Archive for the ‘Toilet Tissue’ Category
Toilet Tissue 101
THE BASICS OF TOILET TISSUE
THE THREE BASIC TYPES OF TOILET TISSUE FOR AWAY FROM HOME MARKET ARE:
CONVENTIONAL TISSUE
Conventional tissue is individually wrapped rolls of toilet tissue that is perforated into individual sheets. Conventional tissue ranges in roll diameter from 4.0” to 5.5”. Sheets per roll range from 300 to 1,000 for 2-ply products and from 500 to 2,000 for 1-ply products. The most popular counts are 500 for 2-ply and 1,000 for 1-ply. The most popular AFH products are approx. 4.5” roll diameter. Case counts range from 24 to 96 rolls per case. The most popular case count is 96 in the USA and 48 in Canada. More manufacturers are switching to 60 or 80 roll cases to maximize space utilization on trucks.
JUMBO TISSUE
Jumbo tissue rolls are much larger than the smaller conventional rolls and require special, larger dispensers. There are three primary sizes of jumbo bath tissue: mini jumbo is approx. 7” roll diameter, “Junior” jumbo is approx. 9” roll diameter, and “senior” jumbo are approx. 12” roll diameter. Jumbo tissue is usually characterized by the length in feet per each roll. The most popular length for the “Junior” size is 1,000’ for the 2-ply, and 2,000’ for the 1-ply. The most popular case pack for 9” jumbo tissue is 12 rolls. The most popular length of 12” diameter jumbo tissue is 2,000’ for the 2-ply, and 4,000’ for the 1-ply. The most popular case pack for 12” diameter jumbo tissue is 6 rolls.
TOILET TISSUE IS OFTEN DIFFERENTIATED BY 5 COMPONENTS:
- NUMBER OF PLIES
- SHEET SIZE
- NUMBER OF SHEETS ON A ROLL
- EMBOSSED OR NON-EMBOSSED
- PERFORATED OR NON-PERFORATED TISSUE
NUMBER OF PLIES
Toilet tissue is either 1 or 2-ply. Wet your fore-finger and thumb, then pinch the sheet of tissue. If the tissue is a 2-ply tissue, the individual plies will separate easily. One major competitor uses the term “multilayer” for a heavy weight 1-ply bath tissue in order to differentiate the product from more traditional lower bulk 1-ply products. 2-ply products represent more than 60% of total AFH sales.
SHEET SIZE
Originally the standard sheet size for toilet tissue was 4 1/2” x 4 1/2” (width x perforation interval) in the USA and 4.2” x 4.5”in Canada. Due to increased flexibility of the newer, more automated converting lines, manufacturers have added new incremental products with a slightly smaller sheet size. Now, end users have options including: 4.5 x 4.5, 4.5 x 4.4, 4.5 x 4.0, 4.5 x 3.75, 4.5 x 3.5. The standard has essential now changed to 4.0×4.0.
NUMBER OF SHEETS ON A ROLL
The number of sheets on a roll vary, but the most popular sheet count for a 2-ply tissue is 500 sheets and the most popular sheet count for a 1-ply. More manufacturers have switched to 605 sheets per roll with the new more compact case packs of 80 rolls
Jumbo Tissue Advantages
The Cost of Jumbo Making You Roll?
Make sure you know what is in the box !
- Check linear feet
- o Industry Standard on 2 ply 9″ tissue is 1000′. There are a lot of cheater and short sheets in the market
- Check the width Standard is 3.8
- Many manufactures have reduced the width of their Jumbo Tissue to 3.5
- Check the Quality
- Grey and Crisp – are two words used too describe the majority of Jumbo Tissue sold in today’s marketplace. There are some Jumbo tissue that are high quality White and Embossed (for softness)
- Get Back to the Basics
- The advantages of selling Jumbo Tissue over Conventional Tissue are labor savings and waste reduction
- One 2 ply 1000′ roll is equal to 6 conventional 2 ply tissue rolls
- Labor Saving on less changes can be significant cost reduction
- On average an end user recognizes 35% waste with conventional tissue
- There is also much more pilferage with standard tissue 10-15%
- Waste Reduction
- Few stub rolls throw away
- No spare rolls on the back of the commode
- Green Considerations
- Paper is Ecologo certified
- Less waste also helps with Green certification
Users that most benefit
- High volume restrooms & Facilities
- Schools, Stadiums, Large Industrial Accounts, and High Traffic Areas.



































