BlogFleece Fabric for Hoodies: GSM, Brushing, and Pilling Risk
Fleece Fabric for Hoodies: GSM, Brushing, and Pilling Risk
May 15, 2026
Table of Contents
For hoodie bulk production, fleece fabric problems often appear after sampling approval: the fabric feels heavier or lighter than expected, the brushed side pills after washing, or the finished hoodie does not match the target warmth and structure. These issues usually come from specs that were not clearly confirmed before production. This guide explains how to evaluate fleece knit fabric by GSM range, brushing depth, pilling test reference, fiber blend, and certification options before confirming a bulk order.
Matching GSM to Hoodie Category: A Sourcing Reference
GSM is the primary specification variable when sourcing fleece for hoodies. The ranges below reflect common ordering patterns across casualwear and streetwear production — they are reference points, not fixed standards. Exact GSM per SKU should be confirmed based on your fiber composition, construction, and wash shrinkage targets.
Note: Brushed fleece may feel heavier than its stated GSM due to the raised pile. Always request a pre-production fabric swatch at your target GSM before finalizing bulk specs.
How Brushing Depth Affects Pilling Risk in Bulk Production
Brushing is a finishing process in which the fabric surface is mechanically raised to create the soft inner pile characteristic of fleece hoodies. The depth of brushing — and the number of passes applied — directly influences how much fiber is lifted from the yarn structure. More aggressive brushing can produce a softer initial hand feel, but may also release more loose fiber ends during early wash cycles, increasing surface pilling risk over the garment's lifespan.
In bulk production, this relationship can be compounded by variation between dye lots and finishing runs. Before sampling, confirm the following with your fabric mill:
Brushing setting — confirm light, medium, or heavy brushing; one-sided or two-sided brushing; and whether the same setting will be used from sample approval to bulk production.
Anti-pilling treatment — confirm whether the fabric uses shearing, anti-pill finishing, or both.
Pilling test reference — ask for the test method, rating scale, test duration, sample condition, and whether the result applies to greige, dyed, brushed, or finished bulk fabric. ASTM D3512 can be used as a reference when the mill tests with a random tumble pilling tester.
Macro comparison of lightly brushed and heavily brushed fleece fiber surface
When French Terry Is a Better Hoodie Fabric Than Brushed Fleece
Some sourcing teams default to brushed fleece for all hoodie production, when the actual end-use spec — breathability requirement, seasonal market, or target pilling tolerance — would be better served by French terry knitted fabric. The distinction isn't about quality hierarchy; it is about matching construction to application.
Feature
Fleece Knit
French Terry
GSM range
200–420+ GSM
180–380 GSM
Interior structure
Brushed, raised pile
Looped, unbrushed
Pilling tendency
More sensitive to brushing depth, loose fiber release, and anti-pilling finish
Usually lower brushing-related pilling risk because the looped back is not raised, but still depends on yarn, fiber blend, and finishing
A 300 GSM brushed fleece and a 280 GSM French terry serve different market positions and carry different quality-control priorities at the production stage. If your development brief specifies moderate warmth, year-round use, or activewear crossover, confirm whether your GSM and pilling requirements are better met by French terry before committing to a fleece build.
Certifications and Composition to Confirm Before Sampling
For brands with recycled-content sourcing requirements, Global Recycled Standard (GRS) certified fleece is an available option. GRS supports recycled-content programs by verifying recycled raw materials through the supply chain and adding processing requirements related to chemical, social, and environmental criteria. Runtang Tex holds GRS certification, but available fleece constructions, recycled content, color options, and MOQ should still be confirmed before sampling.
If you are evaluating polar fleece fabric for outerwear-adjacent hoodie applications where anti-pilling performance is the primary spec driver, confirm the anti-pill grade and applicable test standard before sampling, as these differ between constructions.
Composition note: Common hoodie fleece builds include cotton-rich blends for a softer hand feel, polyester-rich blends for better shape retention and faster drying, and recycled polyester blends for GRS-related sourcing programs. For brushed fleece, do not judge composition alone. Ask the mill to confirm fiber blend, yarn quality, brushing depth, anti-pilling finish, shrinkage target, and pilling test result as one combined specification package.
What GSM should I specify for a midweight everyday hoodie in bulk production?
For everyday casual hoodies — branded basics and streetwear staples — a range of 280–320 GSM in a cotton/polyester blend is a commonly used starting point. The exact GSM should be confirmed based on your construction, fiber targets, and wash shrinkage allowance. Request a pre-production swatch at your target GSM before finalizing the bulk spec.
Can I get GRS-certified fleece fabric for hoodies?
Yes. Runtang Tex supplies Global Recycled Standard (GRS) certified fleece options for brands with recycled-content sourcing requirements. GRS certification applies chain-of-custody verification across fiber sourcing and production. For custom solid-color development, MOQ usually starts from 300 kg per color, while exact requirements depend on yarn, recycled content, color, GSM, and finishing. Contact us to confirm whether your target fleece construction can be developed under a GRS-certified supply.