Unpunched Binding Paper

Discover premium unpunched half-size binding paper at MyBinding.com, perfect for customizing your documents with any punching pattern you prefer. Ideal for offices, schools, and print shops, this versatile paper comes in multiple weights, 20 lb, 24 lb, 28 lb, and 32 lb, ensuring the right thickness and durability for presentations, reports, and manuals. Whether you need a small pack or bulk quantities of 250, 500, 1250, or 5000 sheets, our selection accommodates every project size and budget. Unpunched paper allows you to maintain flexibility by using your own binding machine, making it a practical choice for businesses and individuals who require tailored binding solutions. Shop with confidence at MyBinding.com, where competitive prices, fast shipping, and exceptional customer service make it easy to get the high-quality binding supplies you need to keep your documents professional and organized.

Unpunched Binding Paper

Discover premium unpunched half-size binding paper at MyBinding.com, perfect for customizing your documents with any punching pattern you prefer. Ideal for offices, schools, and print shops, this versatile paper comes in multiple weights, 20 lb,...

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features

  • Premium 20lb - 32lb bond weight for durability and a professional feel
  • Versatile unpunched design accommodates various binding methods
  • Perfect for quick turnaround projects like reports and presentations
  • Ensures smooth operation in printers and copiers without sticking
Starting at $19.19

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Frequently Asked Questions

All of them, really, since the punching happens after you've got the paper, not before. That's the whole appeal if your office runs a few different binding styles, comb, coil, wire, ProClick, on the same stock without needing a separate pre-punched version for each one. It also works well if you're punching a custom hole pattern yourself that isn't sold pre-punched. The catch is you need punching equipment on hand, so this makes the most sense when you've already got that step covered and want the flexibility to switch styles project to project.

20lb is your everyday workhorse, light, cheap, fine for reports that won't get handled much. Step up to 24lb or 28lb and you get noticeably more body, a little more premium feel, good for anything getting passed around a table. 32lb is as heavy as this range goes and it's really built for covers or dividers, anything that needs to take more wear than the pages behind it. A lot of people mix it up, lighter weight for the body pages, heavier for the dividers, which works well in practice. If color is part of the plan alongside weight, the broader unpunched paper range covers other sizes and shades worth comparing.

Pre-punched saves you a step, sure, but it locks you into one hole pattern, and that's a problem the moment you switch machines or need a pattern that isn't common. Unpunched keeps that decision open until you're actually ready to bind, so the same stock works no matter what project comes up next. If you already know exactly what pattern you need every time, pre-punched binding paper will just save you the extra step. Staying unpunched only makes sense if you've got a punch on hand already.

Half size jobs usually burn through fewer sheets per document than full size ones, so smaller increments, 250 or 500 sheets, keep you from sitting on paper you won't use before your preferences change. If it's a recurring project with steady volume though, buying bulk brings your per sheet cost down noticeably, so it's worth running the numbers on your annual usage before deciding. If you're trying a new weight for the first time, grab the smallest quantity available and test it on your printer before committing to a bigger order.

Most machines handle half size sheets just fine, but double check your tray settings first, since half size sometimes needs a different tray or a manual feed setting compared to standard letter paper. Since it's unpunched, there's zero risk of jamming on holes the way some pre-punched paper can. If you're printing double sided, make sure your duplex settings are actually calibrated for the smaller sheet, misalignment shows up more on half size pages than full size ones. For other sizes and weights, the general binding paper range covers a lot more ground.