Airlines don’t gamble with cabin textiles. The stakes are simply too high. And yet, to be honest, passengers still expect the cozy factor. That’s why the Fire Retardant Airline Blanket from STHome Textile caught my eye: it balances strict flame standards with real comfort. I spent a week talking to procurement folks and QA managers; surprisingly, many of them said the same thing—durability through repeated laundering is the make-or-break. This fire retardant blanket is built for that grind.
Core material: woven 100% modacrylic—an inherently flame-retardant fiber (not a topical finish that washes off). Styles include yarn-dyed and jacquard, with sizes like 90×180cm, 100×160cm, 110×150cm, 120×160cm, 120×180cm, or custom. GSM ranges from ≈150 to ≈550 depending on route and climate—Nordic red-eyes tend to pick heavier weights, an airline planner told me.
A proper airline fire retardant blanket lives and dies by test reports. Typical protocols include FAR 25.853 (aircraft interior flammability), ASTM D6413 (vertical flame), EN ISO 12952 (ignitability of bedding), and NFPA 701 for flame propagation. Many buyers also ask for OEKO-TEX Standard 100 for skin contact safety.
| Name | Fire Retardant Airline Blanket |
| Material | 100% modacrylic, inherent FR |
| Styles | Yarn-dyed, Jacquard |
| Sizes | 90×180, 100×160, 110×150, 120×160, 120×180 cm or custom |
| Weight | ≈150–550 GSM (route-specific) |
| Hemming | Overlock / Edgefold / Edge covering |
| MOQ | Yarn-dyed: 3,000 pcs; Jacquard: 10,000 pcs |
Primary use is obvious—airline cabins (economy to premium). But operators in rail and marine hospitality use the same fire retardant blanket for overnight routes. Customization covers dimensions, GSM, weave, colorways, jacquard logos, and packaging. I guess the quiet win is hemming selection; overlock edges tend to survive carts and snagging better, according to one cabin crew manager.
| Vendor | Certs/Tests | MOQ | Lead Time | Customization | Price Band |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| STHome Textile | FAR 25.853, ASTM D6413, EN ISO 12952, OEKO-TEX (on request) | 3k–10k | ≈25–35 days | High (weave, GSM, logo) | Mid |
| Competitor A | ASTM D6413 only | 5k+ | ≈30–45 days | Medium | Low–Mid |
| Competitor B | FAR 25.853, NFPA 701 | 10k+ | ≈40–60 days | High | High |
A Middle East carrier switched to a 350 GSM jacquard fire retardant blanket to reduce pilling complaints; after three months, returns fell by ~38%. A Nordic regional operator opted for 500 GSM for winter rotations—crew reported noticeably fewer passenger complaints about warmth. Not scientific, but telling.
If you need a cabin-ready fire retardant blanket that doesn’t feel like sandpaper, modacrylic woven with airline-grade testing is a safe bet. Just lock in your GSM, wash protocol, and hemming choice early; it saves headaches later.