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Choosing slip sheet tab style is simple if you stop thinking like a buyer and start thinking like a forklift.
Because the tab style is really answering one question:
“From what direction will the push-pull grab this load… every single time?”
If that direction is predictable, you can keep it cheap and simple.
If it’s unpredictable, you need more tabs so receiving doesn’t turn into a 10-minute puzzle.
The 3 Real Factors That Choose Your Tab Style
1) Handling direction at receiving
This is the big one.
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If the receiver always pulls from the same side → single tab
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If the receiver might pull from either end → two tabs
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If the receiver might pull from any side (or orientation changes) → four tabs
If you can’t guarantee orientation, tabs are your insurance policy.
2) How standardized your shipping lanes are
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One customer / one DC / same dock setup → keep it simple
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Multiple customers / mixed warehouses → more tabs reduces “we can’t unload this” drama
3) How much you care about speed
More tabs = more flexibility = faster unloading when things show up rotated or staged wrong.
If your goal is fast turns and no headaches, don’t cheap out on tabs.
The Main Tab Styles (What People Actually Use)
Single Tab (1-Way Pull)
Best when: orientation is consistent and controlled.
Pros:
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lowest cost
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simplest build
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less chance tabs get damaged (only one to protect)
Cons:
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if the load shows up rotated, the receiver has to reposition it
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can slow unloading or cause frustration
Use single tab when you’re confident the load will always be pulled from the same direction.
Two Tabs (Bi-Directional Pull)
Usually on opposite sides.
Best when: orientation sometimes changes or receivers want flexibility.
Pros:
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receiver can pull from either direction
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fewer unloading delays
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still reasonably cost-efficient
Cons:
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tabs can get bent/crushed if not protected
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slightly higher cost than single tab
This is the “safe default” for a lot of real operations.
Four Tabs (Any-Direction Pull)
Tabs on all four sides.
Best when: you don’t control orientation, or you ship to multiple sites.
Pros:
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maximum flexibility
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fastest unloading
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reduces rejection risk
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most “idiot-proof” option
Cons:
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higher cost
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tabs need protection (they can get damaged if staged poorly)
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requires good load build so product isn’t sitting on tabs
If you ship to multiple DCs or have inconsistent dock setups, four tabs can save your ass.
“Tab Style” Also Includes Tab Geometry (Why Tabs Tear)
Beyond count (1/2/4), tab performance depends on:
Tab length
Too short = clamp doesn’t get a clean bite.
Too long = it gets bent, crushed, or torn in staging.
Tab reinforcement
Heavy loads often need stronger material / higher grade / reinforced tab area so it doesn’t rip under clamp pressure.
Tab placement
Tabs must remain clear — you can’t stack product on top of the tab area and expect clean pulls.
The #1 Rule: Match Tab Style to Receiving Reality
Here’s the honest playbook:
If you control the lane (same customer, same orientation):
âś… Single tab
If orientation is sometimes wrong or receiver wants flexibility:
âś… Two tabs
If you ship to multiple receivers or orientation is unpredictable:
âś… Four tabs
The cost difference between tab styles is usually tiny compared to:
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delays at receiving
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damaged loads from repositioning
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customer complaints
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rejection risk
Common Mistakes (That Make Slip Sheets “Not Work”)
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Choosing single tab for a lane where orientation changes
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Tabs getting crushed because staging stacks on them
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Under-spec’ing sheet grade so the tab tears under clamp pressure
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Receivers not trained on proper clamp position and pull alignment
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Trying to run slip sheets in a lane without consistent push-pull capability
Most failures are spec + process issues, not “slip sheets are bad.”
What We Need to Recommend the Best Tab Style for You
Shoot us:
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Who receives it (one DC or many)?
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Can you guarantee load orientation every time?
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Load weight (light/medium/heavy)?
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One-way or reusable program?
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Dock/handling environment (smooth/rough, dry/humid)?
We’ll tell you the best tab style (1/2/4) and the right sheet grade so it pulls clean without tearing.
Bottom Line
Choose slip sheet tab style based on how predictable the pull direction is at receiving. Single tab is best for controlled, consistent orientation. Two tabs are the safe default when orientation can vary. Four tabs are best when you ship to multiple sites or can’t guarantee how loads will be positioned—because flexibility prevents unloading delays and lane rejection.