Most folding and inflatable kayak skins are either PVC (polyvinyl chloride) or TPU (thermoplastic polyurethane). The two materials look similar in product photos. They are not similar in any way that matters.

If you are buying a kayak that will be used in sun, salt, and packed away dozens of times per year, the choice between PVC and TPU is the single most consequential gear decision after picking the hull shape itself.

Quick verdict

TPU wins on almost every axis that matters for travel-and-ocean use. It costs more. That is essentially the only drawback.

PVC is fine for budget-tier boats stored in a garage and used a few times per year on a calm lake.

What the materials actually are

PVC

Polyvinyl chloride is a synthetic plastic resin. In its raw form, PVC is rigid (think plumbing pipes, vinyl siding). To make it flexible enough for inflatable boats, manufacturers blend in liquid plasticizers — chemical additives that stay between the polymer chains and keep them mobile.

The plasticizer trick is what gives PVC kayaks their flexibility. It is also what causes them to fail.

Over time, plasticizers leach out — accelerated by UV, heat, and chlorinated water. As they leave, the PVC slowly returns to its rigid state: it stiffens, develops permanent creases at fold lines, and eventually micro-cracks along stress points.

TPU

Thermoplastic polyurethane is an elastomer — a polymer that is inherently rubbery without needing additives. Its flexibility comes from its molecular structure, not from a plasticizer chemical sitting between the chains.

TPU is the material used in:

  • Most modern high-end inflatable paddleboards
  • Premium drysuit seals
  • Phone case bumpers
  • Industrial conveyor belts

It is more expensive to manufacture and harder to weld (requires high-frequency RF welding instead of glue), but the end product behaves more like a piece of synthetic rubber than a piece of plastic.

Side-by-side comparison

PropertyPVCTPU
Weight per m²Heavier~30–40% lighter for equivalent strength
Initial costCheaperHigher (often 30–60% premium)
Abrasion resistanceModerateExcellent — Taber tests show TPU significantly outperforms
Puncture resistanceModerateExcellent — elastic flex absorbs sharp impacts
UV stabilityDegrades; plasticizers leachStable for many years
Salt resistanceSurface fine; underlying degradesStable
Cold flexibilityStiffens noticeably below 5°CFlexible to well below freezing
Folding durabilityDevelops permanent creases over yearsFolds indefinitely without weak points
RepairabilityEasy (PVC patches + cement)Slightly harder (TPU-specific glue)
RecyclabilityDifficult; contains plasticizersMore recyclable; pure elastomer
WeldabilityGlue-bonded seams (more failure-prone)RF-welded seams (more reliable)

What this means on Jeju (or anywhere with sun + reef)

The scenarios where the material difference becomes obvious:

  • Dragging the boat across volcanic rock to launch from a Jeju beach: PVC will gouge and eventually need patching; TPU will scratch superficially.
  • Brushing a shallow coral head in the Philippines: PVC can tear; TPU usually deflects.
  • Leaving the boat inflated on a hot beach for an hour at midday: PVC’s plasticizers start migrating to the surface and the skin loosens over time; TPU is unaffected.
  • Packing the boat in the same fold pattern every weekend for five years: PVC develops weak crease lines that will eventually fail; TPU keeps its integrity.

The price of TPU

For a Neris kayak, the TPU upgrade is typically a several-hundred-Euro premium. On a boat that already costs €2,000+, the TPU upgrade brings the total to €2,500–€3,500. The premium pays back in:

  • 30–40% lower weight (the Smart-1 TPU at 10 kg vs. the PVC version at 13–14 kg).
  • 2–3× longer skin life under tropical conditions.
  • Genuine peace of mind when scraping over the unknown.

When PVC is actually fine

  • You only paddle a freshwater lake near home, on weekends.
  • You store the boat indoors year-round.
  • Budget is the binding constraint.
  • You plan to upgrade in 3–5 years anyway.

For everyone else — and especially anyone planning the Jeju Kayak Circumnavigation Challenge or tropical island travel — pay for TPU.

Common misconception

There is a persistent rumour that “TPU is fragile” because it is thinner and lighter. This is backwards. TPU is stronger per gram than PVC. The reason TPU skins look thinner is that they don’t need the extra bulk to achieve the same strength. Industrial abrasion tests (Taber) consistently put TPU 2–4× ahead of comparable PVC.