Choosing a hanging hole is not a design flourish — it’s a retailing and engineering decision. The wrong hole type can cause torn bags on peg hooks, skewed displays, and customer complaints that cost you time and margin.

Here, Meishida, a leading pharmaceutical packaging manufacturer, compares hang hole and Euro hole options from a structural, production, and procurement viewpoint so you can specify the right hole packaging solution for your SKU.

What is Hang Hole Packaging?

Definition: simple punched holes — round, half-round, or plain punch — usually centered or offset at the bag top.

Typical use: lightweight, short-display products and promotional packs.

Materials: OPP, PET, PE films, or paper-backed laminates.

Pros: low tooling cost, fast production, flexible placement.
Cons: single-point load concentrates stress; needs reinforcement for heavier items.

Custom Pouch for Multivitamin Gummies (2)
Round hang hole packaging

What is Euro Hole Packaging?

Definition: the Euro slot (two circular holes joined by a narrow slot) — a standardized retail format common in Europe.

Why it’s stable: dual contact points distribute load, resist rotation, and suit heavier or longer-displayed SKUs.

Typical use: mid-weight goods, permanent shelf-back displays, and chain retail channels that expect robust presentation.

Custom Powder Packaging for Acai Superfood (2)
Euro hole packaging

Structural Strength & Load-Bearing Comparison

Load mechanism:

  • Hang Hole — single-point load; stress concentrates at the punch edge and the adjacent laminate.
  • Euro Hole — two load points plus a slot, spreading forces and reducing tear propagation.

Performance gaps appear when:

  • Product weight increases.
  • Items hang for extended campaigns.
  • Customers frequently remove/re-hang the item.

Reinforcement options: local patch (film/adhesive), thicker laminate, or folded header can mitigate failures — but add cost and processing steps.

Euro hang hole, round hang hole, and triangle hang hole(from the top to the bottom)

Production & Cost Implications

  • Die-cut complexity: Euro slots are slightly more complex in die design and tooling. That can affect initial setup costs but not dramatically.
  • Speed & yield: aggressive punching can nick seals or cause web distortion on high-speed form-fill-seal lines — especially on thin film. Euro holes may require slower indexing or additional rerouting.
  • MOQ effects: reinforcement patches, thicker films, or pre-formed headers can raise MOQ and per-unit cost. Don’t assume “one extra cut” is trivial — evaluate end-to-end line effects.
  • Automation: on high-throughput automated lines, hole placement tolerances and web stability matter. Poorly integrated punching can cause jitter that affects pouch sealing and print registration.

Product-Based Selection Guide (Featured Snippet Table)

Product TypeTypical Weight RangeRecommended Hole Packaging
Small snacks, samples, sachets< 50 gHang Hole (simple punch)
Single-serve condiments, small toys50–150 gHang Hole with reinforcement patch
Mid-weight packaged foods, small tools150–500 gEuro Hole (slot + dual contact)
Heavy or frequently handled SKUs> 500 gEuro Hole + reinforced header or perforated card

Common Mistakes Buyers Make

  • Assuming sample = production: a one-off poster sample hanging fine doesn’t prove mass-run reliability.
  • Ignoring combined stresses: shipping vibration + peg display = much higher local stress than bench tests.
  • Skipping fatigue tests: hanging fatigue and repeated re-hang cycles reveal edge-tearing modes you won’t see in static tests.
  • Treating hole as a graphic choice: it’s structural — brief it like a mechanical spec.

How to Brief Your Packaging Supplier Correctly

Before production, give suppliers this minimum data set:

  • unit gross and net weight, including any internal contents shifting;
  • expected display duration and handling frequency;
  • hook type and diameter if known (or retail standard);
  • whether long-distance freight or drop tests are required;
  • acceptance tests: pull-to-failure, fatigue cycles (e.g., 200 re-hang cycles), and drop/stack tests.

Ask for sample videos of pouches on peg hooks, and require pilot-run results rather than only pre-production mockups.

Structures that are Prone to Failure – From Factory Perspective

Thin single-web films with extensive printed coverage, narrow seal areas, or very small seam margins are commonly mishandled.

Frequent culprits: ultra-thin OPP used to save cost, lack of reinforcement patch when the weight increases, and punch placement too close to the weld lines. Fast-running converters sometimes locate punching units before final cooling/maturation, causing web stretch and misregistration.

In short: thin films + high line speed + inadequate edge reinforcement = most common failure pathway. Audit these points during factory visits and demand batch-level testing.

Conclusion

There’s no universal “better” — only the right choice for your product’s weight, display life, and supply-chain stresses. Use this decision rule:

Product weight × display duration × handling intensity × cost tolerance = hole choice.

Brief holes as engineering specs require fatigue and pull tests, and treat hole packaging as a small change with potentially large consequences. Do that, and you’ll avoid torn bags on the peg, lost sales, and the headache of reactive fixes.

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何が必要かわからない?私たちの包装の専門家にお問い合わせください。あなたのブランドに最適なカスタム医薬品包装ソリューションを見つけるお手伝いをいたします。
+86-13827303202[email protected]広東省潮州市潮安区安武潮山路文里工業区

お問い合わせ

喜んでお手伝いします!

何が必要かわからない?私たちの包装の専門家にお問い合わせください。あなたのブランドに最適なカスタム医薬品包装ソリューションを見つけるお手伝いをいたします。
+86-13827303202[email protected]広東省潮州市潮安区安武潮山路文里工業区

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