Best Heat-Resistant Welding Gloves (2025): For Extreme Heat Applications
Best heat-resistant welding gloves for overhead welding, preheat work, and heavy fabrication. Kevlar-lined and aluminized options from Tillman, BSX, and John Tillman.
Welding glove reviews by process: MIG, TIG, and stick. Leather types, heat resistance ratings, dexterity vs protection tradeoffs, and top picks from Tillman, Lincoln, Miller, and others.
Welding gloves are process-specific gear. A glove that works great for TIG is wrong for stick, and stick gloves are too bulky for TIG. The right pair protects your hands from heat, spatter, and UV radiation while giving you enough dexterity to control the torch, gun, or electrode holder. Getting this balance wrong means either burning your hands or fumbling your work.
TIG gloves prioritize dexterity above all else. They’re thin (goatskin or kidskin leather), form-fitting, and unlined or lightly lined. You need to feel the filler rod between your fingers and feed it smoothly. TIG produces minimal spatter, so heavy protection isn’t the priority. Expect to pay $15-35 per pair, and expect them to wear out faster than heavier gloves.
MIG gloves split the difference between dexterity and heat protection. Medium-weight cowhide or pigskin leather with a cotton or foam lining handles MIG spatter and moderate heat while keeping enough finger feel to operate the gun trigger and adjust wire tension. A 4-5" gauntlet cuff protects the wrist. Price range is $15-40.
Stick gloves are built for maximum heat and spatter protection. Thick cowhide, elkskin, or deerskin with a long gauntlet cuff (6" or more) shields against heavy slag and sustained high temperatures. Stick welding throws more spatter and generates more radiant heat at the hands than any other process. Dexterity is less critical since you’re just holding an electrode holder. $20-50 per pair.
Goatskin is the go-to for TIG. Soft, thin, excellent dexterity. Moderate heat resistance.
Cowhide is the all-purpose leather. Tough, good heat resistance, moderate dexterity. Used in MIG and stick gloves.
Elkskin handles high heat better than cowhide and stays softer when hot. Premium stick and MIG glove material.
Pigskin is durable and breathable. Used in lighter-duty MIG gloves and general-purpose work gloves.
Reviews of welding gloves for each process, head-to-head brand comparisons, sizing guides, and tips on extending glove life.
Best heat-resistant welding gloves for overhead welding, preheat work, and heavy fabrication. Kevlar-lined and aluminized options from Tillman, BSX, and John Tillman.
Best MIG welding gloves reviewed. Tillman 50, Lincoln K2981, Miller 271329 compared for heat protection, dexterity, and durability on MIG welding applications.
Best stick welding gloves reviewed. Tillman 850, Lincoln K3109, Revco BSX stick gloves compared for heat resistance, gauntlet length, and slag protection.
Best TIG welding gloves reviewed. Tillman 24C, CK Worldwide, Weldas DEERSOsoft compared for dexterity, filler rod feel, and fingertip sensitivity.
Welding glove leather types compared: cowhide, elkskin, goatskin, deerskin, pigskin, and synthetic. Dexterity, heat resistance, durability, and cost per pair.
Tillman vs Lincoln welding gloves compared model by model for TIG, MIG, and stick. Price, durability, fit, and performance differences between the two top brands.