What Is Pallet Wrap?

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Pallet wrap is the material used to secure and protect a pallet load so it can be moved, stored, and shipped without the product shifting, tipping, getting crushed, or getting contaminated.

Most of the time, when someone says “pallet wrap,” they mean stretch film (stretch wrap)—the clear plastic film wrapped around a pallet to hold everything together.

But “pallet wrap” can also refer to other pallet-wrapping systems like shrink wrap, stretch hood, or shrink hood—depending on the operation.

In plain English: pallet wrap is what turns a pallet into a single unit instead of a stack of boxes waiting to fall.

Now let’s break down pallet wrap the right way: what it is, what it does, the different types, and how to choose the right one so your pallets stop leaning and your freight claims stop piling up.


What pallet wrap is used for (the 6 jobs)

Pallet wrap is used to:

1) Contain the load

Holds cartons, bags, and product together as one unit.

2) Prevent shifting

Reduces movement from vibration, braking, and turns.

3) Improve stability

Helps prevent leaning pallets and collapsed stacks.

4) Protect from dust and dirt

Keeps product cleaner during storage and transport.

5) Discourage tampering

Not “tamper-proof,” but it makes messing with the load harder and more obvious.

6) Reduce handling damage

A stable load is a safer load for forklifts and warehouse teams.


The main types of pallet wrap

1) Stretch wrap (most common)

What it is: Stretch film wrapped around the pallet in layers.

Best for:

  • general pallet loads

  • high-speed warehousing

  • most shipping situations

Pros:

  • fast

  • flexible

  • no heat

  • works with hand wrap or machines

Cons:

  • top is often exposed unless you add a top sheet

  • can loosen if applied wrong or loads settle


2) Shrink wrap (heat shrink)

What it is: Shrink film applied around the pallet and heated to shrink tight.

Best for:

  • long-term storage

  • loads that loosen with stretch wrap

  • certain industrial pallets

Pros:

  • tight “skin”

  • good protection

  • can look very clean

Cons:

  • requires heat equipment

  • safety considerations

  • not ideal for heat-sensitive products


3) Stretch hood film

What it is: A stretched hood of film dropped over the pallet and released to grip tight (no heat).

Best for:

  • high-volume pallet lines

  • loads needing top coverage + premium presentation

Pros:

  • full top + side coverage

  • excellent stability

  • no heat

Cons:

  • requires specialized machine/equipment


4) Shrink hood film

What it is: A hood of film dropped over the pallet and heat shrunk tight.

Best for:

  • maximum pallet containment

  • weather protection

  • high-risk pallet loads

Pros:

  • very tight and stable

  • great environmental protection

Cons:

  • requires heat-based hood system


Pallet wrap vs pallet stretch film (are they the same?)

Often, yes.

In everyday warehouse speak:

  • “pallet wrap” = stretch film

  • “stretch wrap” = pallet wrap

But technically, pallet wrap is the broader category that includes shrink and hood systems too.


What pallet wrap does NOT fix (important)

Pallet wrap is containment. It helps, but it cannot fix:

  • a weak pallet pattern

  • crushed cartons from too much stacking pressure

  • a load that’s top-heavy

  • gaps in a trailer/container (you still need dunnage bags or bracing)

  • cartons that are under-spec’d for the weight

If you wrap a bad load perfectly… you still have a bad load.


The most common pallet wrap mistakes (that cause leaning pallets)

❌ 1) Not anchoring to the pallet

If the film isn’t tied into the pallet, the load can slip.

❌ 2) Too little wrap at the bottom

The bottom is your foundation. Weak foundation = leaning.

❌ 3) Overstretching by hand

Film gets too thin and loses holding power.

❌ 4) Using the wrong film type for sharp loads

Sharp edges puncture the film and the load loosens.

❌ 5) Ignoring corner/edge protection

Corners get crushed, the load loses structure, and everything leans.


The “right” pallet wrap is part of a system

For strong pallet loads, pallet wrap is often paired with:

  • edge protectors / corner protectors

  • layer pads (chipboard, corrugated, honeycomb)

  • strapping for heavy loads

  • pallet caps / pallet trays

  • tier sheets / slip sheets

This combination is what reduces damage and claims.


Bottom line

Pallet wrap is the wrapping material used to stabilize, contain, and protect pallet loads—most commonly stretch wrap. It’s essential for load unitization and damage prevention, but it works best when combined with good pallet building and the right protective packaging system.

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