
Premier Care Industries has wrapped construction on a new manufacturing campus in Arlington, Texas, setting the stage for a major expansion of its U.S. production footprint. The company is now running final equipment tests and process validation ahead of a planned commercial launch in the latter part of the third quarter of 2026. Once fully online, the site is intended to boost contract manufacturing capacity for wet wipes and other personal care formats serving retail and brand partners.
Campus capabilities and systems
According to Tissue Online North America, the Arlington campus is designed to produce flat packs, canisters, sachets, stand-up pouches and alcohol-based wet-wipe products. The facility also includes a purified-water treatment system and an automated distribution network. The outlet reports that Premier Care is wrapping up equipment testing, process validation and customer qualification work before scaling to commercial output.
Location and hiring
According to Premier Care, the new site is located at Cooper Commerce Center in Arlington. The company is already recruiting for the campus as it moves through commissioning and ramp-up.
Job postings on Premier Care list roles such as machine operator, compounder and blending operator, maintenance mechanic and multiple quality positions tied to the Arlington operation, suggesting staffing is ramping in parallel with technical startup.
Local economic impact
Per the Texas Economic Development & Tourism Office’s project list, the Arlington facility is recorded as a new operation with roughly $3.5 million in investment and about 150 jobs, underscoring the local economic impact of the project. The state entry classifies the development under NAICS code 3132 for wet-product manufacturing in Tarrant County.
Timeline and what is next
As reported by Tissue Online North America, Premier Care expects commercial production to begin in the latter part of the third quarter of 2026. The company also plans to add a liquid-fill manufacturing platform in the third quarter of 2027, expanding into liquid-infused personal care, household and beauty products.
Company representatives told the industry outlet that customer qualification runs will take place before any full-volume shipments and that commissioning work will continue through the late-summer window.
A growing manufacturing hub
Arlington has been actively courting industrial and logistics tenants, and several business parks have filled up as manufacturers continue to move into the Dallas-Fort Worth region. The Arlington Economic Development Corporation notes that Prologis’ Interchange 20 park reached full occupancy late last year, a data point officials like to highlight when making the case for the city’s distribution and logistics advantages.
Local leaders say the Premier Care investment fits neatly into a broader trend of reshoring and manufacturing growth across North Texas, adding another specialized production site to a region that is quickly becoming a magnet for modern industrial projects.









