ANZSIC subdivision

19 Polymer Product and Rubber Product Manufacturing

Subdivision page linking the underlying ANZSIC groups and classes for this part of the hierarchy.

Browse the next layer

Groups in Polymer Product and Rubber Product Manufacturing

Compare the industry groups below before you open a class page. This is the cleanest place to separate similar retail, service or production families without jumping too early to the final code.

Groups

What this subdivision covers

ANZSIC subdivision 19 is the middle layer between the broad division and the more specific groups. It is useful when you want to understand the section of the economy without jumping straight to the final class code.

This is also where confusion often appears. Similar business types can sit in nearby groups, so using the subdivision page first makes the boundary clearer before you narrow the match further.

Subdivision facts

Division
C Manufacturing
Groups
2
Classes
8

Class-level detail

Classes in Polymer Product and Rubber Product Manufacturing

These are the final four-digit ANZSIC class pages in this subdivision. Each card uses the official class-level description and primary activities already parsed from the ABS material.

Group 191

Polymer Product Manufacturing

7 class pages sit under this group.

1911 7 activities

Polymer Film and Sheet Packaging Material Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in manufacturing unsupported polymer film or polymer sheet into packaging materials.

  • Bag, plastic, manufacturing
  • Bag, sack or packet (plastic film or sheeting), manufacturing
  • Bubble packaging manufacturing
1912 26 activities

Rigid and Semi-Rigid Polymer Product Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in manufacturing rigid or semi-rigid polymer products.

  • Badge, plastic, manufacturing
  • Bathtub, plastic, manufacturing
  • Bottle, plastic, manufacturing
1913 7 activities

Polymer Foam Product Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in manufacturing polymer foam products.

  • Bicycle safety helmet manufacturing
  • Cooler and ice chest, polymeric foam, manufacturing
  • Cup, polymeric foam, manufacturing
1914 5 activities

Tyre Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in manufacturing tyres from synthetic polymers and/or natural rubber, tyre repair materials and inner tubes.

  • Aircraft tyre manufacturing
  • Inner tube manufacturing
  • Motor vehicle tyre manufacturing
1915 4 activities

Adhesive Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in the manufacture of glues, adhesives and other bonding materials of an organic nature.

  • Adhesive manufacturing
  • Casein glue manufacturing
  • Glue manufacturing
1916 21 activities

Paint and Coatings Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in mixing pigments, solvents and binders into paints and coatings.

  • Carbon ink manufacturing
  • Caulking compound manufacturing
  • Drawing ink manufacturing
1919 16 activities

Other Polymer Product Manufacturing

This class consists of units mainly engaged in manufacturing polymer composite products such as fibreglass products and resilient floor coverings, as well as other polymer products not elsewhere classified.

  • Awning, fibreglass, manufacturing
  • Conveyor belt, plastic or composite, manufacturing
  • Floor covering, resilient polymer, manufacturing

Group 192

Natural Rubber Product Manufacturing

1 class page sit under this group.

Frequently asked questions

What does subdivision 19 add?

Polymer Product and Rubber Product Manufacturing narrows the broad division into a more specific industry family. It is the level you use when you need more precision but are not yet at the final class.

Can I view the class pages directly from subdivision 19?

Yes. This page now shows both the groups and the class pages nested under them, so you can move straight to the final four-digit ANZSIC class when the subdivision is already correct.

Is the subdivision code the one used on forms?

Usually not. Most operational forms use the class-level code. The subdivision page is mainly for navigation and understanding the hierarchy.

How to use this page

If you know the division but not the exact group, this is the right stepping stone. It keeps the hierarchy readable and stops you from guessing the four-digit class too early.

For code selection work, move from subdivision to group and then confirm on the class page before you rely on the result for registration, reporting or taxonomy mapping.

Source and trust

Official source
ABS ANZSIC 2006 release
Last reviewed
2026-04-17

This site is an independent reference resource. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the ABS, ATO or any Australian Government agency.

Please verify critical classification decisions with the official authority before using them for tax, payroll, licensing, immigration or compliance work.

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