Your silicone mold looks cured, but the surface is still sticky, tacky or oily. Does it mean the silicone is defective?
Not always.
Before changing supplier or testing another random sample, first check where and how the mold is sticky:
- Is only the surface tacky?
- Is the whole rubber body soft?
- Does the mold feel oily?
- Is only the side touching the master model sticky?
- Did the mold become sticky only after several castings?
These situations have different causes. A sticky silicone mold may come from wrong mixing ratio, poor mixing, low temperature, platinum cure inhibition, incompatible release agent, surface contamination or chemical attack from the casting material.
This guide helps you diagnose the real cause and decide whether the mold can be fixed, or whether you should choose a different RTV-2 silikon grade next time.
Quick Answer: What Type of Sticky Silicone Mold Do You Have?
The most important point is this:
If the silicone cured normally in the mixing cup but became sticky only on the model surface, the problem is usually not the silicone batch itself. It is more likely surface inhibition, contamination or release agent incompatibility.
| Sticky Type | What It Usually Means | First Thing to Check |
| Surface tackiness only | Surface inhibition, release agent issue, coating residue or incomplete surface cure | Master model surface and release agent |
| Whole mold is soft or weak | Wrong ratio, poor mixing, low temperature or expired material | Mix ratio, mixing method and room temperature |
| Local sticky spots | Poor mixing, unmixed material or local contamination | Container wall, bottom mixing and tools |
| Oily surface | Incorrect ratio, excess catalyst, contamination or unsuitable grade | Catalyst ratio, storage and TDS |
| Sticky only where it touched the model | Cure inhibition or contaminated model surface | Model material, coating, paint or 3D resin |
| Sticky after repeated casting | Chemical attack from resin, PU, solvent, wax or cleaning agent | Casting material compatibility |

Can a Sticky Silicone Mold Be Fixed?
This is the question most buyers care about first.
| Situation | Can It Be Fixed? | What to Do |
| Slight tackiness caused by low temperature | Sometimes yes | Extend curing time or cure at warmer temperature |
| Surface tack caused by release agent residue | Bazen | Clean the surface carefully and test again |
| Platinum cure inhibition on model surface | Usually difficult | Use barrier coating or change surface preparation next time |
| Wrong mixing ratio | Usually no | Remake the mold with correct ratio |
| Poor mixing with local sticky spots | Usually no | Remake the mold or cut away affected area if possible |
| Oily surface from excess catalyst or contamination | Usually difficult | Check ratio, tools and material storage before next batch |
| Mold becomes sticky after resin or PU casting | Usually no | Choose a more suitable silicone grade for that casting material |
If the mold is sticky because it was not fully cured due to low temperature, it may improve with more time and warmer conditions.
If the problem is wrong ratio, poor mixing or cure inhibition, the mold is usually difficult to recover.
1. Surface Tackiness: The Mold Looks Cured, But the Surface Feels Sticky
Surface tackiness means the silicone body may be cured, but the surface still feels sticky or slightly wet.
Common causes include:
- incompatible release agent
- solvent not fully evaporated
- uncured paint or coating on the master model
- dust, oil or grease on the model surface
- platinum cure inhibition
- not enough curing time under low temperature
| Symptom | Possible Cause | What to Do Next |
| Surface feels tacky but mold body is elastic | Surface contamination or release agent issue | Test on a clean surface |
| Only the contact side is sticky | Model surface inhibition | Check model material and coating |
| Surface tack is light and uniform | Low temperature or insufficient cure time | Extend cure time or warm the mold |
| Sticky patches appear randomly | Uneven release agent or contamination | Clean model and tools before retesting |
How to avoid it next time
Do a small surface test before making the full mold. Apply a small amount of mixed silicone on the master model and check whether it cures properly.
This is especially important for platinum cure silicone.
2. Whole Mold Is Soft: This Is Usually a Curing Problem
If the entire mold is soft, weak or gummy, the issue is usually not just surface tackiness. It is more likely incomplete curing.
Common causes include:
- wrong mixing ratio
- poor mixing
- too little catalyst
- low room temperature
- expired catalyst or poorly stored material
- wrong Part A / Part B ratio
- using components from different suppliers
| Cause | What Usually Happens |
| Too little catalyst | Slow cure, soft rubber, sticky mold |
| Wrong Part A / Part B ratio | Weak or incomplete cure |
| Poor mixing | Local soft spots or uneven hardness |
| Low temperature | Cure time becomes much longer |
| Expired catalyst | Unstable or incomplete cure |
How to avoid it next time
Weigh both parts accurately according to the TDS. Do not estimate by eye. Scrape the sidewall and bottom of the container during mixing.
For important molds, use the double-cup method:
Mix once → transfer to a clean cup → mix again → pour.
This reduces the risk of unmixed silicone staying on the container wall.

3. Oily Silicone Mold Surface: Not Always the Same as Sticky
Some customers describe the mold as “sticky”, but the actual feeling is oily or greasy. This is different from simple surface tack.
An oily surface may be related to:
- incorrect catalyst ratio
- excessive catalyst in tin cure silicone
- poor material storage
- contamination from tools or containers
- incompatible release agent
- interaction with resin, PU or solvent
- unsuitable silicone grade for the casting material
| Oily Mold Situation | Possible Reason |
| Oily feel immediately after curing | Wrong ratio, excess catalyst or contamination |
| Oily feel after several uses | Casting material attack or release agent buildup |
| Oily surface with weak rubber | Incorrect ratio or unsuitable grade |
| Oily surface only after resin casting | Resin compatibility issue |
Can an oily mold be saved?
Usually it is difficult. If the oily feel comes from incorrect ratio, contamination or casting material attack, the mold may not return to normal performance.
The better solution is to identify the cause and choose the right silicone grade before the next mold is made.
4. Sticky Only on the Master Model Side: Check Cure Inhibition
If the silicone cures in the mixing cup but stays sticky only where it touches the master model, the most likely reason is cure inhibition or surface contamination.
This is especially common with plati̇n kürlü si̇li̇kon.
Platinum cure silicone may be inhibited by:
- some 3D printing resins
- sulfur-containing clay
- latex rubber
- amine-containing materials
- certain paints or coatings
- some adhesives
- tin cure silicone residue
- incompatible release agents
- oil, solvent or uncured coating on the model surface
| What You See | What It Usually Means |
| Cup cures, model surface sticky | Surface inhibition |
| Only contact surface does not cure | Incompatible model material |
| Platinum silicone sticky on 3D print | Resin inhibition |
| Sticky only in some model areas | Local contamination or uneven coating |
How to avoid it next time
Before making the full mold, test a small amount of silicone directly on the model surface.
If inhibition happens, consider:
- cleaning the model surface
- using a compatible barrier coating
- changing release agent
- allowing paint or coating to fully dry
- using another master material
- choosing tin cure silicone if the application allows

5. Local Sticky Spots: Often Caused by Poor Mixing
If only corners, edges, bottom areas or random patches are sticky, poor mixing is one of the most common causes.
Even when the total ratio is correct, unmixed material on the container wall or bottom can create sticky areas.
Common signs include:
- sticky bottom layer
- soft corners
- streaks in the silicone
- uneven hardness
- random tacky patches
- one side cures better than another side
How to avoid it next time
Mix slowly but thoroughly. Scrape the wall and bottom of the mixing container. Avoid pouring unmixed material from the edge of the cup into the mold.
For larger batches, train operators to follow a fixed mixing time and method.
6. Sticky After Several Castings: This May Be Material Attack
If the mold was not sticky after curing but became sticky after several castings, the problem is usually not curing failure.
It may be caused by chemical attack or compatibility problems with the casting material.
| Casting Material | Possible Effect on Mold |
| Aggressive resin | Surface tackiness, swelling, shorter mold life |
| PU casting material | Surface degradation or mold wear |
| Solvent-containing material | Softening or sticky surface |
| Wax casting | Heat and repeated demolding stress |
| Concrete or gypsum | Abrasion, moisture and surface wear |
| Strong cleaning agent | Surface damage or tackiness |
This is a very important difference:
Sticky immediately after curing = usually curing, inhibition or operation issue. Sticky after repeated casting = usually material compatibility or mold life issue.
How to avoid it next time
Tell your silicone supplier the casting material before sampling. A grade that works for soap or candle molds may not be suitable for PU casting, aggressive resin or high-frequency production.

7. Low Temperature: The Mold May Just Need More Time
Sometimes the silicone mold is not defective. It simply needs more time to fully cure.
This often happens when:
- workshop temperature is below 15°C
- the mold is thick
- the catalyst system is slow
- the silicone has long pot life
- the mold is checked too early
- the TDS cure time is based on 23–25°C but the actual workshop is much colder
| Temperature Condition | Possible Result |
| Below 15°C | Cure becomes much slower |
| 20–25°C | Normal testing condition |
| Above 30°C | Pot life becomes shorter and cure becomes faster |
How to avoid it next time
When comparing samples from different suppliers, test them under the same temperature, same ratio and same mold condition. Otherwise, the comparison may be misleading.
Three Simple Tests Before You Remake the Mold
Before throwing away the material or changing supplier, do these three checks.
Test 1: Cup Test
Mix a small amount of silicone in a clean cup according to the TDS.
| Result | Meaning |
| Cures normally in cup | Silicone itself can cure |
| Stays sticky in cup | Check ratio, catalyst, temperature or material condition |
| Cures slowly | Check room temperature and catalyst speed |
Test 2: Surface Test
Apply a small amount of mixed silicone on the master model surface.
| Result | Meaning |
| Cup cures, model surface sticky | Surface inhibition or contamination |
| Both cure normally | Full mold making can continue |
| Only some areas sticky | Local contamination or uneven release agent |
Test 3: Casting Compatibility Check
If the mold becomes sticky after several castings, test the silicone with your actual casting material before bulk production.
| Result | Meaning |
| Mold surface stays normal | Material compatibility is likely acceptable |
| Mold becomes sticky or swollen | Need a more suitable silicone grade |
| Mold tears or wears quickly | Need better tear strength or hardness selection |
How to Choose the Right Silicone After a Sticky Mold Problem
Do not choose silicone only by price or hardness. The correct cure system and grade depend on the real cause of the sticky mold.
| Your Situation | Better Direction |
| General craft, soap or candle molds | Tin cure silicone is usually practical |
| Sticky on 3D printed master | Test platinum cure inhibition first |
| Food contact molds | Platinum cure silicone with suitable compliance |
| Resin molds with sticky surface after use | Check resin compatibility and mold life |
| PU casting molds | Consider platinum cure or higher-performance grade |
| Large gypsum or concrete molds | Tin cure with suitable Shore A and tear strength |
| Alttan kesimli detaylı kalıplar | Softer silicone with good tear resistance |
| Mold sticky due to low temperature | Adjust catalyst speed or curing condition |
The best solution is not always “try a harder silicone” or “add more catalyst”. The real solution is to match cure system + hardness + viscosity + pot life + casting material compatibility.
Tin Cure or Platinum Cure: Which One Is Better for Sticky Mold Problems?
| Gereksinim | Kalay Kür Silikon | Platin Kür Silikon |
| Genel kalıp yapımı | Good choice | Also possible |
| Lower cost | Daha iyi | Daha yüksek maliyet |
| Less sensitive to inhibition | Genellikle daha kolay | More sensitive |
| Food-grade mold | Usually not preferred | Better if certified |
| Low shrinkage | Orta | Daha iyi |
| 3D printed master model | Often more forgiving | Must test first |
| PU or wax casting | Mümkün | Often better |
| Large concrete molds | Commonly used | Usually not necessary |
If the sticky problem comes from platinum cure inhibition and your application does not require food-grade performance, low shrinkage or high precision, tin cure silicone may be a more forgiving choice.
If your application requires food contact, PU casting, wax casting, precision reproduction or low shrinkage, platinum cure silicone may still be the better choice, but surface testing is necessary.
How Topsil Diagnoses Sticky Silicone Mold Problems
Topsil Silicone is a China RTV-2 silicone rubber manufacturer with 15+ years of production and application experience.
When a customer says, “My silicone mold is sticky after curing,” we do not immediately judge the silicone as defective or send a random replacement grade.
We usually ask one question first:
Did the silicone cure normally in the mixing cup?
If the cup sample cures normally, we then check the master model, release agent, coating, 3D resin, surface contamination and casting material.
If the cup sample also stays sticky, we check the mix ratio, catalyst, temperature, shelf life, storage condition and mixing method.
If the mold was fine at first but became sticky after several castings, we check the casting material compatibility and whether a more suitable silicone grade is needed.
This process helps avoid unnecessary sample testing and helps buyers choose the right RTV-2 silicone more efficiently.
What to Send Us for Silicone Grade Recommendation
If your silicone mold remains sticky, tacky or oily after curing, please send us the following details:
| Information | Why We Need It |
| Photos or videos of the sticky mold | To identify surface tack, soft body, oily feel or local sticky spots |
| Cup test result | To check whether the silicone itself can cure |
| Current silicone TDS | To compare hardness, viscosity, pot life and cure time |
| Cure system | Tin cure and platinum cure have different risks |
| Mix ratio | Wrong ratio is a common cause |
| Room temperature | Low temperature slows curing |
| Master model material | Helps check inhibition risk |
| Release agent, coating or paint used | May cause surface tackiness |
| Döküm malzemesi | Resin, PU, wax, gypsum, concrete or food material |
| When the stickiness appeared | Immediately after curing or after repeated casting |
| Annual consumption | Helps recommend suitable sample and supply solution |
These details help us recommend a suitable RTV-2 silicone grade instead of sending a random sample.
SSS
Why is my silicone mold sticky after curing?
A silicone mold may be sticky after curing because of wrong mixing ratio, poor mixing, low temperature, surface inhibition, incompatible release agent, contamination or wrong silicone grade.
Why is only the surface of my silicone mold sticky?
Surface tackiness is usually related to the master model surface, release agent, coating, paint, solvent residue or platinum cure inhibition.
Why does my silicone cure in the cup but stay sticky on the model?
This usually means the silicone itself can cure, but the model surface is inhibiting or contaminating the cure. This is common with platinum cure silicone on some 3D printed resins, sulfur clay, latex, coatings or incompatible release agents.
Can a sticky silicone mold be fixed?
Sometimes. If the issue is low temperature or insufficient curing time, longer curing or warmer conditions may help. If the cause is wrong ratio, poor mixing, cure inhibition or chemical attack, the mold is usually difficult to recover.
Why did my mold become sticky after several castings?
If the mold was normal after curing but became sticky after repeated resin, PU, wax or solvent exposure, the problem is usually material compatibility or chemical attack, not initial curing failure.
It depends on the cause. Tin cure silicone is often easier for general mold making and less sensitive to inhibition. Platinum cure silicone is better for food molds, precision molds, PU casting and low-shrinkage applications, but it requires surface compatibility testing.