Rigid Flex PCB Design Guide — Bend Radius, Stackup and DFM Rules

Rigid-flex PCB failures almost always trace back to one of three design errors: insufficient bend radius, incorrect trace routing in the flex zone, or a stackup that the manufacturer cannot build as drawn. This guide covers the practical design rules for rigid-flex PCB — bend radius calculation, layer stackup, coverlay vs soldermask, trace routing in the bend zone, and a DFM checklist to submit with your Gerbers.

Table of Contents

Rigid-Flex vs FPC — Choosing the Right Structure

Before designing the stackup, confirm whether you need rigid-flex or FPC. FPC (flexible PCB) replaces cables between two separate rigid PCBs — the rigid boards are separate assemblies. Rigid-flex combines rigid and flexible sections in a single board, eliminating connectors and improving reliability in high-vibration environments. The choice affects cost, assembly process and reliability — see rigid flex PCB manufacturer for a full comparison.

Bend Radius RulesRigid flex PCB bend radius diagram showing minimum bend radius calculation and trace routing perpendicular to bend axis

Flex ThicknessCopper WeightMin Bend Radius (Static)Min Bend Radius (Dynamic)
0.05mm (1-layer)0.5oz0.3mm (6×)0.5mm (10×)
0.1mm (1-layer)1oz0.6mm (6×)1.0mm (10×)
0.15mm (2-layer)1oz0.9mm (6×)1.5mm (10×)
0.2mm (2-layer)1oz1.2mm (6×)2.0mm (10×)
0.3mm (3-layer)1oz1.8mm (6×)3.0mm (10×)

Static vs dynamic bending

Static bending means the flex section is bent once during assembly and remains in a fixed position. Dynamic bending means the flex section bends repeatedly during the product’s life — hinge applications, cable replacement where repeated flexing occurs. Dynamic applications require a larger minimum bend radius (10× flex thickness vs 6× for static) and should use rolled-annealed (RA) copper rather than electrodeposited (ED) copper for fatigue resistance.

How to measure bend radius

Bend radius is measured from the neutral axis of the flex section to the inner surface of the bend — not the outer surface. For a flex section with thickness T, bending it around a radius R produces a strain on the outer copper of approximately T/(2R). At the minimum bend radius of 6×T, outer surface strain is approximately 8.3% — within the fatigue limit for ED copper in static applications.

Layer Stackup for Rigid-FlexRigid flex PCB layer stackup cross section showing rigid FR4 sections flex polyimide layers coverlay and adhesive transitions

Rigid section stackup

The rigid sections use standard FR4 or high-Tg FR4 construction — copper layers, prepreg, core, soldermask. For rigid-flex with RF content on the rigid sections, Rogers or PTFE materials can be used in the rigid sections with polyimide flex layers bonded using Rogers 4450F bondply.

Flex section stackup

The flex sections use polyimide (PI) substrate with adhesive-bonded copper foil or direct-bond copper. Coverlay (PI film + adhesive) replaces soldermask on the flex sections — soldermask is too rigid for reliable flex applications and will crack on bending. Coverlay openings must clear pad edges by at least 0.3mm.

Transition zone

The transition between rigid and flex sections is a critical stress concentration point. Key rules: do not terminate all layers at the same point (stagger layer drop-offs), add copper relief at the transition, and ensure the first bend starts at least 0.5mm from the rigid-flex boundary.

Trace Routing in the Flex Zone

  • Route traces perpendicular to the bend axis — never parallel. Parallel traces experience maximum stress during bending.
  • Avoid 45° or curved routing in the bend zone — use straight perpendicular traces only
  • Increase trace width by 20–30% in the bend zone to reduce current density and stress
  • No vias in the bend zone — vias are rigid stress concentrators and will crack under repeated bending
  • Use hatched/mesh copper fills in the bend zone — solid copper fills prevent flexing and cause cracking
  • Add teardrop reliefs at trace entry into pads near the flex zone

Coverlay vs Soldermask

Soldermask is a rigid epoxy — it cracks on bending and is not acceptable for the flex sections of a rigid-flex design. Coverlay (polyimide film + adhesive) is flexible and is the standard protective coating for flex sections. Soldermask is used on the rigid sections only. Some manufacturers use flexible soldermask on flex sections as a cost reduction — this is generally not acceptable for dynamic bend applications or IPC Class 3.

DFM Checklist for Rigid-Flex

DFM Check ItemRule / Requirement
Bend radiusMin 6× flex thickness (static), 10× (dynamic) — confirm in DFM review
Trace routing in bend zoneRoute perpendicular to bend axis — never parallel. No vias in bend zone.
Trace width in bend zoneIncrease trace width by 20–30% in bend area to reduce stress concentration
Copper pour in bend zoneAvoid solid copper fills — use hatched/mesh copper only
Layer transition at rigid-flex boundaryStagger layer transitions — do not terminate all layers at same point
Stiffener placementFR4 or PI stiffener on connector pads — specify thickness and placement in drawing
Coverlay openingCoverlay opening ≥0.3mm from pad edge — confirm with manufacturer
Strain reliefAdd teardrop at trace entry into pad in flex zone
Via placementNo vias within 0.5mm of rigid-flex transition boundary
Bend zone markingMark bend zone clearly on fabrication drawing — centerline and direction

Files Required for Rigid-Flex Quote

  • Gerber files for all layers — clearly labeled (rigid copper layers, flex copper layers)
  • NC drill file
  • Layer stackup drawing — mark rigid sections, flex sections, transition zones, coverlay openings
  • Bend zone drawing — mark bend axis, bend radius, static or dynamic use
  • Stiffener drawing — location, material (FR4 / PI / steel), thickness
  • IPC Class and certification requirements (ISO13485 / IATF16949 if applicable)

Frequently Asked Questions — Rigid Flex PCB Design

What is the minimum bend radius for rigid-flex PCB?
The minimum bend radius is 6× the total flex thickness for static applications and 10× for dynamic (repeated bending) applications. A 0.1mm single-layer flex section requires minimum 0.6mm bend radius for static use and 1.0mm for dynamic use.
Can soldermask be used on rigid-flex PCB flex sections?
No — soldermask is a rigid epoxy that cracks under bending. Coverlay (polyimide film + adhesive) is the correct protective coating for flex sections. Soldermask is only used on the rigid sections of a rigid-flex PCB.
Can vias be placed in the flex zone?
No — vias should not be placed in the bend zone. Vias are rigid structures that concentrate stress during bending and will crack under repeated flexing. Place vias only in rigid sections, at least 0.5mm from the rigid-flex transition boundary.
How should traces be routed in the flex zone?
Traces in the flex zone should be routed perpendicular to the bend axis — never parallel. Trace width should be increased by 20-30% in the bend zone, and solid copper fills replaced with hatched copper mesh.
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