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All Heat Resistant Gloves

(210 products)

Heat-resistant gloves come in protection levels from 100°C to 1,000°C. Which level you need depends on what you're touching, how long you're touching it, and what type of heat you're facing-contact, radiant, convective, or molten metal splashes.

All our gloves meet EN407:2020 certification, the European standard that tests six critical heat hazards. Each glove displays a performance rating from 0–4 for each hazard type, so you see exactly what protection you're getting. No guessing.

The Core Decision: What Type of Heat?

  • Contact heat (up to 1,000°C): Touching hot surfaces, metal, or tools directly. EN407 measures how long the glove resists heat transfer; Level 4 is 15 seconds at 250°C.
  • Convective heat: Hot air and gases from ovens or industrial processes.
  • Radiant heat: Working near furnaces, molten metal, or open flames. Extended cuffs protect your forearm.
  • Molten metal splashes: Foundry work and welding demand aluminised or aramid-coated materials.

Materials That Actually Work

Leather stays supple under heat and resists flame. Aramid fibres (Kevlar®) won't melt when ordinary synthetics would fuse to skin. Aluminised fabrics bounce radiant heat back. Most industrial-grade gloves combine two or three of these; leather palm with aramid backing and aluminised cuff, for example.

Who Needs These

Welders, foundry workers, glass manufacturers, oven operators in commercial kitchens, steel mill staff, and anyone handling materials above 100°C. Each industry has different requirements: TIG welding needs precision and dexterity; foundry work needs maximum insulation and extended gauntlet protection.

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