In environments where flammable gases, vapours, or dusts may be present — oil refineries, chemical plants, fuel depots — garments must prevent electrostatic discharge from creating ignition sources. EN 1149-5 specifies material and design requirements for protective clothing with electrostatic dissipative properties, requiring a conductive carbon fibre grid woven through the fabric.
EN 1149-5 is required for compliance with the ATEX Directive (2014/34/EU), which governs equipment intended for use in potentially explosive atmospheres. Almost all XM FireLine™ fabrics include antistatic properties as standard.
EN 13034 Type 6 protects against incidental exposure to light spray, liquid aerosols, or low-volume splashes — for environments where chemical contact is accidental rather than routine. The standard requires a fluorocarbon finish on the fabric surface to provide liquid repellency.
Type 6 clothing is designed for occasional, accidental exposure only. Workers with regular, direct contact with hazardous liquids require higher-level chemical protective clothing (Type 3, 4, or 5). A risk assessment is essential to establish whether Type 6 is appropriate for your environment.
Selection by
Application
The following guidance translates the standards framework into practical fabric selection advice for the most common application environments served by XM FireLine™ customers.
Oil, Gas & Petrochemical
Workers face a combination of flash fire risk, hydrocarbon ignition, and static electricity. Primary specification: EN ISO 11612 + EN 1149-5 antistatic. North American markets: NFPA 2112 + NFPA 70E.
Electrical Utilities & Energy
Arc flash is the dominant hazard. Required ATPV value is determined by site-specific hazard analysis. High-voltage workers typically need Class 2 (7 kA) or ATPV above 8 cal/cm².
Metal Industries & Welding
Requires EN ISO 11611 Class 1 or Class 2 depending on the process. Fabric must balance thermal protection with sufficient breathability and flexibility for productive work.
Utilities & Multi-Hazard
Many maintenance roles involve multiple hazards — electrical, mechanical, chemical — in varying conditions. Multi-norm fabrics carrying several simultaneous certifications provide the most practical solution.
Beyond Protection:
Comfort, Durability & Washcare
A fabric that meets the required standard is the minimum requirement, not the maximum aspiration. The best FR fabric for your application is one that provides the required protection, can be worn correctly all day, survives the full expected garment lifetime, and is maintainable with realistic washing infrastructure.
5.1 Comfort
Discomfort leads to non-compliance. Workers who find protective garments too hot, too stiff, or too heavy will find ways to reduce coverage — opening fasteners, removing layers, shortening wear time. Each of these behaviours introduces risk. Comfort is not a luxury parameter — it is a safety parameter.
Weight
Lighter fabrics improve thermal comfort during physical work. Compare g/m² alongside protection level.
Breathability
Moisture vapour transmission rate (MVTR) determines how well the garment manages heat and perspiration.
Moisture Absorption
Cotton-rich fabrics manage perspiration significantly better than polyester-dominant blends.
Handle & Softness
Fabric hand affects both comfort and worker acceptance. Critical for daily-wear garments.
Stretch & Flexibility
Stretch constructions improve ease of movement, particularly relevant for maintenance and installation roles.
Weave Structure
RipStop, satin, and twill constructions each offer different balances of strength, softness, and breathability.
5.2 Durability & Washfastness
For FR-treated fabrics, the FR finish is the functional layer. If the finish degrades, the garment fails — and unlike a visible tear or fade, FR degradation may not be visible to the user. This is why XM FireLine™ publishes wash test results after 50 or 100 industrial wash cycles for all treated fabric lines.
Improper washing is the single most common cause of premature FR garment failure. Do not use fabric softeners or optical brighteners — they coat or damage the FR finish. Wash at the correct temperature. Do not mix FR garments with heavily soiled non-FR laundry. Inspect garments regularly for damage. XM FireLine™ provides garment care recommendations with every product data sheet.
5.3 Colour & Corporate Branding
Protective clothing is part of corporate identity. Colour consistency across fabric types and batches, accurate reproduction of corporate colours, and colour retention after repeated washing are all relevant procurement factors. XM FireLine™ fabrics are available in a full range of standard colours and can be produced in custom corporate colours from MOQ-appropriate quantities.
Working With
XM FireLine™
XM FireLine™ supplies FR fabrics in roll form to workwear manufacturers and garment makers worldwide. Here is how to engage with us effectively and get the best results from the specification and sampling process.
Documentation & Technical Support
Every XM FireLine™ fabric is supported by a full Technical Data Sheet (TDS) with composition, construction, weight, certifications, wash test results, and care instructions. Certificates from accredited third-party labs are available for all certified products.
Sampling & Evaluation
We recommend structured fabric evaluation before confirming a production specification: lab certification confirmation, wash testing in the customer’s own laundry conditions, garment construction trials, and end-user comfort evaluation. European stock warehouses allow sample delivery within 5–7 business days.
MOQ & Stock Programme
Core fabrics are held in stock at European warehouses for immediate delivery, with minimum order quantities from 500 metres. Full production orders for non-stocked fabrics or custom specifications are manufactured in our China facility with lead times of 60–90 days.
Key Takeaways
Before specifying any FR fabric, conduct a risk assessment. The standard — and the fabric — should follow from the hazards identified, not precede them.
FR-treated fabrics offer cost-effectiveness and range; FR-inherent fabrics offer permanent protection and multi-norm coverage. Know the difference before specifying.
EN ISO 11612 performance codes, ATPV values, and wash cycle test results tell you far more than a logo. Ask for the test report, not just the certificate.
For FR-treated fabrics, wash test results after 50 or 100 cycles are as important as initial performance data. Establish a correct washing protocol from the start.
A garment that is not worn correctly provides no protection. Evaluate fabric weight, breathability, and handle alongside performance data when selecting your specification.
Ready to Specify Your FR Fabric?
Our technical team works directly with manufacturers, brand departments, and procurement teams to identify the right fabric for each application. Talk to us about your requirements — we provide objective, specification-focused advice as part of the standard service.
