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Loose Lay vs Dryback LVT — Which Installation System for Your Commercial Project? | Ecoflors
Installation Guide · Loose Lay vs Dryback · LVT Specification Reference

Loose Lay vs Dryback LVT —
Which Installation System
for Your Commercial Project?

By Ecoflors Export Team  ·  May 2026  ·  8 min read  ·  Installation Specification Reference
Direct answer — which system for which project

Loose Lay and Dryback LVT use the same surface — wear layer, décor film, UV coating — but differ entirely in how they connect to the subfloor. Loose Lay uses friction backing to hold without adhesive — planks lift in 60 seconds, maximum EN 685 Class 33/42. Dryback uses full-spread adhesive — permanent bond, zero floor movement, maximum EN 685 Class 44 (the only method that achieves it). The decision is not about aesthetics — it is about whether your project requires subfloor access post-installation and what EN 685 class the specification demands. If Class 44 is required, Dryback is the only compliant system. If subfloor access or phased renovation is required, Loose Lay is the correct system.

The Two Systems — What Each Actually Does

Loose Lay LVT
Friction backing · No adhesive · No click
How it holds: Self-weight + proprietary friction backing grip against subfloor surface — no adhesive compound required
Fibreglass layer: Single or dual fibreglass reinforcement prevents PVC from stretching under temperature change — the stability layer that makes friction backing viable
Removal: Individual planks lift in under 60 seconds without tools or solvent — subfloor immediately accessible
Max EN 685 class: Class 33/42 (0.5mm wear) or Class 43 (0.7mm wear) — friction backing cannot achieve Class 44
Thickness available: 4mm · 4.5mm · 5mm · FOB from US$8.80/m²
Dryback LVT
Full-spread adhesive · Permanent bond
How it holds: Full-spread pressure-sensitive or hard-set adhesive bonds the entire plank surface to the subfloor — zero movement under any load
Core: Flexible PVC — multi-layer calendered core without fibreglass (the adhesive bond provides the stability, not the material)
Removal: Requires solvent or mechanical removal — subfloor access is disruptive and damages the adhesive layer
Max EN 685 class: Class 44 (0.7mm wear + adhesive bond) — the only LVT installation method that achieves Class 44
Thickness available: 2mm · 2.5mm · 3mm · FOB from US$3.80/m²

Why Adhesive Bond Is the Only Path to EN 685 Class 44

EN 685 Class 44 is the highest commercial utilisation class for resilient flooring — covering NHS hospitals, airport terminals, supermarket trading areas, and industrial facilities with sustained heavy wheeled traffic. Achieving Class 44 requires the floor covering to withstand concentrated rolling loads without any plank movement, residual indentation, or joint separation.

“Friction backing holds a Loose Lay plank against a concrete subfloor under normal foot traffic. It does not hold against a hospital trolley weighing 300kg loaded with medical equipment.”

The adhesive bond in Dryback LVT distributes rolling load across the entire plank surface — the plank cannot move horizontally or vertically because it is fully bonded. Loose Lay’s friction backing creates sufficient horizontal resistance for foot traffic but is overcome by the shear force of sustained heavy wheeled loads. Consequently, specifying Loose Lay for a Class 44 environment creates a floor that will fail structurally within 12–24 months — planks will migrate, joints will open, and the friction backing will compress irreversibly under wheel tracks.

Head-to-Head Comparison — Every Parameter for Specification

ParameterLoose Lay LVTDryback LVT
Installation methodFriction backing — no adhesive, no toolsFull-spread adhesive — wet or pressure-sensitive
Subfloor access post-install✓ 60 seconds — no tools, no solvent✗ Solvent required — disruptive, damages adhesive
Max EN 685 classClass 33/42 (0.5mm) · Class 43 (0.7mm)Class 44 (0.7mm + adhesive bond)
Raised access floor compatible✓ Standard — dual fibreglass upgrade available✗ Adhesive bond fails on removable access panels
UFH underfloor heating✓ Fibreglass layer stabilises across thermal cycling✓ Adhesive bond maintains stability at ≤27°C
Installation cure timeZero — immediate re-entry24–48h adhesive cure — site locked
Rolling load resistanceGood — up to Class 42/43 foot and light wheeledExcellent — full adhesive bond for heavy wheeled Class 44
Fibreglass reinforcementSingle (standard) or dual layer (upgrade)None — adhesive bond provides stability
Available thickness4mm · 4.5mm · 5mm2mm · 2.5mm · 3mm
FOB price fromUS$8.80/m² (4mm)US$3.80/m² (2mm)
Container yield (20ft)~2,400 m² at 5mm~5,100 m² at 2.5mm · ~3,800 m² at 3mm
Phased renovation compatible✓ Zone-by-zone — no cure time per zone✗ Full area must be completed before re-entry
GREENGUARD Gold✓ 135463-420✓ 135462-420
FloorScore✓ SCS-FS-05154✓ SCS-FS-05154
Bfl-s1 · EN 13501-1✓ Per shipment✓ Per shipment

The Decision Guide — Which System for Your Project Type

Specify Loose Lay
Corporate office with raised access floor

Subfloor cable management requires routine access. Loose Lay planks lift in 60 seconds — IT teams can access cabling without calling a flooring contractor. Dual fibreglass upgrade available for spans between raised floor pedestals.

5mm · Dual fibreglass · EN 685 Class 42
Specify Dryback
NHS hospital corridor / clinical area

EN 685 Class 44 mandatory under HTM 61. Heavy medical trolleys and wheelchair loading requires full adhesive bond. 3mm Dryback with 0.7mm wear layer is the only compliant specification. R10 slip resistance required for clinical wet areas.

3mm · 0.7mm wear · Class 44 · Adhesive
Specify Loose Lay
Phased office renovation — live environment

Office must remain operational during renovation. Loose Lay installs zone-by-zone with immediate re-entry — no adhesive cure time. Individual zones can be completed during evenings or weekends without disrupting adjacent working areas.

4mm–5mm · Zero cure time · Phased install
Specify Dryback
Airport terminal / supermarket trading floor

EN 685 Class 44 required. Sustained trolley, pallet truck, and service vehicle loading. Full adhesive bond is the only system that prevents plank migration under this load profile. 2.5mm or 3mm Dryback with 0.5mm–0.7mm wear layer.

2.5mm–3mm · Adhesive bond · Class 43/44
Specify Loose Lay
Data centre / server room floor

Raised access floor standard. Frequent subfloor access for cabling and cooling infrastructure. Dual fibreglass Loose Lay 5mm spans between pedestals without deflection. Anti-static option available for sensitive electronic environments.

5mm · Dual fibreglass · Raised access
Specify Dryback
Large-volume import — lowest landed cost

2mm Dryback LVT at US$3.80/m² FOB yields approximately 7,000 m² per 20ft container — the highest m²-per-container yield of any LVT system. For projects where adhesive installation is acceptable and volume is the priority, Dryback delivers the lowest landed cost per installed m².

2mm · FOB US$3.80 · 7,000 m²/20ft
Can the same project use both systems?

Yes — and this is often the optimal specification for large commercial projects. Loose Lay for raised access floor office zones (subfloor access required) + Dryback for common corridors, wet areas, and entrance lobbies (Class 42/43/44 required). Because both systems use the same décor film technology (EIR wood, stone, terrazzo, carpet texture), the visual result can be consistent across zones while the installation system is matched to the performance requirement of each area. Ecoflors supplies both from the same factory, with the same CE DoP and certification package per shipment.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between Loose Lay and Dryback LVT?
Loose Lay uses a friction backing to hold the plank in position without adhesive — planks can be lifted in under 60 seconds without tools, making it ideal for raised access floors and phased renovation. Dryback uses full-spread adhesive to permanently bond the plank to the subfloor — this is the only installation method that achieves EN 685 Class 44 for NHS, airport, and supermarket environments. The surface of both products (wear layer, décor film, UV coating) is identical — the difference is entirely in the installation method and the EN 685 class it enables.
Can Loose Lay LVT achieve EN 685 Class 44?
No. EN 685 Class 44 requires a permanent adhesive bond between the floor covering and the subfloor — friction backing cannot replicate this under sustained heavy wheeled traffic. The maximum practical EN 685 class for Loose Lay LVT is Class 33/42 (0.5mm wear) or Class 43 (0.7mm wear). For Class 44 environments, specify 3mm Dryback LVT with 0.7mm wear layer and permanent adhesive bond.
Which is cheaper — Loose Lay or Dryback?
Dryback is significantly cheaper at FOB level — from US$3.80/m² for 2mm versus US$8.80/m² for 4mm Loose Lay. However, total installed cost must include adhesive cost (US$3–6/m² for premium contact adhesive), longer cure time (24–48h site downtime), and installation labour (typically higher for Dryback). For raised access floors and phased renovation projects, the installation cost of Dryback (site downtime, adhesive, removal cost) often makes Loose Lay the lower total cost option despite its higher FOB price.
Does Dryback LVT have a fibreglass layer?
No. Dryback LVT at 2mm–3mm does not contain a fibreglass reinforcement layer. The dimensional stability of Dryback LVT comes from the permanent adhesive bond constraining the flexible PVC core to the subfloor — not from material reinforcement within the plank. Loose Lay LVT requires a fibreglass reinforcement layer (single or dual) because it must achieve dimensional stability without any adhesive bond — the fibreglass prevents the PVC core from stretching or curling under temperature change.
Loose Lay LVT 4–5mm · Dryback LVT 2–3mm · CE EN 14041 · Bfl-s1 · GREENGUARD Gold · Factory direct
Both Systems. One Factory. One Certificate Pack.

Ecoflors manufactures Loose Lay and Dryback LVT in the same Changzhou facility. Both carry CE EN 14041, Bfl-s1 EN 13501-1, FloorScore SCS-FS-05154, and GREENGUARD Gold per shipment. Mixed-system orders accepted — specify your application areas and Ecoflors will recommend the correct system per zone. MOQ 800 sqm per SKU.