The delamination of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) in artificial joints is a major cause limiting the long-term clinical results of arthroplasty. However, the conventional test method using simple reciprocation to evaluate the delamination resistance of UHMWPE materials has insufficient detection sensitivity. To reproduce delamination, the unconformity contact must be maintained throughout the test so that the maximum stress is generated below the surface. Therefore, a test method that applies a U-shaped motion comprising two long-linear and one short linear sliding motion was developed. The sensitivity, robustness, and reproducibility of the U-shaped delamination test were investigated and compared with the traditional test method. The traditional test method could reproduce delamination only in materials that had degraded considerably, whereas the U-shaped delamination test could reproduce delamination in a wide range of materials, demonstrating its superior sensitivity. Additionally, using a higher load helped accelerate the test without affecting the test results. The optimal length of the short linear sliding motion was confirmed to be 1 mm. Finally, the inter-laboratory reproducibility of the U-shaped delamination test was confirmed using the round-robin test. The U-shaped delamination test demonstrates high sensitivity, robustness, and reproducibility and contributes to the selection and development of UHMWPE materials and artificial joints with a lower risk of delamination.