Bounty paper towels are primarily made in several large Procter & Gamble plants in the United States, not in a single factory or in China.

Main manufacturing locations

These P&G mills are specifically mentioned as producing Bounty paper towels:

  • Mehoopany, Pennsylvania – A major P&G paper mill that makes Bounty paper towels, Bounty napkins, Charmin toilet paper, and some diaper products.
  • Box Elder (Bear River City), Utah – P&G’s newer U.S. manufacturing site that produces Bounty paper towels and Charmin toilet paper for the western U.S. region.
  • Green Bay, Wisconsin – A P&G plant in a major paper‑making corridor that produces Bounty paper towels along with Charmin and Puffs.
  • Albany, Georgia – Another P&G paper plant that makes Bounty paper towels and Charmin toilet paper.
  • Oxnard, California – A P&G paper products plant in Southern California that produces Bounty paper towels and Charmin toilet paper.

All of these are Procter & Gamble facilities in the United States , and Bounty is described as being “primarily produced in the United States” by P&G.

Quick FAQ style notes

  • Are Bounty paper towels made in China?
    No—consumer information sources describing Bounty’s origin say it is primarily produced in the U.S. by Procter & Gamble.
  • Why do people ask “where are Bounty paper towels made”?
    Recent online guides and Q&As specifically address whether Bounty is made in China and emphasize its U.S. manufacturing base, which has turned this into a small “trending” shopper question, especially after supply‑chain issues in the early 2020s.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.