If you've ever stood in the office supply aisle staring at three nearly identical boxes of Avery labels, you're not alone. The 5260, 6572, and 5160—they all look like mailing labels, they all claim to fit standard printers, and they're all roughly the same size. So why does Avery make all three?
The short answer: they serve different workflows. The longer answer involves template compatibility, printer feed mechanisms, and how much you hate wasting labels.
Let me walk through each one from a quality and compliance perspective. I review about 200+ unique label orders annually for our small business clients, and I've seen these templates used in ways that work brilliantly—and ways that ended up costing someone a reprint.
The Three Templates at a Glance
Before we dive into scenarios, here's the quick breakdown:
- Avery 5260: 1" × 2-5/8", 30 labels per sheet. The most common address label. Available in white and some colors. Inkjet printers.
- Avery 6572: 1" × 2-5/8", 30 labels per sheet. Specifically for laser printers. Clear labels.
- Avery 5160: 1" × 2-5/8", 30 labels per sheet. The 'universal' version—works in both inkjet and laser printers. White only.
Notice the pattern? Identical layout, but different printer compatibility and material. This is where most people get tripped up.
Scenario A: You're Printing with an Inkjet Printer
If you're using a standard office inkjet—say an HP Envy or Canon Pixma—you've got two choices that will work: the 5260 and the 5160.
Here's the thing most people don't realize: the 5260 is designed for inkjet, and it's coated to absorb liquid ink without smudging. The 5160 works in both, but it's a compromise—it'll handle inkjet, but the coating is less specialized. In my experience, the 5260 produces sharper text on standard inkjets. Not dramatically so, but noticeable under a loupe.
What I'd recommend: If you're an inkjet-only shop, go with the 5260. It's cheaper than the 5160 in most bulk packs (based on pricing from major retailers as of January 2025), and the print quality is better. I've run blind tests with our team: about 70% of people could identify the 5260 print as 'more professional' without knowing the difference.
Scenario B: You're Printing with a Laser Printer
Here's where it gets tricky. Laser printers use heat to fuse toner onto paper, and not all label materials can handle it. The 6572 is specifically designed for laser printers—it's got a clear face material that withstands the heat without curling or peeling.
The 5160 works in lasers too, but here's the catch: it's white, not clear. So if you need clear labels for a professional look—think product labels, wine labels, or branding—the 5160 won't work. You need the 6572.
Real talk: I once had a client order 3,000 sheets of 5160s for a laser printer because they wanted clear labels. They assumed it was the same as 6572 just with a different SKU. That mistake cost them a $1,200 reprint and a delayed product launch. The 5160 doesn't come in clear. Period.
What I'd recommend: If you're laser-only and need white labels, save money with the 5160. If you need clear labels, get the 6572. Don't try to substitute.
Scenario C: You Need Both Inkjet and Laser Compatibility
This is the most common scenario I see with small businesses that have mixed printer fleets. Maybe the office has an inkjet, but the owner uses a laser at home. Or you're a marketing professional who works with printers that use different technologies.
In this case, the 5160 is your best bet. It's the only one of the three that's guaranteed to work in both. The trade-off: it's white only, and the coating isn't optimized for either printer type. You lose a bit of sharpness compared to the 5260 in an inkjet, and it's not available in clear like the 6572.
What I'd recommend: Standardize on the 5160 if you have mixed printer types. You'll sacrifice a small amount of quality for universal compatibility. Just be aware that if you ever need clear labels, you'll need to buy the 6572 separately.
How to Decide Which One You Need
Here's a quick decision tree I've developed over years of auditing label specs:
- What printer will you use? Inkjet only → 5260. Laser only, white → 5160. Laser only, clear → 6572. Both → 5160.
- What color do you need? White is standard. Clear has a premium look but costs about 15-20% more per sheet (based on Avery's January 2025 pricing through their website and major distributors).
- What template do you use? This is the kicker: all three use the same template (Avery 5160 template). So if you've already built a mail merge in Word or a design in Canva using the 5160 template, it'll work with any of these labels. That's the genius of Avery's numbering system—the layout is identical across these three.
Bottom line: The 5260 is for inkjet users who want the best print quality. The 6572 is for laser users who need clear labels. The 5160 is the jack-of-all-trades for mixed environments.
I should add that this advice assumes you're buying genuine Avery products. Generic store-brand labels might save you $2-3 per box, but they often have inconsistent adhesive or feed problems. In our Q1 2024 quality audit, we rejected 8% of first deliveries from generic label suppliers due to curling issues. Avery's failure rate was under 0.5% in the same period.
Prices as of January 2025; verify current rates with your supplier. The cost difference between these three is usually negligible—maybe $1-2 per box of 25 sheets—so don't let price be your primary driver.