A laminator preserves documents that need to survive handling: ID cards, restaurant menus, instruction sheets at the warehouse, certificates, signs, training materials. The choice between casual desktop and heavy duty models turns on monthly volume, pouch thickness range and the speed advantage daily use justifies.
Pouch laminators use pre cut plastic pouches sized to standard document formats. The user inserts the document inside the pouch and feeds the pair through heated rollers. Pouch laminators dominate the office market for their simplicity and clean output. Roll laminators use continuous rolls of laminating film and feed documents through automatically. Roll machines handle higher volumes and unusual sizes but require trim cutting after lamination. For office use, pouch laminators serve nearly all needs.
A4 (230 mm) pouch laminators handle the bulk of office work including certificates, signs, training material, restaurant menus. A3 (320 mm) models handle larger posters and oversized documents. A5 (160 mm) models suit small items like ID cards. For most offices, A4 is the practical default with A3 as an upgrade where larger output matters.
Light pouches at 75 microns suit menu cards and lightly handled documents. Standard pouches at 125 microns handle most office needs. Heavy pouches at 175 to 250 microns produce more durable laminations for warehouse signs and heavily handled material. The laminator must support the thickness used; entry models reject pouches above 125 microns.
Entry laminators warm up in 4 to 8 minutes. Mid range office models warm up in 1 to 3 minutes. Heavy duty models with quick start technology warm up in under 60 seconds. For occasional use, warm up time matters little. For daily use, faster warm up saves substantial waiting time over years of operation.
Two roller laminators are entry level, with adequate heat distribution for thinner pouches but uneven results on heavier ones. Four roller machines deliver consistent heat across pouch thickness, the standard for office use. Six roller premium machines produce professional grade output without bubbling or wrinkling on the heaviest pouches.
Jam reverse functions clear stuck pouches without manual intervention. Auto shut off prevents overheating from being left running. Cold lamination mode handles thermal sensitive documents that would damage in hot lamination. These features extend laminator life and reduce frustration during occasional use.
Entry laminators run 25 to 50 cm per minute, slow enough that A4 lamination takes 30 to 60 seconds. Mid range office models reach 50 to 75 cm per minute. Heavy duty models hit 100 cm per minute or above. For daily lamination work, speed matters; for occasional use, even slow models feel fine.
Five categories of office lamination recur. ID cards and visitor badges that need to last weeks or months. Restaurant and cafe menus that survive daily handling and cleaning. Warehouse and workshop signs that resist oil, dirt and rough handling. Training documents and procedure cards that staff handle repeatedly. Children's certificates and awards for school environments.
Each use case affects the pouch thickness choice. Heavy use cases like warehouse signs need 175 to 250 micron pouches. Light use like one-time certificates suits 125 micron. ID cards typically use 100 micron specialised card laminating pouches.
| Use level | Specification | Indicative price |
|---|---|---|
| Personal occasional | A4, 125 micron max, 2 roller | 40-80€ |
| Small office daily | A4, 175 micron, 4 roller | 120-280€ |
| Mid office daily | A3, 175 micron, 4 roller, quick start | 280-500€ |
| Heavy duty office | A3, 250 micron, 6 roller, fast warm | 500-1,200€ |
| School or training centre | A3, 250 micron with bypass for thicker stock | 600-1,500€ |
A4 lamination pouches cost 0.05 to 0.15 euros each depending on thickness and brand. A 100 pack of 125 micron A4 pouches typically runs 8 to 16 euros. For an office laminating 20 documents per week, monthly pouch cost runs 4 to 12 euros, modest enough that pouch cost is not usually a deciding factor at procurement.
Three issues recur with office lamination. Bubbles in the finished pouch result from inadequate heat or speed too fast for the pouch thickness; slow down and ensure full warm up before use. Curl at the edges occurs when documents are too close to the pouch edge; leave at least 3 mm border around the document. Adhesive seepage on the rollers requires periodic cleaning with a cleaning pouch run through the machine empty.
Fellowes dominates the office laminator market in Spain with a broad range from personal to heavy duty. GBC (a Swingline brand) competes strongly across mid range and heavy duty categories. Olympia produces budget personal and small office models. For specialised photographic and fine art lamination, brands like Albyco serve niche needs.
For documents that cannot tolerate heat (photos with delicate inkjet inks, thermal paper receipts, materials with heat sensitive adhesives), cold lamination uses pressure sensitive pouches that bond without heat. Cold lamination machines cost slightly more than thermal equivalents but eliminate the warm up wait and serve specialised needs that thermal cannot.