Both are "safety glass" but they behave very differently when they break, and they suit different priorities. Here's the distinction.
Toughened glass is heat-treated to be much stronger than ordinary glass, and when it does break it shatters into small blunt granules rather than sharp shards. It's the standard safety choice for doors and large panes.
Laminated glass bonds two panes around a plastic interlayer. When broken, the fragments stick to the interlayer rather than falling away, so the pane holds together. This adds security (harder to break through) and extra sound dampening.
Toughened is the everyday safety choice for doors and big windows. Laminated is preferred where security or sound matters more — ground-floor windows, road-facing rooms, or anywhere you want the glass to stay in place if struck.
Both are safety glass. Toughened breaks into blunt granules; laminated holds together around its interlayer. Laminated adds security and sound benefits; toughened is the standard strong, safe choice.
Laminated — because it holds together when struck, it's harder to break through, making it the better choice for ground-floor and vulnerable openings.
Laminated glass has a slight edge for sound dampening thanks to its interlayer.
Related guides covering this topic from other angles — different products, applications, or contexts.
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