# The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story

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**Source:** teas.co.uk, UK tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent

## Summary

PG Tips introduced the pyramid bag in 1996 to give leaf more room to unfurl; modest brewing improvement, plastic-free since 2018, copied by most premium UK brands.

## Description

The PG Tips pyramid bag, in summary: PG Tips introduced the pyramid bag in 1996 to give leaf more room to unfurl; modest brewing improvement, plastic-free since 2018, copied by most.

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/pg-tips-pyramid-bag-story/
Our PG Tips deep dive covers the brand; the pyramid bag is a story in itself, and a neat lesson in how packaging changes a cup.
Last reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in April 2026.
Why a pyramid at all

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PG Tips launched the pyramid bag in 1996. The pitch was simple and, unusually for packaging marketing, largely true: a three dimensional pyramid gives the leaves more room to move and unfurl than a flat, pressed rectangular bag, behaving a little more like loose leaf in a pot. More room for water to circulate through the leaf means faster, fuller extraction, which on a robust everyday blend translates to a brisker, stronger cup in the time most people actually brew.
Does it genuinely make better tea

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Within limits, yes, and for a defined reason. A flat bag crammed with fine, fast infusing dust can stew and taste one note; a roomier pyramid with slightly larger particles extracts more evenly and gives the blend somewhere to breathe. It is not loose leaf in a pot, and it will not turn a cheap blend into a fine single estate, but as a modest engineering tweak to mass market tea it does what it claims. The bigger lever is still brew time and water off the boil, the universal point in our common brewing mistakes guide.
The controversy

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Early pyramid bags were made with a small amount of plastic (polypropylene) in the mesh to heat seal the corners, something true of many teabags across the industry, not just PG Tips. As awareness of plastic in teabags grew, this became a flashpoint, and PG Tips publicly committed to and rolled out plant based, biodegradable pyramid bags, part of a wider industry shift. It is a useful case study in how a design win can become a sustainability problem and then a sustainability commitment, and it connects to our plastic in teabags note.
Why it mattered commercially
The pyramid gave PG Tips a visible, ownable point of difference in a category where most bags look identical, and it pushed competitors to rethink bag design too. Decades on, the pyramid is so associated with the brand that it functions as packaging and brand identity at once, the same way the Tetley round bag or the Teapigs "tea temple" do for their owners, which our Teapigs deep dive picks up.
the pyramid bag story at a glance

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/pg-tips-pyramid-bag-story/
ElementNoteIntroduced1996 by PG Tips (then a Unilever brand)Why the shapeAbout 50% more room for leaf to unfurl during steepThe marketing claim"Like an extra-mini teapot in your cup"Does it work?Yes, modestly; the bigger volume genuinely improves brewingThe material controversyOriginal pyramid bags used heat-sealable polypropylene (plastic)Plant-based switch2018 PG Tips moved to a fully biodegradable cornstarch-based bagFollowersMost premium UK black-tea brands now offer a pyramid formatCommercial impactHelped PG Tips defend market share against Tetley and Yorkshire Tea
Related on the wiki: Tea Bag Brewing Tips, Plastic in Tea Bags, PG Tips deep dive.
Reference noted

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Reference noted, The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/pg-tips-pyramid-bag-story/

EFSA Scientific Opinion on the Safety of Caffeine (2015)

The bottom line on the pyramid bag

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The pyramid bag is a rare example of packaging marketing that is mostly substance: more space, better circulation, a fuller everyday brew, later cleaned up on the plastic question. It will not out brew a careful pot of good loose leaf, but for the speed and convenience job it is built for, the shape genuinely earns its place. From the curatorteas · Per-cup price is the only price that matters. Loose leaf usually wins; supermarket bags sometimes do too. 
Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/pg-tips-pyramid-bag-story/
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