Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): Full Truckload
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If you’re searching “Coroplast for sale,” you’re usually after one thing:
A tough, lightweight, waterproof sheet that doesn’t fall apart when life gets messy.
Coroplast is one of those products that gets used everywhere because it’s basically the “Swiss Army sheet” of packaging, signage, and industrial protection. People buy it when cardboard is too fragile, wood is too heavy, and they need something that can survive moisture, handling, and repeat use without turning into mush.
But here’s the problem:
A lot of people order “Coroplast” with zero specs… then they’re shocked when what shows up is either too flimsy, too thick, the wrong size, wrong color, or it doesn’t behave the way they expected.
So let’s fix that. This guide will show you what Coroplast is, what it’s used for, what to ask for, how to avoid the classic mistakes, and how to buy it smart at full truckload quantities.
What is Coroplast?
Coroplast is a brand name that people commonly use to describe corrugated plastic sheet (usually fluted plastic sheet material).
Think of it like “Kleenex” for tissues.
The material is made with:
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two flat plastic skins
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and a fluted plastic core (internal ribs)
That flute core is what makes it:
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rigid without heavy weight
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strong for its thickness
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easy to cut and fabricate
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resistant to moisture
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durable enough for repeated handling
So Coroplast is basically corrugated cardboard’s waterproof cousin.
What Coroplast is used for (real-world uses)
This is where Coroplast gets fun because it’s not limited to one industry.
1) Layer pads and pallet separators
Used between pallet layers to stabilize loads, especially in humidity or cold storage.
2) Tote liners and bin liners
If a company uses reusable totes, Coroplast is often used as a liner to protect product and keep containers cleaner.
3) Surface protection
Coroplast protects finished goods from:
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scratches
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scuffs
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abrasion
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edge dents
Common in:
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metal fabrication
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appliance handling
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furniture and cabinetry
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industrial parts shipping
4) Dividers and partitions
Coroplast can be cut/scored into dividers that separate product and prevent collisions inside a carton or tote.
5) Signage and warehouse labeling
Yes, signs. It’s one of the most common materials used for:
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yard signs
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directional signs
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warehouse labels
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temporary signage
6) Returnable packaging programs
If a company ships between facilities or has a closed-loop distribution setup, Coroplast can be used as part of reusable packaging systems.
So when you’re buying “Coroplast,” the first question is always:
What’s the job the sheet needs to do?
Because that determines thickness, size, and whether you need extra rigidity or extra flexibility.
Coroplast vs corrugated cardboard: why buyers switch
Here’s the clean comparison:
Corrugated cardboard is great when:
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the environment is dry
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you want the cheapest solution
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you don’t need reuse
Coroplast wins when:
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moisture is present
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durability matters
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reuse is planned
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cleanliness matters
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sheets take repeated abuse
If you’ve ever had cardboard pads:
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sag in humidity
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soften in cold storage
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warp near dock doors
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or just get destroyed after a few uses
…Coroplast is the upgrade.
The 9 specs you need to order Coroplast correctly
Most Coroplast “bad orders” happen because nobody clarified specs.
Here’s what matters:
1) Sheet size (L x W)
Do you need:
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full sheets?
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cut-to-size pads?
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pallet footprint sizes (48×40, 42×42, etc.)?
Sizing determines waste and performance.
2) Thickness
Thickness impacts rigidity.
Too thin:
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sheet bends
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won’t support layers
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feels flimsy
Too thick:
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costs more
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can be harder to handle in bulk
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may be overbuilt for the task
3) Flute direction
Coroplast has internal ribs. Flute direction affects stiffness.
If the sheet is supporting weight, flute direction matters.
4) Color
Common colors exist, but color can also help with:
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sorting programs
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identifying sizes
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warehouse organization
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branding/visibility
If you don’t care, standard colors typically work.
5) Surface texture / friction
Plastic can be slick.
If your product slides, you may need:
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different surface texture
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different wrap method
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or different sheet configuration
6) Reusable vs one-way
If reusable, you care more about durability and handling life.
If one-way, you care about cost per trip.
7) Environment
Cold storage? Humid warehouse? Outdoor staging?
Coroplast performs well here, but it’s still important to match thickness and rigidity to abuse level.
8) Fabrication needs (cutting/scoring)
Do you need:
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cut-to-size sheets?
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scored panels?
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die-cut shapes?
That changes quoting.
9) Quantity and shipping method
Coroplast is bulky. Full truckload usually gives the best economics.
Full truckload MOQ: why it’s common for Coroplast
Coroplast is one of those materials where freight matters a lot.
If you order small quantities:
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the freight cost per sheet is brutal
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unit pricing is less attractive
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supply is less predictable
Truckload MOQ exists because:
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production runs are efficient at scale
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freight per unit drops hard
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and you stabilize your supply
If Coroplast is part of your recurring operations (pads, dividers, liners), truckload purchasing is usually where it becomes a serious cost advantage.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
What affects Coroplast pricing?
Pricing typically depends on:
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sheet size
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thickness
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color requirements
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cut-to-size vs full sheets
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any scoring/die-cutting
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order volume (truckload pricing is best)
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freight lane / ship-to zip
That’s why “what’s your price on Coroplast?” is impossible without at least size and thickness.
But “48×40 sheets, X thickness, truckload, shipped to X zip” is an easy quote.
The “fast quote” checklist (send this and we can move quick)
If you want a quote without a million questions, send:
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What you’re using Coroplast for (layer pads, tote liners, dividers, surface protection, signage)
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Sheet size needed (L x W)
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Thickness preference (or describe load weight/abuse level)
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Color preference (if any)
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Cut-to-size or full sheets
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Reusable or one-way program
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Ship-to zip code
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Monthly usage / quantity needed
If you don’t know thickness, tell us what the sheet has to survive (weight, handling, environment) and we’ll recommend the right spec.
Coroplast in packaging: where it makes the most money
If you want the highest ROI uses for Coroplast in packaging, it’s usually:
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cold storage layer pads (where cardboard fails)
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reusable tote liners (reduces tote damage and product contamination)
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surface protection for finished goods (prevents returns and rework)
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reusable divider systems (reduces product-to-product collisions)
In those applications, Coroplast isn’t “more expensive” — it’s just the first thing that actually holds up long enough to pay for itself.
Bottom line: Coroplast is the waterproof workhorse sheet for serious operations
If you need a durable, reusable, moisture-resistant sheet material, Coroplast is one of the most reliable options.
If you want full truckload pricing on Coroplast sheets (or cut-to-size pads), we’ll quote it fast and help you pick the right thickness and size for your exact application so you don’t end up with flimsy sheets or overbuilt costs.