
Anti-pilling yarn is yarn that is designed to resist pilling�the formation of small fiber balls on the fabric surface�through spinning process (e.g. vortex, ring-spun, compact, siro-spun) or fiber selection. Some anti-pilling yarns also offer anti-static properties. Pilling resistance is often reported on a grade scale (e.g. 3�4, where higher is better).
In this guide, we explain what anti-pilling yarn is, how it works, and when to use it.
Anti-pilling yarn is yarn produced by spinning processes or fiber choices that reduce pilling. Pilling occurs when loose or broken fibers tangle into small balls on the surface after friction. Anti-pilling yarns minimize this by reducing hairiness, holding fibers firmly in the structure, or using fibers that resist breaking. Some types reach grade 4�5 (excellent) or grade 3�4 (good) in pilling tests.
Pilling is reduced by:
Spinning method affects the result:
| Spinning type | Anti-pilling effect (typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ring-spun (e.g. 40s polyester) | Grade 4�5 (with anti-pilling treatment) | Can combine with anti-pilling/anti-static finish |
| Vortex (acrylic, viscose, polyester, cotton) | Grade 3�4 | Low hairiness, good anti-pilling; yarn stiffer |
| Siro-spun | Slightly worse than vortex | Softer hand possible |
| Compact-spun | Slightly worse than vortex | Better than conventional ring-spun |
Vortex-spun anti-pilling yarns are common in apparel and home textiles. Typical advantages:
Anti-pilling yarn is yarn designed to resist pilling through spinning process (vortex, ring-spun, compact, siro-spun) or fiber/finish. Vortex-spun types offer low hairiness and grade 3�4 anti-pilling; some ring-spun anti-pilling yarns reach grade 4�5. Choose anti-pilling yarn when you want longer-lasting smoothness; accept that the softest, fuzziest yarns usually pill more.
Anti-pilling yarn is yarn made to resist pilling through spinning method (e.g. vortex, ring-spun) or fiber/finish. It often has lower hairiness and achieves higher pilling grades (e.g. 3�4) in tests.
Vortex-spun yarn often gives strong anti-pilling (grade 3�4) and 12�15% less hairiness than ring-spun. Treated ring-spun (e.g. 40s polyester) can reach grade 4�5. Siro and compact are slightly worse than vortex but better than conventional ring-spun.
Not necessarily. Vortex anti-pilling yarn tends to be stiffer; ring-spun or compact can be softer. Anti-pilling is about pilling resistance, not softness�choose by hand feel and project needs.
This article is part of our yarn knowledge series, offering practical insights into yarn construction, pilling, and selection for knitters and fabric buyers.