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

ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves Review (2026): Industrial-Grade Latex-Free Vinyl

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

★★★★☆ 4.2/5

Reviewed by Steven Eaton, WC Safety Editorial

ProHeal vinyl — Key Specifications
Material Vinyl
Grade Industrial-Grade
Powder Powder-free
Latex Latex-free (no natural rubber)
Sizes X-Small, Small, Medium, Large, X-Large
Color Clear
Typical thickness ~3–4 mil
Single-use Yes — disposable

The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is a industrial-grade vinyl disposable glove for janitorial, painting, light assembly, and general shop use. ProHeal's clear vinyl is the one line here that carries a complete X-Small through X-Large run at the 100-count box tier, so smaller hands and larger hands get a real fit instead of a one-size compromise. It is powder-free and latex-free, available in X-Small, Small, Medium, Large and X-Large, and priced from $6.99 per box — a budget, allergy-safe choice for short, non-hazardous tasks where you do not need the puncture or chemical resistance of nitrile.

Why the ProHeal Vinyl Glove Stands Out

ProHeal's clear vinyl is the one line here that carries a complete X-Small through X-Large run at the 100-count box tier, so smaller hands and larger hands get a real fit instead of a one-size compromise. The full XS-XL size run is its standout — most budget vinyl lines skip the extremes.

Material, Fit and Performance

Vinyl (PVC) is the lowest-cost disposable glove material and is naturally latex-free, so the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves avoids the latex-allergy risk that rules out natural-rubber gloves. At roughly 3–4 mil it is thinner-feeling and looser-fitting than nitrile, which is the trade-off for the lower price: it is well suited to brief, frequent-change tasks like food prep and light cleaning rather than long wear. As a industrial-grade glove it is aimed at janitorial, painting, light assembly, and general shop use.

Because it is powder-free, the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves leaves no talc residue on food, surfaces, or skin — the standard requirement for food-contact and clinical use. The full XS-XL size run is its standout — most budget vinyl lines skip the extremes. It ships in X-Small, Small, Medium, Large and X-Large, so you can match the glove to the hand rather than forcing one size across a crew. For a side-by-side on where vinyl fits against the alternatives, our breakdown of how the materials compare is linked below.

Durability and Chemical Limits

Vinyl's limits are real and worth stating plainly: it offers far less puncture, abrasion, and chemical resistance than nitrile, and it is not the preferred barrier for solvents, harsh chemicals, or bloodborne-pathogen exposure. Use the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves for light, clean, non-hazardous work; when the task involves chemicals, oils, sharps, or higher-risk patient contact, switch to a nitrile glove. Treat every vinyl glove as single-use.

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Latex-free vinyl — no natural-rubber allergy risk, safe for latex-sensitive crews
  • Powder-free — no talc residue on food, surfaces, or skin
  • Low per-box cost (from $6.99) makes frequent glove changes affordable
  • Industrial-Grade vinyl stocked in X-Small, Small, Medium, Large and X-Large

Cons

  • Limited puncture and chemical resistance — not for solvents, sharps, or sustained chemical contact
  • Looser fit and thinner feel than nitrile; single-use only

Who Should Buy It

Order the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves if you are kitchens, caregivers, and households that need a full size range of food-safe clear vinyl at a low per-box price. It comes in X-Small, Small, Medium, Large and X-Large, and at $6.99 per box it keeps per-pair cost low for frequent glove changes.

Who Should Skip It

Skip it for chemical or solvent work and heavy-duty tasks — vinyl is a light-duty, food-prep and cleaning glove. Vinyl is a light-duty material — match the glove to the hazard.

How It Compares

Within vinyl, the choice is mostly grade and size run: exam-grade lines suit clinical and food use, while industrial and food-service lines suit shop and kitchen work. Against other materials, nitrile costs more but adds puncture and chemical resistance, and latex fits best but carries allergy risk. If the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is close but you want more durability, move up to nitrile; if you want the best fit and latex is acceptable, consider latex.

Other Vinyl Gloves to Consider

Glove Guides

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are ProHeal vinyl gloves latex-free?

Yes. The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is made from vinyl (PVC), which contains no natural rubber latex, so it is safe for people with latex allergies. If you need latex, see the latex gloves collection instead.

Are these vinyl gloves food safe?

Yes. They are powder-free and latex-free, which is the standard for food handling and prep. As a industrial-grade clear vinyl, the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves suits janitorial, painting, light assembly, and general shop use. Verify compliance with your local food-service authority.

What sizes does the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves come in?

It is stocked in X-Small, Small, Medium, Large and X-Large. Vinyl runs close to standard glove sizing — measure across your palm and check the glove size chart; size up if you want a looser fit.

Are ProHeal vinyl gloves powder-free?

Yes. Every size of the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is powder-free, so there is no talc transfer onto food, instruments, or skin.

How thick are these vinyl gloves?

Disposable vinyl like the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is typically about 3–4 mil. Vinyl feels thinner than nitrile at the same task, which is why it suits short, frequent-change work rather than long wear.

Vinyl vs nitrile — which should I buy?

Vinyl such as the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is cheaper and latex-free but looser and less puncture- and chemical-resistant than nitrile. Use vinyl for brief, non-hazardous tasks; choose nitrile for chemicals, solvents, sharps, or bloodborne risk. See our nitrile vs vinyl guide.

Can I use the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves with cleaning chemicals?

Only for brief contact with mild cleaners. Vinyl offers limited chemical resistance, so for solvents or harsh chemicals choose a chemical-resistant or nitrile glove instead.

Is the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves good for mechanics or automotive work?

No — vinyl tears easily and resists oils and solvents poorly; use heavy-duty nitrile for shop work.

Are these ProHeal gloves disposable or reusable?

Disposable, single-use. The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is not made to be washed and reused — change gloves between tasks. For reusable cleaning gloves, look at flock-lined latex.

What is the difference between exam-grade and industrial vinyl?

Exam-grade vinyl is rated for medical examination; industrial and food-service vinyl is for shop, janitorial, and kitchen work. The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is a industrial-grade line aimed at janitorial, painting, light assembly, and general shop use.

Does the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves protect against bloodborne pathogens?

Vinyl is not the preferred barrier for bloodborne-pathogen exposure — nitrile is recommended for that. Use industrial-grade vinyl only for low-risk contact and switch to a nitrile exam glove for higher-risk work.

Where can I buy ProHeal vinyl gloves in bulk?

This review links to the current ProHeal Amazon listing for box and case pricing, and the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is stocked at WC Safety. Compare box vs case pricing on the product page for volume orders.

Is standard vinyl different from regular vinyl?

The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves is standard clear PVC vinyl: the lowest-cost, latex-free disposable option, best for light, non-hazardous tasks.

How many gloves are in a box of ProHeal vinyl?

Box counts vary by size and pack — typically 100 per box, with some sizes sold as larger cases. Check the exact count on the linked product page before ordering.

Is the ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves the right pick for my work?

Choose it if you are kitchens, caregivers, and households that need a full size range of food-safe clear vinyl at a low per-box price. If your task involves chemicals, sharps, or higher-risk exposure, a nitrile glove is the safer call — see our best exam and food-service glove guides.

The Bottom Line

The ProHeal Clear Vinyl Gloves does exactly what a industrial-grade vinyl glove should: deliver a low-cost, latex-free barrier for light, non-hazardous industrial tasks. The full XS-XL size run is its standout — most budget vinyl lines skip the extremes. It is not built for chemicals, sharps, or heavy wear — but within its lane it is a sensible, honestly-priced pick.


About the Author

Steven Eaton is the founder of WC Safety and an industrial PPE specialist who sources and evaluates disposable gloves for food-service, healthcare, and industrial buyers.

How We Review

Reviews draw on manufacturer specifications, material properties, and product documentation. We do not run lab tests or fabricate specs; ratings reflect grade, value, and fit for the intended use.

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 manufacturer data and known material properties. WC Safety does not invent specifications or test results. Report errors to safetynw2012@gmail.com.

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