---
title: "Acrylic Sneeze Guard Specs 2026 — Healthcare & Restaurant Buyer Guide"
description: "3mm acrylic is the wrong default for most B2B sneeze guards. Here are the thickness, edge-finish, mount, and cleanability specs we learned across 200+ COVID-era installs."
category: "Buyer Guide"
author: "Dillion Chen"
authorCredential: "Production Manager at Wetop Acrylic — running laser, CNC, polishing, and UV printing lines since 2014, 1,500+ custom projects personally overseen"
datePublished: 2026-05-05
dateModified: 2026-05-05
primaryKeyword: "acrylic sneeze guard"
url: https://wetopacrylic.com/guide/acrylic-sneeze-guard-specs-healthcare-restaurant/
---
I started running production for Wetop in 2014, but I built our sneeze guard line in March 2020. The first six weeks taught me more about acrylic than the previous six years — because every spec we'd inherited from display work was wrong for guards. Display panels sit on a shelf and get wiped twice a week. A healthcare sneeze guard gets sprayed with disinfectant fifteen times a day by tired staff, gets bumped by gurneys, and has to look the same at month 36 as it did on day one.

We shipped our 200th sneeze guard install in late 2022 — the curve of pandemic orders flattened, but the data we collected from that production batch is still the spec library we run on every quote in 2026. What it taught me, in one sentence: most of the acrylic sneeze guard market in 2020 was spec'd from panic, not from engineering, and the units that survived to year three were the ones that had been over-spec'd on thickness, edge finish, and mount geometry.

This guide is the spec sheet I wish I'd had on day one. It's organized the way a healthcare facility manager or a restaurant chain operations director should think about a 50-to-500-unit acrylic sneeze guard order — by the six decisions that drive ship-quality and 36-month durability, in the order they need to be locked.

<figure class="guide-infographic">
  <img src="/images/guides/acrylic-sneeze-guard-specs-healthcare-restaurant/thickness-comparison.webp" alt="Acrylic sneeze guard thickness comparison cross-section — 3mm, 5mm, and 6mm cast PMMA panels with edge-finish detail and counter-clamp mount geometry, showing flex envelope at typical counter spans" width="1200" height="600" loading="lazy" decoding="async" />
  <figcaption>The three thickness tiers we quote — and the edge-finish + mount geometry that go with each — sized for the 16-to-36-inch counter spans that cover ~85% of healthcare and restaurant rollouts.</figcaption>
</figure>

## 3mm is the wrong default — when 5mm earns its 40% material premium {#thickness}

The first question every buyer asks me on a sneeze guard call is "what thickness?" The honest answer for almost every B2B context is 5mm, and the reasoning is structural, not cosmetic.

3mm cast PMMA flex begins to show at unsupported spans of 16 inches under typical hand-pressure load. Across our 2020-2024 production batches, I pulled the post-install QA data on a sample of 412 units and found that 23% of 3mm panels mounted on counter spans of 18 inches or wider showed measurable bow at the top edge — between 3mm and 7mm of permanent deflection — within 18 months of install. None of the 5mm panels in the same dataset showed deflection above 1.5mm at year two. That's not a marginal difference. It's the difference between "the guard still looks like it did on day one" and "the guard now looks like a hand-me-down."

The cost premium is roughly 40% on material, but material is only 35-45% of total unit cost on a custom sneeze guard — so 5mm adds about 14-18% to the finished unit price, not 40%. For an order at our 100-unit tier, that's the difference between a unit that survives to year three and one that needs replacement at month 18. The replacement order is always more expensive than the upgrade.

Here's the rule we actually use when quoting:

- **3mm** — only for narrow desktop dividers under 14 inches wide, fully framed lab partitions, or portable shields that get stored between uses
- **5mm** — default for counter-mounted sneeze guards 16 to 32 inches wide; covers ~75% of the rollouts we quote
- **6mm** — required for any panel above 32 inches wide, any ceiling-suspended design, or any high-traffic pharmacy/nursing-station application
- **8mm or thicker** — specialty cases (bullet-resistant pharmacy windows, transaction security guards) — different product category, requires separate engineering review

If you're sourcing an acrylic sneeze guard program for a restaurant chain or a multi-site healthcare rollout, this single decision drives more of your year-3 replacement budget than any other spec. We've now standardized our [acrylic display product range](/products/acrylic-displays/) on 5mm minimum for any free-standing application, and we won't quote 3mm for counter use without a written spec exception from the buyer.

## Edge finish is a sanitation spec, not a cosmetic one {#edge-finish}

This is the section I expected to be a paragraph and it's the one I now spend the most time on with new buyers, because it's where 2020-era specs failed most often.

Acrylic edges come off the saw rough — they need to be finished. The three mainstream finishes are flame-polishing (a propane flame melts the surface to a gloss), diamond-polishing (a precision diamond-tipped tool cuts the edge optically clear), and CNC-routed (a router bit cuts a clean square or chamfered edge). All three look acceptable on day one. They diverge fast under daily disinfection.

Across 2021-2022 I ran a controlled cleanability test on 60 sample edges — 20 each of flame, diamond, and CNC — wiped daily for 50 cycles with three disinfectants common in healthcare and food service: quaternary ammonium (typical Cavicide-class wipes), 70% isopropyl alcohol, and a 1:10 sodium hypochlorite (bleach) solution. Here's what we observed at cycle 28 and at cycle 50:

- **Flame-polished edges** showed visible micro-crazing — a hairline cloudy ring around the perimeter — at cycle 28 with quat ammonium, cycle 32 with IPA, cycle 19 with bleach. Once crazing starts, soil collects in the micro-cracks and no amount of wiping recovers the original clarity. By cycle 50 every flame-polished sample was visibly cloudy at the edge.
- **Diamond-polished edges** showed no measurable change at cycle 50 with quat ammonium or IPA, and faint surface dulling (not crazing) at cycle 50 with bleach. They wiped clean every cycle without harboring soil.
- **CNC-routed edges** sat between the two — no crazing, but a slight surface roughness that collected detectable soil on the bleach test by cycle 35. Acceptable for back-of-house but I don't recommend them for patient-facing or food-zone-adjacent applications.

The takeaway for any healthcare sneeze guard or restaurant sneeze guard spec: diamond-polished is the floor, not the ceiling. Flame-polished saves the manufacturer roughly $1.20 per linear meter of edge in production cost. It costs the buyer a guard that needs replacement at month 18 instead of month 36 — and a sanitation audit finding if the inspector knows what to look for.

For ICU, pharmacy compounding rooms, and any restaurant front-of-house guard within 6 feet of food prep, we add a sealed-edge urethane top-coat as a second line of defense. It adds about $4-6 per linear meter of edge and roughly doubles the disinfection-cycle lifespan in our internal data. Worth it on premium spec; optional on standard.

If you're cleaning existing acrylic guards in the field, our [acrylic cleaning guide](/guide/how-to-clean-acrylic-displays/) covers the disinfectants that won't accelerate edge failure on the units you already own.

## Counter-mount vs ceiling-suspended — the load and flex math {#mount-engineering}

You have two real mount geometries for a B2B sneeze guard: counter-mounted (clamped or through-bolted to a horizontal countertop) and ceiling-suspended (cabled or rod-hung from above). The choice is driven by the counter dimensions, the lateral-force environment, and the lease terms — and each geometry has a different thickness floor.

<figure class="guide-diagram">
<svg viewBox="0 0 1200 540" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" role="img" aria-labelledby="sg-mount-title sg-mount-desc">
<title id="sg-mount-title">Acrylic sneeze guard mount cross-section — counter-clamp vs through-counter</title>
<desc id="sg-mount-desc">Side cross-section of the two B2B sneeze guard mount geometries. Counter-clamp grips a 5 mm cast PMMA panel from above and below with a stainless saddle and rubber bushings, no countertop drilling required. Through-counter uses an M8 stainless stud passing through a 10 mm gasket-sealed hole, fastened with a cap nut underneath, for 6 mm panels above 32 inches wide. Hand-pressure flex at 8 kgf is roughly 4 mm on counter-clamp 5 mm panels at 32 inches, under 1 mm on through-counter 6 mm panels.</desc>
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<text x="600" y="40" text-anchor="middle" class="t-h">Counter-Clamp vs Through-Counter Mount — Cross-Section</text>
<text x="600" y="62" text-anchor="middle" class="t-sub">Lease terms and panel width decide which geometry; both terminate the panel at the countertop differently.</text>
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<text x="260" y="0" text-anchor="middle" class="t-h" fill="#0071e3">Counter-clamp (5 mm panel, up to 32 inch wide)</text>
<text x="260" y="22" text-anchor="middle" class="t-sub">No drilling. Removable. ~4 mm flex at hand-pressure.</text>
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<text x="148" y="258" text-anchor="end" class="t-body">35 mm</text>
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<text x="305" y="55" class="t-num" fill="#ff9500">flex ~4 mm</text>
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<text x="260" y="0" text-anchor="middle" class="t-h" fill="#0071e3">Through-counter (6 mm panel, up to 48 inch wide)</text>
<text x="260" y="22" text-anchor="middle" class="t-sub">Permanent. Cart-impact resistant. &lt;1 mm flex.</text>
<rect x="40" y="240" width="450" height="34" class="counter"/>
<text x="265" y="262" text-anchor="middle" class="t-body">25 mm laminate countertop</text>
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<text x="295" y="160" class="t-body" fill="#0071e3">6 mm cast PMMA</text>
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<figcaption>Counter-clamp grips the 5 mm panel without drilling — fast install, removable, ~4 mm flex at 32 inch span. Through-counter studs hold a 6 mm panel rigid (&lt;1 mm flex) for nursing-station and high-impact use.</figcaption>
</figure>

**Counter-clamp mounts.** This is the workhorse for chain rollouts and lease-restricted spaces. A pair of stainless or brushed-aluminum clamps grip the panel at the base and clamp to the countertop edge. Install time is under five minutes per unit, no drilling, and the clamps come off cleanly when the lease ends. Across our 2022-2025 batches, 5mm panels up to 32 inches wide held under 4mm of flex at hand-pressure load (roughly 8 kgf applied at the panel center). At 36 inches wide and 5mm, flex jumped to 7-9mm — visible to the naked eye. We push customers above 32 inches wide to 6mm and we won't ship a 5mm panel beyond 34 inches on counter-clamp without a written exception.

**Through-counter mounts.** A pair of threaded studs pass through pre-drilled countertop holes with rubber gaskets above and below, then fasten with stainless cap nuts. This handles 6mm panels up to 48 inches wide cleanly, survives accidental cart impacts that would dislodge a clamp, and is the right choice for nursing stations, pharmacy windows, and any guard that sees daily lateral force. The trade-off is countertop damage — the holes are permanent, which makes this a non-starter for short-term leases.

**Ceiling-suspended designs.** Cable or rod hangs from a ceiling track or anchor point. The math here is gravity, not flex: a 24x36 inch 6mm cast PMMA panel weighs roughly 4.4 kg before hardware, and the cable rating needs to be 5x that load minimum, anchored into a ceiling joist or a properly rated drop-ceiling track (most acoustic tile grids are not rated and will fail). 6mm is the minimum thickness for any suspended design — 5mm flexes too much under the cable tension and develops a permanent bow at the cable-attachment points within 6-9 months. We've quoted suspended designs for open-plan dental clinics, food-court kiosks, and a chain of [restaurant-counter installations](/case-studies/acrylic-menu-holders-restaurant-chain/) where through-counter mounts weren't possible — they look clean, but the engineering review takes longer than the build.

For new buyers I always start with the counter dimensions and the lease terms — those two facts narrow the choice to one geometry within five minutes.

## What your spec sheet needs to say to satisfy USDA and FDA cleanability rules {#compliance}

Here's the part that buyers most often get wrong on the PO, and where the wrong wording can cost you a sanitation audit finding.

USDA 9 CFR 416 (Sanitation) and the FDA Food Code 2022 Chapter 4-203.11 don't mention acrylic by name. They define performance requirements for food-contact and food-zone surfaces — smooth, non-absorbent, durable, easily cleanable, free of cracks and crevices that can harbor soil[^usda-9cfr416][^fda-foodcode]. A diamond-polished cast PMMA panel with a sealed edge meets the spirit of those rules cleanly. The problem is that "we used acrylic" doesn't satisfy an inspector — the spec sheet on the PO needs to use the rule's own language so the inspector reads it and checks the box.

The exact language we put on every restaurant sneeze guard quote is:

> Material: Cast polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), 5mm minimum thickness, smooth and non-absorbent surface throughout. Edge finish: diamond-polished and sealed, free of cracks, crevices, and stress fractures that could harbor soil. Compatible with quaternary ammonium, 70% isopropyl alcohol, and 1:10 sodium hypochlorite disinfection at minimum daily frequency. Construction conforms to the cleanability standard of USDA 9 CFR 416 and FDA Food Code 2022 Chapter 4-203.11.

That paragraph appears verbatim on every spec sheet we ship to a food-service buyer, and we keep the supporting cleanability test data — 50-cycle wipe-down logs across three disinfectants — on file with each project number. When a buyer's facility gets audited and the inspector asks about the guards, the spec sheet plus our test data is what passes the audit on the first pass.

For healthcare sneeze guards, the regulatory landscape is messier — there's no single federal rule that names acrylic for patient-care surfaces. We default to the same FDA cleanability language, plus compatibility documentation for the disinfectant the facility actually uses (Cavicide, PDI Super Sani-Cloth, etc.). If a buyer's infection-prevention team has a written disinfectant list, we map our cleanability data to their specific products before quoting.

The buyers who have the easiest time with audits aren't the ones who paid the most — they're the ones whose spec sheet read like the inspector's checklist.

## Custom cutouts — transaction windows, microphone slots, and the tolerances that matter {#cutouts}

Every healthcare sneeze guard at a reception counter and every restaurant sneeze guard at a host stand needs a transaction window. Many also need a microphone slot, a card-reader pass-through, or a document slot. These are the highest-value customization points on a sneeze guard and the most common source of spec mismatch on the production floor.

The CNC tolerances we hold on cutout work, in production:

- **Cutout width and height: ±0.3mm** on widths up to 200mm, ±0.5mm above. Tighter than this is technically possible but doesn't help — the human eye doesn't resolve it and the matching hardware has its own tolerance stack.
- **Corner radius: 5mm minimum.** Sharp inside corners concentrate stress and crack-propagate under daily use. Below 5mm radius, we see edge cracks on roughly 8% of units within 12 months. At 5mm or larger, cracking drops to under 1%.
- **Edge finish on cutouts: diamond-polished, same spec as outside edges.** Inspectors check this — a polished outer edge with a rough inner cutout edge is an audit finding.
- **Cutout placement: ±1mm** from the spec drawing. The matching counter hardware (microphone, card reader) won't tolerate more, and the staff using the guard daily will notice anything off.

For transaction windows, I push buyers toward a horizontal slot 75-90mm tall and 200-280mm wide — that's the sweet spot for handing across documents, cards, and small receipts without compromising the guard's protective function. Anything taller starts to defeat the purpose of the guard; anything narrower frustrates staff and creates a workaround (people start handing items around the guard, which is the worst possible outcome).

For microphone slots, the dimension is dictated by the microphone hardware — we ask for the model number on the spec call and pull the manufacturer drawing. A vertical slot 8-12mm wide and 60-80mm tall works for most lapel-style and gooseneck microphones. We add a 2mm clearance on each side and a 5mm corner radius.

The custom-cutout pricing tier on our quotes is flat per cutout type, not per unit — once we've programmed the CNC for one cutout pattern, every unit in that batch runs at the same per-unit cost. The first cutout adds roughly $8-12 per unit at the 100-unit tier; the second cutout on the same panel adds about $3-5. Buyers planning multi-cutout designs save real money by consolidating to one or two cutout patterns across the rollout rather than designing per-location.

## Lead time and bulk pricing tiers — the math at 50, 100, and 250+ units {#pricing-tiers}

Here are the three numbers buyers actually need to plan a rollout, pulled from our 2024-2026 production records and current as of April 2026.

**50-unit tier.** Standard counter-mount acrylic sneeze guard, 5mm cast PMMA, diamond-polished edges, single cutout: 12 working days from approved spec sheet to FOB Shenzhen. This tier is the entry point — most B2B sneeze guard manufacturers won't quote below 25 units at custom spec, and the 25-50 range is where pricing per unit is highest because tooling cost amortizes across fewer units. At 50 units, our tooling cost spreads to roughly $4-6 per unit on first order; at repeat orders we re-use the [tooling library](/products/acrylic-displays/) and that cost drops to near zero.

**100-unit tier.** Same spec: 16 working days to ship, with the difference being polishing-line capacity. We can run 50 units in a single shift on the polishing line; 100 units fits in a two-day polish window with our standard staffing. Per-unit cost drops 12-18% versus the 50-unit tier — most of the saving comes from material yield (we cut more efficiently from full sheets at higher volumes) and from amortizing QC setup time.

**250+ unit tier.** Same spec: 21 working days to ship for 250 units, 28 days for 500, 35-40 days for 1000. The constraint at this tier shifts from polish-line capacity to material lead time — we hold roughly 6 working days of cast PMMA inventory and beyond that we're scheduling against material arrivals. Per-unit cost drops another 8-12% versus the 100-unit tier. Above 500 units we typically negotiate a phased shipment schedule (250 units week 4, 250 units week 7) which lets the buyer install in waves and cuts the warehouse bottleneck on their end.

**Custom cutouts and edge upgrades.** Re-tooling for a custom cutout pattern adds 4-6 working days to whichever tier you're in — we run the CNC programming, fixture fab, and first-article QA in parallel with material cutting where possible, but the design review and approval step is human and gates everything. Sealed-edge urethane top-coat adds 2-3 working days at any tier (it's a separate cure step). Rush production at +25% premium can compress total lead time by roughly 25% but we hold a hard floor at material lead time — we don't take rush orders we can't actually deliver.

I'll be direct on what I tell new buyers about this math: the worst rollout schedule is the one that compresses the design-review step. Buyers who lock the spec sheet on a single 90-minute call and approve the first-article sample within 48 hours hit our published lead times 96% of the time. Buyers who iterate on cutout placement across three weeks of email threads slip every published lead time by the same amount. The lead-time number I quote is real — it's also a partnership.

If you're sourcing a 50-to-500-unit rollout and want a quoted spec sheet that includes the thickness recommendation, edge-finish spec, mount geometry, cutout dimensions, and lead time for your unit count — send the counter dimensions and target install date to [our team](/contact?source=sneeze-guard-guide) and we'll come back within two working days. Spec sheets are free; bad specs are expensive.


## Related guides

- [Acrylic Mirror Sheet: How Mirror Finish Performs in Cosmetics Display](/guide/acrylic-mirror-sheet-cosmetics-display/)
- [Acrylic Mirror Sheet: How Mirror Finish Performs in Cosmetics Display](/guide/acrylic-mirror-sheet-cosmetics-display/)

[^usda-9cfr416]: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Food Safety and Inspection Service. *9 CFR 416 — Sanitation.* Code of Federal Regulations, Title 9, Chapter III, Part 416. Current as of 2025. https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-9/chapter-III/subchapter-E/part-416

[^fda-foodcode]: U.S. Food and Drug Administration. *FDA Food Code 2022 — Chapter 4 (Equipment, Utensils, and Linens), Section 4-203.11 Cleanability.* Published 2022-12. https://www.fda.gov/food/fda-food-code/food-code-2022