What Sizes Do Used Bulk Bags Come In?

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“What sizes do used bulk bags come in?”

This sounds like a simple question… until you realize used bulk bags are not like buying new bags off a catalog page where everything is neat, standardized, and made-to-order.

Used bags are the wild west.

They come from real industrial use, which means:

  • sizes vary,

  • heights vary,

  • construction varies,

  • and the same “size” can show up with different fill capacities depending on fabric type, baffles, and how it was used.

So the right way to answer this question is:

  1. What size categories exist in the used bulk bag market?

  2. What are the most common “standard” sizes you’ll see?

  3. How do you match bag size to your product and handling needs?

  4. What should you verify before buying used bags by size?

Let’s go.

First: Used Bulk Bag Sizes Are Usually Described by 3 Numbers

Most bulk bags are described like this:

Length x Width x Height (in inches)

Example:
35” x 35” x 50”

That means:

  • the base is about 35 by 35,

  • the height is about 50.

Sometimes sellers will shorten it and just say:

  • “35x35x50”

  • “36x36x60”

  • “Super Sack size 35 cube”

  • “1 yard bag”

  • “2 yard bag”

But the real-world way to make sure you’re talking about the same bag is always:
L x W x H.

Second: Used Bulk Bag Sizes Fall Into Common “Families”

Even though used bags vary, they cluster into predictable families.

Family 1: “Small / Compact” Bulk Bags

These are used when:

  • product is dense and heavy (so you don’t need huge volume),

  • space is tight,

  • forklift handling needs compact footprints.

Typical base sizes:

  • 30” x 30”

  • 32” x 32”

  • 33” x 33”

Typical heights:

  • 30” to 45”

Common examples you might see:

  • 30x30x30

  • 32x32x36

  • 33x33x42

These are less common than the “standard workhorse” sizes, but they show up in dense material industries.

Family 2: The “Workhorse Standard” Sizes (Most Common)

These are the sizes you’ll see over and over in the used market.

Typical base sizes:

  • 35” x 35”

  • 36” x 36”

  • 37” x 37”

  • 39” x 39”

  • 41” x 41”

  • 42” x 42”

Typical heights:

  • 45” to 60”

Common examples:

  • 35x35x50

  • 36x36x60

  • 37x37x55

  • 39x39x48

  • 41x41x51

  • 42x42x60

These are popular because:

  • they stack well,

  • fit common pallet footprints,

  • and suit a wide range of products.

If someone says “used bulk bags,” odds are you’re looking at something in this family.

Family 3: “Large / High-Cube” Bulk Bags

These are taller and hold more volume.

Typical bases:

  • 41” x 41”

  • 42” x 42”

  • sometimes 48” x 48” (less common)

Typical heights:

  • 65” to 90” (yes, tall boys)

Common examples:

  • 42x42x70

  • 42x42x80

  • 48x48x78

These show up when:

  • the product is lightweight but bulky,

  • customers want fewer bags per load,

  • or operations fill by volume rather than weight.

The catch: taller bags can be harder to handle safely if your forklift mast height is limited.

Family 4: “Baffle Bags” (Same sizes, different behavior)

Baffle bags come in many of the same dimensions as standard bags (35-42 inch bases), but they hold a more “square” shape when filled.

So the size might be:

  • 35x35x50 baffle

  • 42x42x60 baffle

Why it matters:
Baffle bags can increase usable volume and improve stacking efficiency.

But in used bag lots, baffles can be torn or compromised, so inspection matters.

Family 5: “Specialty / Odd Sizes” (They exist, but don’t plan your program around them)

Used bags also come in odd sizes like:

  • long rectangle footprints (for certain equipment),

  • custom heights,

  • unusual spouts and skirts.

They exist, but they’re less consistent in the used market.

If your operation needs a very specific size every time, used bags may not be the best fit unless you have a consistent supplier stream.

Third: The Most Common Used Bulk Bag Size You’ll See

If you ask most suppliers what they have “all the time,” you’ll usually hear variations of:

  • 35x35x50

  • 36x36x60

  • 42x42x60

  • 43×43 (various heights)

These are the common workhorses because they match many industrial needs and show up in high volume.

Fourth: “Yard Bags” vs Dimensions (Don’t Get Confused)

People will sometimes describe bulk bags by “yard” capacity:

  • 1 cubic yard

  • 1.5 cubic yard

  • 2 cubic yard

That can be helpful, but it’s also vague, because:

  • baffle vs non-baffle changes usable space,

  • fill method changes shape,

  • and height changes everything.

So if someone says “2 yard bag,” you still want actual dimensions.

Fifth: Size Isn’t Just About Volume — It’s About Product Density

Here’s where buyers get wrecked:

They pick size based on “what looks standard” and forget density.

A bulk bag’s weight capacity is not the same as its volume capacity.

Example:

  • A big tall bag filled with a dense material can exceed safe working load fast.

  • A smaller bag filled with a lightweight product might not hold enough.

So you match size to:

  • your product density,

  • your target weight per bag,

  • and your handling equipment.

If you want to do it clean, you pick:

  1. desired weight per bag

  2. estimate product density

  3. choose a size that fits that volume safely

Sixth: The Top Style and Bottom Style Affect Functional “Size”

Two bags with the same dimensions can behave differently based on construction:

Top styles:

  • Open top

  • Duffle top

  • Spout top

  • Skirt top

Bottom styles:

  • Flat bottom

  • Discharge spout

A duffle top might reduce fill height compared to open top.
A discharge spout might reduce usable internal volume slightly.

So when you’re buying used bags by “size,” you also want to confirm:

  • fill style matches your filling process,

  • discharge style matches your unloading process.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Seventh: What You MUST Verify When Buying Used Bags By Size (So You Don’t Get Surprised)

If you’re ordering used bags and you want them to “fit” your operation, confirm these:

1) Dimensions are consistent across the lot

Used lots can be mixed.

You want:

  • same base size across the pallet,

  • similar height across the pallet.

If you get a mixed lot, your fill weights and stacking will be inconsistent.

2) Bags are not stretched or distorted

Used bags can be stretched from overload or mishandling.

A bag that “measures” right but has distorted fabric can fill weird and stack badly.

3) Your forklift and storage can handle the height

Tall bags require:

  • forklift mast height,

  • ceiling clearance,

  • safe stacking plan.

4) You have the right pallet footprint

Many used bags sit on standard pallets, but not all.

If you’re using a 48×40 pallet program, confirm the bag base suits it.

5) Baffle vs non-baffle matters for stacking

If you need clean stacking, baffle bags may be better—but used baffles must be inspected closely.

Eighth: A Quick “Size Selection” Guide (Practical)

If you don’t want to overthink it, here’s a practical guide:

If you want the most common, easiest size to source used:

  • 35x35x50

  • 36x36x60

  • 42x42x60

If your product is dense (heavy):

  • consider smaller bases or shorter heights (30–36 base range)

If your product is light and bulky:

  • consider taller bags (42 base with 70–80 height)

If stacking and cube efficiency matters:

  • consider baffle bags (but inspect baffles carefully)

Bottom Line

Used bulk bags come in a wide range of sizes, but most of the market clusters around a few common families:

  • Compact sizes (30–33 bases)

  • Workhorse standard sizes (35–42 bases, 45–60 heights)

  • High-cube sizes (42+ bases, 65–90 heights)

  • Baffle bags across similar footprints

If you tell us:

  • what product you’re filling,

  • your target weight per bag,

  • and your handling method (forklift/crane, discharge or dump, indoor/outdoor storage),

we can recommend the best used bag size range for your operation and quote what’s available.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

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