Successful pallet shipping starts long before items are placed on a pallet — it begins with proper planning, the right materials, and adherence to proven best practices that protect your freight from origin to destination. Each step in the pallet preparation process, from selecting the appropriate pallet type to applying the final shipping label, directly impacts whether your shipment arrives intact and on time.
Investing time in proper pallet preparation reduces damage claims, minimizes returns, prevents costly carrier reclassification charges, and protects your business relationships with customers and carriers alike. This comprehensive guide covers every aspect of commercial pallet shipping preparation.
Determining Weight Capacity
Understanding pallet weight capacity requires knowledge of three distinct load ratings: static load (weight when stationary in storage, typically 5,000–7,500 lbs for standard wood pallets), dynamic load (weight during movement by forklift or pallet jack, usually 2,500–3,000 lbs), and racking load (weight when elevated in warehouse racking systems, generally 1,500–2,500 lbs).
Always calculate your total cargo weight including packaging materials and add a 20% safety margin to account for uneven weight distribution and handling stress. Never exceed the lowest capacity rating applicable to your operation.
| Pallet Type | Static Load Capacity | Dynamic Load Capacity | Racking Load Capacity | Typical Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Wood (Hardwood) | 5,000–7,500 lbs | 2,500–3,000 lbs | 1,500–2,500 lbs | General warehousing, retail distribution |
| Heavy-Duty Wood | 7,500–10,000 lbs | 4,000–4,600 lbs | 2,800–3,500 lbs | Heavy machinery, construction materials |
| Standard Plastic | 7,500–10,000 lbs | 2,500–5,000 lbs | 2,500–3,000 lbs | Food/beverage, pharmaceuticals |
| Heavy-Duty Plastic | 10,000–15,000 lbs | 5,000–7,500 lbs | 4,000–5,000 lbs | Bulk liquids, dense products, automotive |
| Metal | 10,000–20,000 lbs | 4,000–10,000 lbs | 6,000–10,000 lbs | Steel coils, machinery, extreme environments |
| Block Pallet (Wood) | 6,000–8,000 lbs | 2,800–3,500 lbs | 2,000–3,000 lbs | 4-way forklift access, export |
Individual Product Packing
Successful pallet shipping starts with how each individual product is packed. The integrity of your entire shipment depends on proper product-level preparation, as even the most expertly built pallet can fail if the boxes themselves are inadequately packed. Each box on your pallet will experience stacking pressure, vibration, and handling impacts throughout its journey.
Boxing and Packaging Materials
Corrugated boxes used for palletized freight should have an Edge Crush Test (ECT) rating appropriate for the stacking weight they'll endure — typically 32 ECT for light items (up to 65 lbs), 44 ECT for medium-weight goods (65–80 lbs), and 48 ECT or higher for heavy products exceeding 80 lbs. Double-wall boxes provide superior protection for fragile or high-value items.
| Product Type/Weight | Recommended Box Type | Cushioning Materials | Special Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light items (under 20 lbs) | 32 ECT single-wall | Kraft paper, air pillows | Ensure uniform box dimensions |
| Medium items (20–50 lbs) | 44 ECT single-wall | Bubble wrap (3/16"), foam sheets | Consider double-wall for fragile goods |
| Heavy items (50–80 lbs) | 48 ECT single-wall | Bubble wrap (1/2"), foam corners | Reinforce bottom with extra tape |
| Extra heavy (over 80 lbs) | 48 ECT double-wall or triple-wall | Dense foam, corrugated dividers | May require wooden crates |
| Fragile/High-value | 44–48 ECT double-wall | Multi-layer bubble wrap, foam-in-place | Label "Fragile" on all sides |
Securing Boxes with Tape
Use the H-taping method for maximum security: seal the center seam completely, then add perpendicular strips along each edge where the flaps meet the box sides. For boxes exceeding 50 lbs, apply at least two passes of tape on both top and bottom, extending tape 2–3 inches down the sides for additional reinforcement.
| Box Weight Range | Tape Type Required | Taping Pattern | Number of Passes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 20 lbs | 2.0 mil pressure-sensitive | H-tape method | 1 pass top/bottom |
| 20–50 lbs | 2.5 mil pressure-sensitive or water-activated | H-tape method | 2 passes bottom, 1 pass top |
| 50–80 lbs | 3.0 mil pressure-sensitive or water-activated | H-tape + edge reinforcement | 2–3 passes bottom, 2 passes top |
| Over 80 lbs | Water-activated tape (reinforced) | Full H-tape + corner strips | 3 passes bottom, 2 passes top |
Creating a Stable Foundation
The foundation layer is your pallet's most critical component — it bears the entire load weight and sets the stage for everything above it. Position your heaviest, largest, and most durable boxes on the bottom layer, ensuring they align flush with the pallet edges to maximize surface contact and weight distribution. The first layer should cover 100% of the pallet surface with minimal gaps between boxes.
| Element | Best Practice | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Box placement | Align edges with pallet edges | Maximizes stability and prevents overhang |
| Weight positioning | Heaviest items on bottom | Lowers center of gravity and prevents top-heavy loads |
| Surface coverage | 100% pallet surface covered | Distributes weight evenly across all pallet boards |
| Gap management | Minimize gaps between boxes | Prevents shifting during transport |
| Box orientation | Strongest side down | Ensures boxes can support weight above |
Weight Distribution Across Pallet
Proper weight distribution prevents pallet failure, product damage, and creates handling safety for everyone in the supply chain. The heaviest concentration of weight should be positioned in the center third of the pallet (40–50% of total weight), with progressively lighter items toward the edges and top.
| Pallet Zone | Maximum Weight Percentage | Placement Guidelines |
|---|---|---|
| Center third | 40–50% | Densest and heaviest items |
| Middle third | 30–35% | Medium-weight items |
| Outer third | 15–20% | Lighter items, avoid heavy concentration at edges |
| Top layer | Lightest items only | Never exceed 50% of bottom layer weight |
Stacking Techniques and Patterns
Column stacking aligns boxes in perfectly vertical columns, offering maximum load-bearing strength ideal for high-compression boxes. Brick pattern stacking offsets each layer by half a box width, providing superior lateral stability. For most LTL freight, brick pattern is preferred for its interlocking stability across the full pallet height.
Shrink Wrapping and Securing
Proper stretch wrapping requires anchoring the film to the pallet base with 2–3 rotations at the bottom, working upward in overlapping passes with 50% overlap between passes, and applying 3–4 complete layers for standard loads and 5–6 layers for heavy or irregularly shaped freight. The key performance specification for hand stretch film is gauge — 80-gauge (20 micron) for standard loads and 100-gauge for heavier applications.
For heavy pallets or tall loads, polypropylene strapping bands provide supplemental security beyond stretch film. Apply two bands lengthwise and two bands widthwise, buckled tight enough to feel firm but not so tight that they crush corrugated box corners. Corner protectors under the strapping prevent indentation damage to box edges.
Labeling and Documentation
Every LTL pallet requires accurate shipping labels on at least two sides, displaying the complete origin and destination addresses, shipper and consignee names, carrier-assigned PRO number, weight, freight class, and piece count. Ensure labels are printed clearly and applied smoothly without wrinkles or bubbles that might cause barcode scanning failures at carrier terminals.
Maintain one copy of the bill of lading with the shipment (attached to the pallet or given to the driver) and retain additional copies in your records for at least 5 years. For high-value shipments, photograph the completed pallet from all four sides before carrier pickup — this documentation is invaluable for freight claims.
Freight Classification (NMFC)
National Motor Freight Classification (NMFC) assigns LTL freight to classes 50 through 500 based primarily on density, stowability, ease of handling, and liability. Correctly classifying your freight is critical because misclassification leads to carrier-assessed correction charges that can add $100–$500 per shipment.
To calculate density for classification purposes: weigh the complete packaged pallet, measure its length × width × height in inches, divide by 1,728 to convert to cubic feet, then divide weight by cubic feet to get pounds per cubic foot (PCF). Higher PCF = lower class = lower rate. Proper packaging that increases density — filling voids, using uniform box sizes — can often reduce your freight class.
| Density (lbs/cubic ft) | Freight Class | Example Commodities |
|---|---|---|
| 50+ lbs/ft³ | Class 50 | Heavy steel, dense machinery, bricks |
| 35–50 lbs/ft³ | Class 55 | Auto parts, tools, cast iron cookware |
| 22.5–30 lbs/ft³ | Class 70 | Appliances, industrial equipment |
| 15–22.5 lbs/ft³ | Class 85 | Electronics, small appliances |
| 10.5–12 lbs/ft³ | Class 100 | Computer equipment, wine |
| 6–7 lbs/ft³ | Class 150 | Auto sheet metal, furniture parts |
| Under 1 lbs/ft³ | Class 500 | Bags of gold dust, ping pong balls |