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Home Cables, Connectors & PCB

Gold vs HASL vs ENIG PCB Finish: Which Should You Choose

Gold vs HASL vs ENIG PCB Finish: Which Should You Choose

March 11, 2026 /Posted byJayesh Jain / 0

Choosing the right PCB finish — HASL, ENIG, or hard gold — is one of the most impactful decisions in PCB design, affecting solderability, shelf life, contact reliability, and cost. Each surface finish has distinct advantages and weaknesses depending on your application. This comparison guide covers all major PCB surface finishes available to Indian makers and startups, with practical advice on when to choose each option and what to specify when ordering from JLCPCB, PCBWay, or local Indian fabs.

Table of Contents

  • Why PCB Surface Finish Matters
  • HASL — Hot Air Solder Levelling
  • Lead-Free HASL
  • ENIG — Electroless Nickel Immersion Gold
  • Hard Gold (Electrolytic Gold)
  • OSP, ENEPIG, Immersion Silver and Tin
  • Side-by-Side Comparison Table
  • Cost Comparison for Indian Makers
  • Frequently Asked Questions

Why PCB Surface Finish Matters

Bare copper oxidises rapidly in air, forming a copper oxide layer that prevents reliable soldering. PCB surface finishes serve two purposes: protect the copper from oxidation during storage, and provide a solderable or contactable surface during assembly or use. The wrong finish choice can lead to:

  • Cold solder joints or non-wet solder (poor solderability from oxidised pads)
  • Contact failures in edge connectors or test points (insufficient wear resistance)
  • “Black pad” syndrome (brittle nickel-phosphorus layer in ENIG failing under component stress)
  • Unnecessary cost (hard gold on a standard soldering board wastes money)
Recommended: Arduino UNO R3 Development Board — Notice how commercial boards use HASL or ENIG — study the pad finish quality before specifying your own PCB order.

HASL — Hot Air Solder Levelling

HASL is the traditional PCB finish where the entire board is dipped in molten solder (tin-lead or lead-free), then hot air knives remove excess solder, leaving a solder-coated surface.

HASL Characteristics

  • Surface appearance: Shiny, silver, slightly bumpy/uneven surface
  • Solder composition: 63/37 tin-lead (eutectic) for leaded HASL; SAC305 (tin-silver-copper) for lead-free
  • Thickness: 1–25 µm (highly variable — this unevenness is the main drawback)
  • Solderability: Excellent — the surface IS solder, so soldering is very easy
  • Shelf life: 12 months typical

HASL Advantages

  • Lowest cost — no premium over base PCB price at most fabs
  • Excellent solderability for through-hole and large SMD components
  • Reworkable — can be resoldered multiple times
  • Very forgiving for beginners

HASL Disadvantages

  • Uneven surface — problematic for fine-pitch SMD pads below 0.5 mm pitch
  • Thermal shock during dipping can damage fine PCB features
  • Leaded HASL requires RoHS compliance consideration for export products
  • Not suitable for edge connector fingers

Best for: Through-hole boards, prototype boards, large-pitch SMD (0805, 0603 passives, SOIC ICs), beginner projects, cost-sensitive production.

Lead-Free HASL

Lead-free HASL uses SAC305 (96.5% tin, 3% silver, 0.5% copper) solder instead of tin-lead. The process is identical but requires higher temperatures. It is the standard choice for RoHS-compliant products and is the default at most modern Chinese PCB fabs.

Lead-free HASL has slightly higher melting point (217°C vs 183°C for eutectic tin-lead), which can cause more thermal stress during the dipping process — be aware when ordering boards with fine BGA or tight via-in-pad features.

Recommended: Arduino UNO R3 CH340G Development Board — Modern Arduino-compatible boards typically use lead-free HASL or ENIG — a good example of production-quality finish selection.

ENIG — Electroless Nickel Immersion Gold

ENIG applies a layer of electroless nickel (3–6 µm) followed by a thin immersion gold layer (0.05–0.15 µm) over the nickel. The gold protects the nickel from oxidation and provides solderability. The actual solder bonds to the nickel, not the gold (the gold dissolves into the solder during soldering).

ENIG Characteristics

  • Surface appearance: Flat, matte gold — very uniform surface
  • Solderability: Excellent — flat surface ideal for fine-pitch SMD
  • Contact resistance: Very low initially, but gold is thin — not suitable for repeated mechanical contact
  • Shelf life: 12 months typical (gold protects nickel well)
  • Thickness: Very flat — ideal for 0.4 mm pitch QFP, BGA, fine-pitch connectors

ENIG Advantages

  • Flat, coplanar surface — ideal for fine-pitch SMD assembly
  • Good for wire bonding
  • Uniform appearance — easier to inspect solder joints
  • Good for press-fit connectors and board-to-board interconnects

ENIG Disadvantages

  • “Black pad” failure: If the nickel-phosphorus content is wrong or the process is poorly controlled, nickel becomes brittle at the gold-nickel interface, causing component pad cracking under stress. This is more common with low-quality fabs.
  • Gold is only 0.05–0.15 µm thick — NOT suitable for edge connectors or test points with repeated contact
  • Cost: 20–50% more than HASL at most fabs
  • Only one reflow cycle should be used — multiple reflows consume the gold and can expose nickel

Best for: Fine-pitch SMD assembly (0.4 mm pitch QFP, 0201 passives), BGA components, RF boards requiring flat ground planes, professional-looking prototypes, production boards requiring inspection.

Recommended: Arduino Nano 33 IoT with Header — This compact IoT board uses ENIG finish — notice the uniform gold pads ideal for fine-pitch assembly.

Hard Gold (Electrolytic Gold)

Hard gold is electroplated gold (0.5–3.0 µm or more) over a nickel underplate. Unlike ENIG’s immersion gold, electrolytic hard gold is thick, wear-resistant, and specifically designed for edge connectors, test contacts, and any application requiring repeated mechanical contact.

Hard Gold Characteristics

  • Thickness: 0.5–3.0 µm (vs 0.05–0.15 µm for ENIG)
  • Hardness: 130–200 HV (vs 60–90 HV for soft/immersion gold)
  • Insertion cycles: 500–10,000+ (vs 5–10 for ENIG)
  • Contact resistance: Lowest of all finishes — ideal for test points and connectors

Hard Gold Applications

  • PCB edge connector fingers (card slots, expansion connectors)
  • Membrane switch contacts
  • Pogo pin test points
  • Keypads and touchpads
  • Sliding contacts (potentiometers, encoders)

Hard Gold Disadvantages

  • Significantly more expensive — ₹200–800 premium per board for finger plating
  • Cannot coat the entire board — selective plating only on connector fingers
  • Requires separate plating step from the rest of the board finish
  • Leads (if used for edge connectors) require the board edge to be beveled/chamfered

OSP, ENEPIG, Immersion Silver and Tin

OSP (Organic Solderability Preservative)

A thin organic coating that prevents copper oxidation. Nearly invisible (very thin, clear). Very flat surface — ideal for fine-pitch SMD. However, it is not durable — shelf life only 6 months, and the coating burns away during soldering (only one reflow cycle). Popular in high-volume automotive SMT production. Available at most fabs including JLCPCB (select “OSP”).

Immersion Silver

A 0.1–0.4 µm silver deposit. Excellent solderability and flat surface, but silver tarnishes quickly in the presence of sulphur (common in India’s industrial/coastal environments). Must be used within 3–6 months of manufacture. Rarely specified by Indian hobbyists but available at premium fabs.

Immersion Tin

A 0.8–1.2 µm tin deposit. Good flatness and solderability. Main concern: tin whiskers (over time, tin can grow conductive whiskers that cause shorts) — not ideal for long shelf life. More common in European markets, less so in India.

ENEPIG (Electroless Nickel Electroless Palladium Immersion Gold)

The premium option — adds a palladium layer between nickel and gold. Eliminates black pad syndrome, suitable for wire bonding AND soldering, and provides better contact wear than ENIG. Cost is 2–3× ENIG. Used in high-reliability aerospace and medical electronics.

Side-by-Side Comparison Table

Property HASL ENIG Hard Gold OSP
Surface flatness Poor Excellent Good Excellent
Solderability Excellent Excellent Not intended Good
Wear resistance Good Poor Excellent Very poor
Shelf life 12 months 12 months 24+ months 6 months
Cost (India, relative) Base +30–50% +50–150% +10–20%
Fine-pitch SMD Poor Excellent Good Excellent

Cost Comparison for Indian Makers

At JLCPCB for a standard 100×100 mm 2-layer board, 5 pieces (as of 2025 pricing, approximate ₹conversion at market rate):

  • HASL (lead-free): Base price ~₹350–450 for 5 pcs
  • ENIG: +₹150–250 over HASL base price
  • Hard gold fingers (partial board): +₹300–600 depending on finger count and area
  • OSP: +₹50–100 over HASL base price

For Indian local fabs (PCBPower, Sriya), ENIG typically adds ₹200–500 per board in small prototype quantities. Hard gold is available from select Indian fabs with minimum order quantities of 50–100 boards.

Recommended: USB to DC Power Cable for Arduino (50cm) — Keep your test boards powered up reliably when evaluating different PCB finish samples for solderability and contact quality.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which PCB finish is best for a beginner’s first PCB?

HASL (lead-free) is the best choice for beginners. It’s the cheapest option, extremely easy to solder, very forgiving, and widely available. The surface unevenness doesn’t matter for typical through-hole and 0805+ SMD components. As you progress to finer SMD work (0402, TSSOP, QFP), upgrade to ENIG.

Is ENIG always better than HASL?

Not always. ENIG is better for flatness and fine-pitch SMD work, but HASL is better for repeated rework (multiple soldering cycles), has no risk of black pad syndrome, and is cheaper. For a prototype board you’ll resolder many times while debugging, HASL is often more practical than ENIG.

Can I use ENIG for edge connector fingers?

Not recommended. ENIG’s gold layer (0.05–0.15 µm) wears through in just a few insertion cycles, exposing the nickel underneath and rapidly degrading contact quality. Always use dedicated electrolytic hard gold for any connector finger that will see repeated mechanical contact.

Is HASL RoHS compliant?

Lead-free HASL (using SAC305) is fully RoHS compliant. Traditional leaded HASL (63/37 Sn-Pb) is NOT RoHS compliant and cannot be used in products sold in the EU or for CE-marked products. For products intended for export or sale under BIS certification in India, always specify lead-free HASL or ENIG.

What surface finish does JLCPCB use by default?

JLCPCB’s default is HASL (lead-free) for standard 2-layer boards. You must explicitly select ENIG or OSP as an upgrade option when placing your order. This is available on the instant order page under “Surface Finish.”

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Tags: ENIG PCB India, hard gold PCB, HASL vs ENIG, PCB finish comparison, PCB surface finish
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