High Temp 3D Printer Filament: Complete Guide to Heat-Resistant Materials
What Makes a Filament “High Temperature”?
In the 3D printing world, “high temperature” filament refers to any thermoplastic that requires a hotend temperature above 260°C and offers a heat deflection temperature (HDT) significantly above what PLA or PETG can handle. While PLA softens at around 55-60°C and PETG at about 75-80°C, high-temp filaments maintain their structural integrity at 150°C and beyond.
These materials are essential for automotive parts, electronics enclosures, industrial jigs, aerospace prototyping, and any application where the printed part will be exposed to sustained heat. The trade-off is that they demand more capable hardware: an all-metal hotend, an enclosed and heated build chamber, and often a high-temperature bed surface.
Let’s break down the most important high-temp filaments available today, from the most accessible to the most extreme.

Polycarbonate (PC): The Accessible Workhorse
Polycarbonate is often the first high-temp filament makers try because it’s widely available and doesn’t require a completely exotic setup. With an HDT of about 130-140°C, it bridges the gap between engineering plastics like PETG and true high-performance materials.
Print Settings for Polycarbonate
- Nozzle temperature: 260-310°C (varies by blend; pure PC needs 290-310°C)
- Bed temperature: 110-130°C
- Enclosure: Required. Ambient temp should be 50-70°C to prevent warping and layer splitting
- Print speed: 30-50 mm/s for best results
- Cooling fan: Off or minimal (10-20% for small overhangs only)
- Bed surface: PEI sheet, Garolite, or BuildTak with glue stick
Strengths: Exceptional impact resistance (nearly unbreakable), good optical clarity in natural form, high HDT, widely available from brands like Polymaker, eSUN, and Prusament.
Weaknesses: Hygroscopic (must be dried before printing), prone to warping without enclosure, UV-sensitive over time, some blends contain ABS which lowers heat resistance.
Nylon (PA6, PA12, PA6-CF): Tough and Versatile
Nylon filaments span a wide range of formulations. Standard PA12 has an HDT around 80-100°C, but carbon fiber or glass fiber reinforced nylons (PA6-CF, PA6-GF) can push that to 180-200°C, firmly placing them in high-temp territory.
Print Settings for Nylon Composites
- Nozzle temperature: 250-280°C
- Bed temperature: 70-100°C (PA12) or 90-110°C (PA6)
- Enclosure: Strongly recommended for PA6; helpful for PA12
- Nozzle: Hardened steel 0.4-0.6mm for fiber-filled variants (fiber destroys brass nozzles within hours)
- Print speed: 40-60 mm/s
- Drying: Absolutely critical. Print from a dry box if possible. 80°C for 8-12 hours before use
Carbon fiber nylon is a favorite for functional parts because it combines high stiffness, heat resistance, and relatively easy printability. Brands like Bambu Lab, Polymaker (PA6-CF), and Markforged (Onyx) have made it widely accessible. The fiber reinforcement also dramatically reduces warping compared to unfilled nylon.

PEI (ULTEM): Aerospace-Grade Performance
Polyetherimide, sold under the brand name ULTEM, is a true high-performance polymer used in aircraft interiors, medical devices, and electronics. ULTEM 1010 has an HDT of 216°C and maintains its mechanical properties across a huge temperature range. It’s also inherently flame-retardant (UL94 V-0 rated) without additives.
Print Settings for PEI/ULTEM
- Nozzle temperature: 350-390°C
- Bed temperature: 130-160°C
- Chamber temperature: 90-130°C (active heating required)
- Nozzle: Hardened steel or ruby-tipped, minimum 0.4mm
- Print speed: 20-40 mm/s
- Printer requirement: Dedicated high-temp machine (Funmat HT, Apium, AON3D, CreatBot)
PEI filament costs $150-300/kg and requires a printer capable of 400°C hotend temperatures with an actively heated chamber. This is not a material you can print on a modified Ender 3. However, for applications where nothing else will do—such as parts that sit near an engine block or inside a sterilization autoclave—ULTEM is the standard.
PEEK: The King of 3D Printing Polymers
Polyether ether ketone (PEEK) sits at the top of the polymer pyramid. With an HDT of 250°C, continuous use temperature of 260°C, and the ability to briefly withstand 300°C+, PEEK is used in spinal implants, Formula 1 components, oil and gas equipment, and semiconductor tooling.
Print Settings for PEEK
- Nozzle temperature: 370-410°C
- Bed temperature: 130-160°C
- Chamber temperature: 120-160°C (critical for crystallinity)
- Print speed: 15-30 mm/s
- Post-processing: Annealing at 200°C for 2-4 hours to achieve full crystallinity and mechanical properties
- Cost: $300-700/kg
Chamber temperature is crucial with PEEK. If the chamber is too cool, the part will be mostly amorphous with significantly lower heat resistance and mechanical strength. Proper crystallinity (30-35%) is achieved through controlled cooling in a hot chamber followed by annealing. The difference between amorphous and semicrystalline PEEK in terms of chemical resistance and strength is dramatic.

Other Notable High-Temp Filaments
Beyond the four major players, several other materials deserve attention:
- PPSU (Polyphenylsulfone) — HDT ~207°C, autoclavable, excellent chemical resistance. Used in medical and food-contact applications. Prints at 360-380°C.
- PSU (Polysulfone) — HDT ~174°C, transparent amber color, good for fluid handling components. Slightly easier to print than PPSU.
- PPA (Polyphthalamide) — High-temp nylon variant with HDT up to 280°C in glass-filled grades. Excellent for under-hood automotive parts.
- ASA — Not truly “high temp” (HDT ~95-100°C) but worth mentioning as a UV-stable, heat-resistant alternative to ABS for outdoor enclosures.
- PC-ABS blends — Combine the impact resistance of PC with the ease of ABS. HDT around 110-125°C. A good middle ground.
Hardware Requirements for High-Temp Printing
Before investing in expensive filament, make sure your printer can handle it:
- All-Metal Hotend: PTFE-lined hotends max out at ~240°C before the tube degrades and releases toxic fumes. An all-metal hotend (E3D V6, Revo, Mosquito, Bambu Lab hotend) is the minimum requirement.
- Heated Enclosure: For PC, a passive enclosure (foam-insulated box) may suffice. For PEEK/PEI, you need active heating with a PID-controlled heater to maintain 120°C+ chamber temperature.
- High-Temp Bed: Your bed needs to reliably reach and hold 130-160°C. Some consumer beds max out at 110°C. Check your bed’s actual capability, not just the firmware limit.
- Hardened Nozzle: Required for any fiber-filled filament. Tungsten carbide or ruby nozzles last the longest but cost $50-100.
- Dry Box / Dryer: Every high-temp filament is hygroscopic. A Sunlu S2, PolyBox, or EIBOS Easdry is essential. Better yet, print directly from the dryer.
Choosing the Right High-Temp Filament: FAQ
What’s the cheapest high-temp option?
Polycarbonate blends (PC-ABS, PC-EZ) are the most affordable at $30-50/kg. They print at lower temperatures than pure PC and still offer HDT above 100°C. eSUN’s ePC is a popular budget choice.
Can I print PEEK on a modified Ender 3?
No. Even with an all-metal hotend upgrade, consumer printers cannot reach the 400°C nozzle temperatures and 120°C+ chamber temperatures PEEK requires. You need a purpose-built high-temp printer starting around $5,000-10,000.
Do I need to dry filament every time?
Yes. High-temp filaments absorb moisture quickly—even overnight in humid conditions. Wet nylon or PC will pop, string excessively, and produce weak parts with visible bubbles. Dry before every print and use a dry box during printing.
Which filament for automotive under-hood parts?
For temperatures up to 130°C: carbon fiber nylon (PA6-CF). For 130-200°C: PEI (ULTEM). For 200°C+: PEEK. Consider vibration, chemical exposure (oils, fuels), and UV exposure in your material selection.
Is high-temp filament food safe?
Some are—PPSU and certain PEEK grades are FDA-compliant and autoclavable. However, FDM-printed parts have layer lines that harbor bacteria regardless of material. For food contact, print in PPSU/PEEK and apply a food-safe epoxy coating to seal the surface.