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How to Write an Underpad OEM Spec: Size, Layers, Backing, Packs

If you’re buying underpads in bulk for nursing homes, hospitals, home care, or a private label shop, your OEM spec isn’t “paperwork.” It’s your safety rail.

A loose spec turns into the same ugly loop: leakage complaints → claim photos → “factory says ok” → you eat the headache. A tight spec does the opposite. It locks the build, keeps QC honest, and makes re-orders boring (boring is good).

This guide stays practical and buyer-first. I’ll also mention LOVINHUG (our manufacturing team behind Adult-Diaper.com) where it fits naturally in the OEM/ODM workflow.


Underpad OEM spec basics for B2B buyers

An underpad OEM spec is a build command. Not a catalog page.

When you write it right, it does three things:

  • It nails the use case (bed, chair, wheelchair, exam table).
  • It turns “performance” into measurable inputs (size, layers, backing, packs).
  • It prevents the “same-same” argument that kills time and trust.

If you’re already sourcing other adult care SKUs—like Adult Diapers or Incontinence Pads—you’ll notice underpads cause a special kind of trouble: they look simple, but tiny details (core placement, backing slip, case pack) can ruin the user experience fast.


Underpad use case and target market

Argument 1: Start with the use case, then lock size and absorbency

Don’t begin with materials. Start with where and how the pad gets used.

Here are common B2B settings that change your spec:

  • Nursing home beds: long wear windows, frequent turns, linen protection is priority.
  • Hospitals / rehab: heavier events, faster change routines, traceability matters.
  • Home care services: storage space is tight, caregivers want easy placement, low mess.
  • Wheelchairs / chairs: anti-slip backing matters more than “ultra thick” core.
  • Mixed channel (some markets): postpartum or pet channels may also want bed pads. Same product family, different pack-out and messaging.

Put this line into your spec (it saves you a lot trouble, trust me):

Primary use case: ____
Surface: mattress / chair / wheelchair / exam table
Change frequency: ____
User mobility: independent / assisted / bedbound

Now your supplier can stop guessing.

Helpful internal pages for context:


Underpad size specification

Argument 2: Size isn’t just length × width, it’s leak geometry

Size problems usually aren’t “wrong dimensions.” They’re wrong coverage.

So don’t only write “60×90 cm” and call it a day. Add:

  • Finished size (L × W)
  • Effective absorbent zone size (core area)
  • Core position (centered? shifted toward one side?)
  • Edge seal width (how much non-absorb border you allow)
  • Corner shape (rounded corners reduce curl-up in real life)
  • Tolerance (± mm/in — pick one standard)

Industry slang you’ll hear: core drift. That’s when the absorbent zone walks off-center during production or converting. If you never specified core placement, you can’t really complain later. So yeah, specify it.

Argument 3: Put placement language into the spec to reduce leakage complaints

This is small but powerful. Add one “how to place” line:

“Place under hips with absorbent zone centered; keep sealed edges flat.”

Why? Because even a good pad leaks if it sits too low on the bed. And when caregivers rush, they’ll place it wrong. Give them a simple line they can follow and re-use on packaging.


Underpad layers specification

Argument 4: Define each layer’s job, don’t just say “X layers”

“4-layer underpad” sounds nice in a meeting. It means almost nothing on a production line.

Write layers by function + material:

  • Topsheet (contact layer): soft nonwoven, hydrophilic, fast strike-through, low lint
  • ADL (acquisition/distribution layer): spreads liquid, reduces pooling (optional but common)
  • Absorbent core: fluff pulp + SAP blend, wrapped to avoid clumping
  • Tissue/wrap layer: keeps core stable, reduces SAP migration
  • Backing layer: waterproof film or breathable film, sealed edges

Use both buyer language and factory language. Example:

“Topsheet: soft hydrophilic nonwoven; Core: fluff + SAP, anti gel-block design; Backing: PE film, leak barrier, embossed anti-slip.”

Not fancy. Just clear.

Argument 5: More layers can fail if fluid can’t move

Thicker doesn’t always mean better. I’ve seen “thick” pads fail because liquid sits on top and runs sideways. That’s a flow-path issue.

So add performance intent, like:

  • Fast intake (no puddles on surface)
  • Low rewet (surface feels drier)
  • Side leak resistance (edge sealing and core spread)

Keep it plain. Your buyers don’t need a lab thesis. They need a pad that behaves.


Underpad backing specification

Argument 6: Backing must define material, breathability, and anti-slip

Backing is where many specs go vague, then reality hits.

Call out:

  • Backing type: PE film / PP film / breathable film
  • Breathable or not: yes/no (don’t “maybe” it)
  • Anti-slip requirement: emboss pattern, coating, or friction target (at least define “must not slide on chair”)
  • Edge sealing: must be sealed, no pinholes, no delamination

If you sell chair pads for caregivers, backing slip is a silent killer. One slide and the caregiver says, “this brand is trash,” even if the core is great.


Underpad packs and case pack specification

Argument 7: Packs aren’t logistics trivia, they prevent billing fights

This is the classic distributor nightmare:

You ordered “one carton.” You got “one carton.” Then you notice the pcs/bag changed and your SKU math is broken. Now ops and finance are arguing like it’s a sport.

So define:

  • Pieces per bag
  • Bags per case
  • Case label rules: SKU, barcode, lot code, production date, language
  • Packaging style: printed bag / plain bag, handle or no handle
  • Carton strength note: “export ready” (simple phrase, but it signals expectations)

Factory phrase: case pack locked. Put it in the spec. It helps.


Underpad OEM spec table: Size, Layers, Backing, Packs

Below is a clean table you can paste into your OEM sheet.

Spec moduleWhat you must write (buyer-ready)Common factory terms (so they don’t play dumb)Source type (for credibility)
Underpad SizeFinished L×W, absorbent zone size, core position, edge seal width, corner shape, tolerance“core centered”, “core offset”, “seal width”, “core drift control”Buyer complaint analysis + converting specs
Underpad LayersTopsheet, ADL (if any), core (fluff + SAP), wrap/tissue, bonding method“strike-through”, “rewet”, “SAP migration”, “gel blocking”Supplier material datasheets + lab feedback
Underpad BackingFilm type, breathable yes/no, anti-slip emboss/coating, edge sealing requirement“PE film”, “breathable backsheet”, “anti-slip emboss”Production SOP + end-user use feedback
Underpad Packspcs/bag, bags/case, case label content, barcode/lot code format, pack style“case pack locked”, “master carton mark”, “lot trace”Warehouse receiving + distributor SOP
QC & ComplianceAQL plan, defect list, golden sample approval, traceability rules“AQL”, “golden sample”, “PSI”, “COA/COC”QC practice + regulatory documentation needs

Underpad QC and compliance requirements

If you sell into care facilities, tenders, or import channels, add a QC section. Otherwise you’ll keep arguing about what “acceptable” means.

Keep it simple:

  • Golden sample: approve one final sample and lock it as reference
  • AQL + defect definitions: define critical/major/minor defects
  • Lot traceability: lot code format, retain samples, record keeping
  • Incoming material control: SAP, fluff, film, nonwoven (the core stuff)
  • Pre-shipment inspection (PSI): random sampling, carton drop check if needed

Little warning: if you skip revision control, specs drift over time. Then V2 shows up and nobody can explain why. Not fun.


Underpad OEM/ODM workflow with LOVINHUG

If you’re building a private label line, you want a supplier that can do more than “make pads.” You want someone who can turn your spec into repeatable output and handle the messy parts: sampling, artwork lock, QC checkpoints, export packing.

That’s where LOVINHUG comes in. On Adult-Diaper.com, we focus on OEM/ODM for distributors, importers, care institutions, and private label teams. You can see the process view here:

If your range includes multiple SKUs, it’s normal to bundle underpads with:

And if you want content that helps your buyers use the product correctly (less misuse = fewer complaints), point them to:

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