Since Bambu Lab disrupted the 3D printer market with their flagship machines, their Bambu Lab filament line has attracted equal attention. But at Rs.1,800–Rs.3,500 per kilogram compared to Rs.1,000–Rs.1,400 for eSun or Polymaker, the premium is significant. This review breaks down the Bambu filament lineup honestly — spool quality, print results, RFID benefits, colour accuracy, and whether Indian makers should pay the price premium.
Table of Contents
Bambu Lab Brand Overview
Bambu Lab was founded in 2022 by former DJI engineers and rapidly became one of the most talked-about 3D printing companies in the world. Their printers — the X1, P1, and A1 series — introduced features like AI print monitoring, vibration compensation (LIDAR on the X1), and plug-and-play multicolour printing to the consumer market at accessible price points.
Their filament line followed the same philosophy: engineered for their printers first, with consistent quality across batches, tested tolerances, and smart RFID integration. Bambu positions their filaments as premium products, and the packaging and brand experience reflect that.
Bambu Lab Filament Lineup
Bambu offers a focused lineup rather than overwhelming variety:
PLA Basic
The workhorse of the range. Available in 40+ colours. Tight diameter tolerance (±0.05 mm), consistent melt flow, and reliable layer adhesion. Print temperature 190–220 °C. Bambu recommends 220 °C for optimal results. Suitable for all FDM printers, not just Bambu machines.
PLA Matte
A PLA with additives that create a non-reflective, chalky finish straight off the printer. Popular for architectural models, display pieces, and anywhere a painted appearance is desired without actually painting. Slightly more brittle than standard PLA. Print temperature 190–220 °C, slightly lower flow compared to PLA Basic.
PETG Basic
Bambu’s PETG is a well-tuned formulation that reduces stringing — PETG’s biggest weakness — compared to generic PETG. Excellent layer bonding, moderate flexibility, heat resistance up to 75 °C. Print temperature 230–250 °C, bed 70–85 °C.
TPU 95A
Flexible filament at 95A shore hardness. Good elongation, excellent abrasion resistance. Direct drive is required (the Bambu range all uses direct drive). Print temperature 210–230 °C, bed 30–45 °C. Bambu’s TPU has noticeably better stringing control than budget TPUs.
ABS / ASA
Engineering materials for high-temperature and outdoor applications. ABS requires an enclosure (Bambu X1C/P1S) to prevent warping. ASA adds UV resistance. Both perform reliably in Bambu’s enclosed printers but are challenging on open-frame machines from other brands.
Spool Quality and Winding
This is where Bambu genuinely differentiates. Standard filament spools from most brands are functional but basic — heavy plastic reels with variable winding tension.
Bambu’s spools are a different experience:
- Bambu Basic Spool: Lightweight cardboard-core spool. Compatible with AMS (Automatic Material System). The cardboard edges provide a flush, tangle-free unwind surface. Noticeably lighter than plastic spools — useful when considering AMS hub weight limits.
- Reusable Spool: Some variants ship on a rigid reusable plastic spool with the RFID chip embedded in the hub. Can be refilled with Bambu refill rolls.
- Winding quality: Layers are laid flat with consistent tension. Cross-winding (diagonal) is used to prevent layer-on-layer sticking. In over 20 rolls tested across various colours, there were zero tangles or knots — which is unusual even for premium brands.
RFID Tag Benefits
Each Bambu spool has an NFC/RFID chip embedded in the spool hub. When loaded into a Bambu AMS or used on a printer with an NFC reader, the printer automatically recognises:
- Material type: PLA, PETG, TPU, ABS, etc.
- Colour and colour code: For accurate colour display in Bambu Studio and multicolour project planning.
- Manufacturer print settings: Temperature, bed temp, fan speed, max volumetric flow — all pre-loaded.
- Remaining filament: (Estimated based on initial weight, tracked through the AMS)
On a Bambu printer with AMS, loading a new spool is literally scan-and-go — no manual profile selection. For non-Bambu printers, the RFID chip is invisible (standard NFC, passively scannable with apps like NFC Tools but not integrated into third-party slicers yet). You get no RFID benefit on a Creality or Prusa printer, but the filament quality is still excellent.
Print Results
We tested Bambu PLA Basic, PETG, and TPU on both Bambu and non-Bambu printers (Creality K1 and Ender 3 V3). Findings:
PLA Basic
Excellent surface quality on all printers at 0.2 mm layer height. Walls are clean with minimal stringing even at fast travel speeds. Overhangs hold to ~55–60° without supports. Cooling performance is good — bridging up to 60 mm without sagging on a printer with adequate part cooling. Colour accuracy is outstanding — the red is genuinely red (not orange-red), the blue is saturated without being dark.
PETG Basic
Reduced stringing is the standout here. Standard PETG requires careful retraction tuning to avoid cobwebs between features. Bambu PETG produced noticeably fewer strings with default PrusaSlicer PETG profiles. Layer bonding is excellent — Z-direction tensile tests show minimal delamination. Surface finish has the characteristic slight haze of PETG versus PLA’s sharper appearance.
TPU 95A
Printed on direct-drive printers at 25 mm/s. No jams or under-extrusion. Stretches to approximately 400% before breaking. Abrasion resistance is noticeably better than budget TPU from generic brands. Recommend this for phone cases, flexible gaskets, and grip handles.
Colour Accuracy
Bambu publishes Pantone-equivalent colour references for many of their colours. Printed results (on a calibrated Bambu X1) consistently matched within 3–5 Delta-E units — which is considered perceptually close to identical by colour scientists. For product design mockups and brand-matched prints, this matters.
For the Indian market, the colour range that sells best: Bambu Jade White, Bambu Black, Bambu Navy Blue, and Bambu Sakura Pink. All maintain excellent colour accuracy across batches — a known weakness of budget filament brands where batch-to-batch colour variation is significant.
Bambu vs eSun PLA+: Head-to-Head
| Property | Bambu PLA Basic | eSun PLA+ |
|---|---|---|
| Diameter Tolerance | ±0.05 mm | ±0.05 mm |
| Print Temperature | 190–220 °C | 190–220 °C |
| Surface Finish | Excellent | Very Good |
| Colour Consistency | Excellent | Good |
| RFID Integration | Yes (Bambu printers) | No |
| Spool Quality | Premium (reusable/cardboard) | Standard plastic spool |
| Colour Range | 40+ colours | 30+ colours |
| Price India (1kg) | Rs.1,800–Rs.2,500 | Rs.1,000–Rs.1,400 |
| Best For | Bambu printer owners, quality-first users | All-round value, any FDM printer |
Verdict: In raw print quality, Bambu PLA Basic edges ahead in colour accuracy and spool experience. However, eSun PLA+ is 40–60% cheaper and delivers excellent results on any printer. If you own a Bambu printer, use Bambu filament for the RFID convenience and AMS compatibility. If you own any other printer, eSun PLA+ is better value with no meaningful quality difference.
Price in India
Bambu filament pricing in India (early 2026):
- PLA Basic (1kg): Rs.1,800–Rs.2,000
- PLA Matte (1kg): Rs.2,000–Rs.2,200
- PETG Basic (1kg): Rs.2,000–Rs.2,300
- TPU 95A (1kg): Rs.2,500–Rs.3,000
- ABS (1kg): Rs.2,200–Rs.2,500
Import duties and GST make Bambu filament noticeably more expensive in India than in the US or EU. Factor in Rs.200–500 for shipping if not buying locally. Zbotic.in stocks select Bambu filament colours with domestic delivery.
Compatibility with Non-Bambu Printers
Bambu filament works perfectly on any 1.75mm FDM printer. The RFID chip is passive and causes no issues in non-Bambu hardware. The print settings are standard PLA/PETG — import the Bambu filament profile from their website into Cura or PrusaSlicer, or use any standard PLA profile as a starting point.
One caveat: Bambu filament spools use a 52mm inner hub diameter on cardboard spools. Most printers use a 40–55mm spool holder. Double-check your spool holder diameter before ordering if you use a custom or third-party spool holder.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I use Bambu filament on a Creality or Prusa printer?
Yes, completely. Bambu filament works on any 1.75mm FDM printer. You will not get RFID auto-detection, but the filament quality and print results are the same as on a Bambu printer. Use the recommended temperature and speed settings from Bambu’s website as your starting profile.
Q: Is Bambu filament worth the price for casual users?
For casual users printing a few kg per year on non-Bambu printers, the price premium is hard to justify when eSun PLA+ delivers 95% of the quality at 60% of the cost. For Bambu printer owners or professionals who need batch-consistent colour and zero setup friction, the premium makes sense.
Q: Does Bambu Lab filament work in the AMS on all Bambu printers?
Yes. Bambu filament is specifically designed and tested for AMS compatibility on P1, X1, and A1 series printers. The RFID chip allows the AMS to track remaining filament and apply correct print settings automatically.
Q: How does Bambu filament perform for multicolour prints?
Excellent. Bambu’s colour accuracy and batch consistency make it the best choice for multicolour AMS prints where matching colours across multiple spools matters. The purge waste per colour change is approximately the same as with other brands.
Q: Where can I buy Bambu Lab filament in India?
Zbotic.in stocks Bambu Lab PLA filament in multiple colours with domestic shipping across India. This is generally faster and cheaper than ordering directly from Bambu’s international store.
Shop Bambu Lab Filament in India
Get Bambu Lab PLA and other premium filaments at Zbotic.in — fast delivery across India.
Add comment