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Protective void fill is the material you put inside a box to fill empty space so the product doesn’t move, rattle, slam into the walls, or get crushed during shipping.
In other words: void fill is the “airbag system” for your shipment.
Because here’s the ugly truth about shipping: if there’s empty space in the box, your product will use that space to build momentum… and momentum is what turns a perfectly good product into a return.
Now let’s break down what protective void fill is, what it does, the different types, and how to choose the right one so you stop paying the “damage tax.”
Why void fill exists (the 3 problems it solves)
Protective void fill is used to prevent:
1) Product movement
Movement causes:
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impacts
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scuffing
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breakage
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crushed corners
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cracked parts
Void fill locks the product in place.
2) Shock and vibration damage
Shipping isn’t gentle. Packages get dropped, tossed, and vibrated for hours.
Void fill absorbs and disperses shock.
3) Compression damage
Boxes get stacked. Loads get crushed. Corners collapse.
Void fill can help support the product inside so the outer box isn’t doing all the work alone.
What void fill is NOT (common confusion)
Void fill is not the same as “cushioning” in every scenario.
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Void fill fills space and restricts movement
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Cushioning absorbs impact forces
Some materials do both. Some do one better than the other.
If your product is fragile, you usually need void fill and true cushioning.
The main types of protective void fill (and what they’re best for)
1) Air Pillows
What it is: Inflated plastic pillows used to fill space.
Best for:
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lightweight products
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preventing movement
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high-speed packing operations
Pros:
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clean and fast
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low material weight (helps shipping cost)
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great for filling large voids
Cons:
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not ideal for heavy products
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can pop under sharp edges
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not the best shock absorption for fragile items
2) Packing Paper / Kraft Paper
What it is: Crumpled paper used to block and brace.
Best for:
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medium-weight products
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wrapping and void fill combined
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operations that want paper-based packaging
Pros:
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versatile
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good friction (holds product in place)
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works well for blocking/bracing
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paper-based option
Cons:
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can compress over time if under-packed
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takes more volume than some options
3) Bubble Wrap (as void fill)
What it is: Bubbles used around product, sometimes stuffed to fill voids.
Best for:
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fragile items
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products needing cushioning
Pros:
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good shock absorption
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protects surfaces from scuffing
Cons:
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not the most efficient as pure void fill
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can shift if not packed correctly
4) Foam (Sheets, Pads, or Inserts)
What it is: Foam used to immobilize and cushion.
Best for:
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fragile items
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high-value items
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electronics
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precision parts
Pros:
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excellent cushioning
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great for blocking/bracing
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consistent protection
Cons:
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higher cost
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may require custom sizing
5) Loose Fill (Packing Peanuts)
What it is: Small loose pieces that fill space.
Best for:
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irregular shapes
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non-heavy items
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general void fill
Pros:
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fills weird spaces easily
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quick to use
Cons:
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messy
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can shift and settle
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not great for heavy items
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can create customer complaints
6) Corrugated Inserts / Pads
What it is: Cardboard structures used to brace product.
Best for:
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heavier products
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items needing structural support
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layered packing
Pros:
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strong, structural support
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prevents movement
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cost-effective at scale
Cons:
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less cushioning than foam
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may require design/fit
Protective void fill vs. blocking & bracing
If you ship heavier items, the best “void fill” strategy often isn’t stuffing. It’s blocking and bracing—using paper, corrugated, or foam to create rigid resistance so the product cannot move.
Lightweight product? Air pillows often work great.
Heavier product? You need bracing, not fluff.
How to choose the right protective void fill (simple rules)
âś… Rule 1: Match it to weight
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light products → air pillows or paper
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medium products → kraft paper + pads
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heavy products → foam or corrugated bracing
âś… Rule 2: Match it to fragility
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fragile → foam or bubble wrap + bracing
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not fragile → paper or air pillows
âś… Rule 3: Match it to shape
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irregular shapes → paper or loose fill (if acceptable)
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clean shapes → pillows, pads, inserts
âś… Rule 4: Consider presentation
Some void fills annoy customers (loose fill). If customer experience matters, avoid the messy stuff.
The most common void fill mistakes (that cause damage)
❌ 1) Underfilling
If there’s still space, the product still moves.
❌ 2) Using air pillows for heavy products
Heavy product + pillows = popped pillows + broken product.
❌ 3) No bracing on sharp corners
Sharp corners slice pillows and puncture thin materials.
❌ 4) Using void fill when you needed true cushioning
Void fill stops movement, but it won’t always absorb impact enough for fragile items.
Bottom line
Protective void fill is the material used inside packaging to fill empty space, prevent movement, and reduce damage during shipping.
Used correctly, it:
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lowers returns and claims
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reduces damage
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protects product presentation
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keeps shipments stable
And if you’re shipping anything that matters, void fill isn’t optional—it’s part of your damage-prevention system.