Cut & Heat Resistant Gloves
(121 products)Heat and cut resistant gloves combine two essential protections in one: protection from sharp materials and thermal hazards. Whether you're working in food processing, automotive manufacturing, or metalworking, these dual-purpose gloves eliminate the need to swap between single-protection options mid-shift.
Choosing the Right Protection Level
Cut and heat resistance exist on scales. For cut protection, EN 388 uses an A-F rating (A = minimal, F = maximum protection). For heat, EN 407 performance levels range from 1 to 4, with each level denoting resistance to contact heat, convective heat, radiant heat, and thermal splashes.
The key question: which combination do you actually need? A food processing plant handling hot meat requires different protection than a foundry. Start by identifying your primary hazard—is it mostly cutting risk with occasional heat exposure, or the reverse?
Common Dual-Protection Use Cases
- Meat and poultry processing (sharp equipment, steam, hot surfaces)
- Commercial kitchens (blade handling, heated cookware)
- Automotive assembly (metal shards, brief thermal contact)
- Light welding or torch work with manual cutting tasks
If your operation demands cut resistant gloves most of the time but occasional heat resistant gloves performance, a dual-rated model saves inventory complexity and training. One glove, one specification, one pair of hands protected.
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UCi
UCi X5-Sumo-FC Cut Protection Glove Level E Kevlar Steel Fully Coated Latex
GX5SUMOFC
Regular price From £7.39 exc VAT — £8.87 inc VATUnit price /Unavailable
Understanding EN 388 and EN 407 Standards
EN 388 measures cut resistance on a scale from A (minimal protection, up to 2 Newtons of force) to F (maximum protection, up to 30 Newtons). The standard was updated to this letter scale in EN 388:2016, replacing the older 1-5 numerical rating. EN 407:2020 tests heat resistance across six separate hazards: burning behaviour, contact heat, convective heat, radiant heat, and small and large splashes of molten metal. Products in this collection include gloves certified to these standards; verify the exact rating and performance level on each product page.
Matching Cut Level to Your Task
Higher cut ratings (D, E, F) protect against industrial blades and metal shards; lower ratings (A, B, C) suit general cutting tasks like kitchen knives or meat processing lines. The most common specification mistake is assuming a high EN 388 rating is always necessary—overspecification creates bulk, reduces dexterity, and costs more without adding protection value for your actual work. Confirm your minimum required level before ordering; it drives both price and fit.
Heat Performance Levels and Contact Time
EN 407 performance levels (1–4) indicate contact heat resistance time and temperature. Level 4 contact heat represents 15 seconds at 250°C; Level 1 is just 4 seconds at 100°C. Know your exposure duration and temperature. A glove rated Level 2 contact heat may fail quickly in foundry work but perform adequately for brief thermal contact in a commercial kitchen. Many models in this range offer different EN 407 levels; check each listing for exact specifications.
Materials and Construction
Typical materials include: • Aramid fibres (Kevlar) for heat and cut resistance combined • Leather or synthetic overlays for grip and durability • Aluminised fabric layers for radiant heat reflection • Nitrile or PU coatings for water and chemical resistance • Heavyweight fabrics (often 150–250gsm) for thermal insulation. Material choice affects heat rating, cut protection, flexibility, and cost. Aramid gloves won't melt at extreme temperatures but may be stiffer than leather.
Use Cases and Suitability
Food processing and commercial kitchens benefit most from cut and heat resistant gloves because workers handle both sharp tools and heated surfaces during a single shift. Automotive manufacturing uses them for assembly lines involving metal handling and occasional thermal exposure. Light metalworking and torch operations with manual cutting tasks are also common. Emergency responders and industrial maintenance teams often choose dual-protection to reduce changeover time. If your operation involves only cutting or only heat exposure, single-purpose gloves may be more cost-effective and offer better specialisation than a compromise dual-rated option.
Selection Guidance
When specifying heat and cut resistant gloves, confirm: the exact EN 388 cut rating (A-F) needed for your blades or materials; the EN 407 heat level required for your maximum contact temperature and duration; whether glove grip matters more than bulk for your task; sizing and fit, as thermal protection layers add thickness; and care and replacement frequency based on use intensity. Options include gloves tested to EN 388 and EN 407; verify exact certifications and performance ratings on each product page before ordering, especially if your operation has specific regulatory or insurance requirements.