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Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant
Industrial Safety Equipment & PPE — ANSI/OSHA Compliant

Liberty 2570SP Review (2026)

Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, WC Safety earns from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. We stock this product; commissions do not influence our review.

★★★★½ 4.4/5

Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial

Liberty 2570SP — Key Specifications
Brand Liberty Glove & Safety
Category Neoprene Chemical-Resistant Glove
Construction (per listing) Neoprene over latex; liquid-proof; flock lined
Typical price $27.25
Model 2570SP

The Liberty 2570SP is a neoprene chemical-resistant glove from Liberty Glove & Safety, stocked at $27.25 — built as a neoprene/latex blend, liquid-proof and flock lined. It's the pick for facility maintenance, janitorial chemical handling, and mixed acid/caustic duty without a single dominant chemistry. This review covers what the listing documents, where it beats its closest rival, and who should buy something else.

Why the Liberty 2570SP Stands Out

Neoprene owns the acid-and-caustic side of the chemical chart the way nitrile owns oils and solvents — and the Liberty 2570SP is the working-budget neoprene: a neoprene-over-latex blend, flock lined, liquid-proof. It's the maintenance-closet glove for mixed janitorial and facility chemistries where the hazard list reads like a cleaning aisle rather than a solvent room.

Specification and Configuration

What the listing commits to: neoprene over latex; liquid-proof; flock lined. Claims beyond that — lab numbers, endurance figures, certifications the listing doesn't state — don't appear in this review, because we don't invent them. Size and color options run on the linked Amazon listing rather than as separate stocked variants.

Chemical gloves are selected by polymer against the specific chemical — nitrile for oils and many solvents, butyl for ketones and polar solvents, neoprene for acids and caustics, PVC for rough wet service — and the deciding document is the manufacturer's permeation chart, not the word 'resistant' on a listing. The Liberty 2570SP is the neoprene chemical-resistant glove entry in that matrix; the full polymer-sorted lineup lives in our Chemical-Resistant Gloves collection.

Where It Falls Short

Its limits, honestly: Latex-allergy programs — the blend contains natural rubber; and solvent-specific work belongs to nitrile or butyl per the chart.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Neoprene over latex
  • $27.25 — positioned honestly against its ladder
  • From Liberty Glove & Safety — the reference brand in jobsite cooling
  • Listing states its construction claims plainly

Cons

  • Single-listing size/color selection happens on Amazon, not as stocked variants
  • Latex-allergy programs

Who Should Buy It

Order the Liberty 2570SP if you are facility maintenance, janitorial chemical handling, and mixed acid/caustic duty without a single dominant chemistry.

Who Should Skip It

Skip it for latex-allergy programs — the blend contains natural rubber; and solvent-specific work belongs to nitrile or butyl per the chart.

How It Compares

Different polymers for different charts: the Solvex nitrile for oils and solvents, the 2570SP's neoprene blend for acids and caustics. If your SDS stack spans both, stock both — no single polymer covers the whole chart. The Chemical-Resistant Gloves collection carries the complete ladder so you can compare every tier. Head-to-head rival: Ansell AlphaTec Solvex 37-175.

Other Options in the Lineup

Hand Protection Guides

Browse by Category

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Liberty 2570SP made of?

Per the listing: neoprene over latex; liquid-proof; flock lined. That's the documented construction — anything beyond it belongs to the manufacturer's spec sheet, not this review.

How much does the Liberty 2570SP cost?

$27.25 at the linked Amazon listing. Prices track the live listing, and size or color selections there can shift the number.

Liberty 2570SP vs Ansell AlphaTec Solvex 37-175 — which should I buy?

Different polymers for different charts: the Solvex nitrile for oils and solvents, the 2570SP's neoprene blend for acids and caustics. If your SDS stack spans both, stock both — no single polymer covers the whole chart.

Who is the Liberty 2570SP best for?

Facility maintenance, janitorial chemical handling, and mixed acid/caustic duty without a single dominant chemistry.

When should I skip the Liberty 2570SP?

Latex-allergy programs — the blend contains natural rubber; and solvent-specific work belongs to nitrile or butyl per the chart.

What sizes does the Liberty 2570SP come in?

The size run (and color options where offered) lives on the linked Amazon listing — we deliberately don't restate it, because listings update. Check the size chart there before ordering.

Is Liberty Glove & Safety a good brand?

Liberty Glove & Safety is a value-tier US supplier with a broad industrial line; its dipped chemical gloves compete on price against the big-name equivalents with honest, if briefer, documentation. A working-budget pick rather than a spec-program pick.

What chemicals does the Liberty 2570SP protect against?

The ones its polymer handles per the manufacturer's permeation chart — 'chemical resistant' is never a blanket claim. Look up your specific chemical and required contact time in Liberty Glove & Safety's chemical-resistance guide before relying on any glove; breakthrough times differ by orders of magnitude across chemistries.

What do permeation and breakthrough time mean for the Liberty 2570SP?

Permeation is chemical movement through an intact glove at the molecular level; breakthrough time is how long that takes at test conditions. A glove that visibly survives a solvent can still be passing it through to your skin — which is why selection runs on published breakthrough data, not on whether the glove looks fine.

Can the Liberty 2570SP be reused, and how should it be decontaminated?

Yes — rinse per the manufacturer's care guidance before removal, dry fully, and inspect for swelling, stiffening, or color change before each reuse. A glove that has absorbed its chemical keeps permeating from within; degradation signs retire it regardless of age.

Does OSHA require chemical-resistant gloves like the Liberty 2570SP?

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.138 requires employers to select hand protection appropriate to the hazard identified in their assessment — for chemical exposures that means a glove whose polymer and breakthrough data match the chemical and task duration. The HazCom SDS for each chemical names the protective-glove requirement the assessment must satisfy.

What thickness is the Liberty 2570SP, and does mil rating matter?

Per the listing: neoprene over latex; liquid-proof; flock lined. Thickness buys durability and (usually) longer breakthrough, at the cost of dexterity — but polymer choice matters far more than mil count. A thin glove of the right polymer beats a thick glove of the wrong one every time.

Lined or unlined — which configuration of glove like the Liberty 2570SP should I buy?

Flock lining absorbs sweat and makes full-shift wear tolerable; unlined gloves decontaminate faster, shed no lint into the process, and dry quicker between cycles. Assign by task: lined for continuous dry-side handling, unlined for wash-down and lint-sensitive work.

When should I use a disposable instead of a reusable chemical glove (or vice versa)?

Disposables for incidental contact and splash — strip and bin with the contamination. Reusables for immersion, sustained contact, and abrasive handling, where a 5-mil film would fail mechanically long before the chemistry got through. The crossover mistake is using disposables for immersion; that's how breakthrough happens mid-task.

What other PPE pairs with the Liberty 2570SP for chemical work?

Splash protection scales with the task: chemical splash goggles over safety glasses, a face shield for pouring and transfer, and chemical-resistant aprons or coveralls for anything that can wet clothing. The glove is one layer of the chemical PPE assessment, not the whole answer.

The Bottom Line

The Liberty 2570SP does its job at its price: a neoprene/latex blend, liquid-proof and flock lined at $27.25. Rated 4.4/5 on documented spec, configuration, and value for the intended buyer.


About the Author

Steven Eaton is the founder of WC Safety and an industrial PPE specialist who sources and evaluates chemical hand protection for industrial and construction buyers.

How We Review

Reviews draw on the manufacturer's published listing data and the applicable OSHA and ANSI consensus standards. We do not run lab tests or invent specifications; where a listing states no rating, the review says so. Ratings reflect documented spec, configuration, and value.

Affiliate Disclosure

WC Safety is an Amazon Associate and earns commissions on qualifying purchases through links on this page. Affiliate relationships do not influence our ratings.

Editorial Standards

Claims are drawn from listing data and published standards. WC Safety does not invent specifications or test results. Report errors to safetynw2012@gmail.com.

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