Cardboard Sheet Thickness Guide

Table of Contents

Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): Bulk Orders Only, No Small Quantities!
đźšš Save BIG on Truckload orders!

If you’re looking for a cardboard sheet thickness guide, you’re already asking the right question — because thickness is where most buyers quietly screw this up.

Too thin? You get crushed product, bent corners, rejected shipments, pissed-off customers.
Too thick? You overpay, waste freight dollars, and stack unnecessary cost into every pallet that leaves your building.

And here’s the brutal truth: most people buying cardboard sheets don’t actually know what thickness they need — they just guess, copy a legacy spec, or let a supplier decide for them.

That’s how money leaks out of operations month after month.

This guide fixes that.


First — what “cardboard sheets” actually means (because this causes confusion)

When buyers say cardboard sheets, they usually mean one of three things:

  1. Corrugated cardboard sheets (singlewall, doublewall, triplewall)

  2. Chipboard / paperboard sheets (solid, non-corrugated)

  3. Pads / layer sheets / divider sheets (used for stacking, separation, and protection)

Thickness standards depend entirely on which category you’re in — and mixing them up is where bad specs start.

This guide will focus primarily on corrugated cardboard sheets, while clarifying where chipboard fits in.


Why thickness matters more than most people think

Thickness isn’t just about “strength.”

Thickness affects:

  • compression resistance

  • puncture resistance

  • load distribution

  • pallet stability

  • product scuffing

  • freight efficiency

  • stacking height

  • cost per pallet

  • cost per truckload

In other words: thickness impacts both damage rates and landed cost.

Choosing the wrong thickness doesn’t just cause breakage — it quietly increases your cost per shipment.


The biggest myth: “thicker is always better”

Nope.

Thicker is only better when the application actually needs it.

In many operations, buyers over-spec thickness because:

  • “That’s what we’ve always used”

  • “We don’t want failures”

  • “It feels safer”

  • “The difference per sheet seems small”

But multiplied across:

  • thousands of sheets

  • pallets per week

  • truckloads per month

That “small difference” becomes real money.

The goal is not maximum thickness.
The goal is correct thickness.


Cardboard sheet thickness basics (simple definitions)

Let’s establish a clean baseline.

Corrugated cardboard thickness is driven by flute type

Corrugated board is made of:

  • linerboard (flat sheets)

  • fluted medium (the wavy part)

The flute profile determines thickness, cushioning, and compression strength.


Common corrugated flute types (from thinnest to thickest)

E-Flute

  • Approx thickness: ~1.2–1.6 mm

  • Very thin profile

  • Smooth surface

  • Good for printing and light protection

Best for:

  • small cartons

  • lightweight products

  • retail packaging

  • inner dividers

Not ideal for heavy loads or pallet stacking.


B-Flute

  • Approx thickness: ~2.5–3.0 mm

  • Stronger than E-flute

  • Good puncture resistance

  • Widely used

Best for:

  • standard shipping boxes

  • moderate-weight products

  • divider pads

  • layer sheets for lighter loads

This is one of the most common flutes in the world.


C-Flute

  • Approx thickness: ~3.5–4.0 mm

  • Excellent cushioning

  • Better compression resistance

  • Very common for shipping

Best for:

  • heavier products

  • palletized loads

  • stacking strength

  • layer pads between loads

C-flute is often the “safe middle ground.”


BC-Flute (Doublewall)

  • Approx thickness: ~6.0–7.0 mm

  • Combines B + C flutes

  • High stacking strength

  • High compression resistance

Best for:

  • heavy pallet loads

  • export shipments

  • long-term stacking

  • fragile or high-value goods

This is where serious protection begins.


AC-Flute / Triplewall

  • Approx thickness: 10–15+ mm

  • Extremely strong

  • Used in place of wooden crates in some cases

Best for:

  • extremely heavy items

  • industrial equipment

  • export and abuse environments

Not common — and usually overkill unless you truly need it.


A “badass” thickness comparison table (save this)

Flute Type Approx Thickness Strength Level Typical Use
E-Flute ~1.2–1.6 mm ⚠️ Low Retail, light dividers
B-Flute ~2.5–3.0 mm ✅ Medium Standard shipping, pads
C-Flute ~3.5–4.0 mm 🔥 Medium-High Pallets, stacking
BC-Flute ~6.0–7.0 mm 🔥 High Heavy pallet loads
Triplewall 10–15+ mm 💀 Extreme Industrial/export

Sheet thickness vs sheet strength (this is critical)

Thickness alone does not equal strength.

Strength is influenced by:

  • flute profile

  • paper weight (liner + medium)

  • board construction

  • orientation

  • load distribution

You can have:

  • a thicker sheet that performs worse, and

  • a thinner sheet that performs better,

depending on how it’s designed.

That’s why pros talk about application-driven thickness, not generic thickness.


How to choose the correct cardboard sheet thickness (step by step)

Step 1: Identify the job of the sheet

Ask this first:

What is the sheet actually doing?

Common roles:

  • separating product layers

  • distributing vertical load

  • protecting edges

  • preventing scuffing

  • stabilizing pallets

  • replacing slip sheets

  • lining pallets or crates

Each role demands a different thickness.


Step 2: Understand the weight above the sheet

Thickness selection depends on:

  • weight per layer

  • total stack height

  • whether weight is static or dynamic

A sheet holding 50 lb behaves very differently than one holding 2,000 lb.


Step 3: Consider stacking duration

Short-term shipping vs long-term storage matters.

Corrugated will creep under sustained load.

Long-term stacking needs more compression resistance — often meaning thicker or stronger construction.


Step 4: Look at handling abuse

Ask:

  • forklift movement?

  • conveyors?

  • export handling?

  • humidity exposure?

More abuse = higher thickness or stronger flute combination.


Step 5: Balance cost vs protection

This is where smart buyers win.

You don’t ask:

“What’s the strongest sheet?”

You ask:

“What’s the lowest-cost sheet that does not fail?”

That mindset alone saves money.


Chipboard thickness vs corrugated thickness (do not confuse these)

Chipboard / paperboard sheets

  • Solid, no flutes

  • Thickness measured in points (pt) or mils

Common thicknesses:

  • 16 pt (~0.016″)

  • 24 pt (~0.024″)

  • 30 pt (~0.030″)

Best for:

  • slip layers for light loads

  • surface protection

  • printing applications

  • minimal cushioning needs

Chipboard is not a replacement for corrugated in heavy stacking situations.


When corrugated sheets beat chipboard every time

Use corrugated when you need:

  • cushioning

  • compression resistance

  • load distribution

  • pallet stability

Use chipboard when you need:

  • smooth surface

  • thin profile

  • minimal height impact

  • light separation

Wrong choice = crushed product or wasted spend.


Thickness mistakes that cost companies real money

Mistake #1: Copying a legacy spec without questioning it

That spec may have been created for:

  • a different product

  • a different pallet pattern

  • a different shipping method

Legacy ≠ optimal.


Mistake #2: Over-spec’ing “just in case”

Fear-based specs add cost fast.

If your damage rate is already low, thicker sheets may not be doing anything useful.


Mistake #3: Under-spec’ing to save pennies

Thin sheets that fail create:

  • damaged goods

  • rework

  • returns

  • customer complaints

That savings evaporates instantly.


Mistake #4: Ignoring freight impact

Thicker sheets:

  • take up more space

  • reduce units per pallet

  • increase freight cost

Sometimes thinner but stronger construction wins overall.


Thickness and palletization (this is where savings explode)

Sheet thickness affects:

  • stack height

  • pallet cube

  • truck utilization

Example:

  • 1 mm extra thickness Ă— 50 layers Ă— thousands of pallets = real lost space

This is why thickness optimization is a logistics decision, not just a packaging decision.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!


Recommended thickness ranges by application (real-world guidance)

Application Recommended Thickness
Light product separation E-flute or thin B-flute
Standard pallet layers B-flute or C-flute
Heavy pallet stacking C-flute or BC-flute
Export / long-term storage BC-flute
Extreme industrial loads Triplewall
Slip layer (non-cushion) Chipboard 24–30 pt

This is guidance — not gospel — but it puts you in the right zone.


How to spec cardboard sheets correctly (what to tell suppliers)

When requesting quotes, don’t just say:

“Need cardboard sheets, 40×48”

Instead say:

  • flute type (or thickness target)

  • sheet size

  • application (layer pad, divider, etc.)

  • load per layer

  • stacking height

  • environment (humidity/export/etc.)

  • quantity + delivery cadence

This prevents re-quotes and mis-specs.


Bulk ordering and thickness strategy (how buyers save big)

Smart buyers:

  • standardize thickness across multiple SKUs

  • reduce sheet variations

  • buy in bulk tiers

  • optimize pallet patterns

This reduces:

  • SKU count

  • minimums

  • dead inventory

  • cost per sheet

Thickness standardization = purchasing leverage.


Why truckload ordering matters for cardboard sheets

Cardboard is bulky.

Freight dominates cost.

Bulk orders:

  • reduce freight per unit

  • stabilize pricing

  • improve supply reliability

Even if you don’t need a truckload every time, knowing the truckload price helps you plan smarter.


Quick checklist: choosing the right cardboard sheet thickness

  • What load sits on the sheet?

  • How long will it be stacked?

  • How rough is handling?

  • Is cushioning required?

  • What’s the freight impact?

  • Can thickness be standardized?

If you can answer those, you’re ahead of most buyers.


Bottom line (read this twice)

There is no “best” cardboard sheet thickness.

There is only:

  • correct thickness, and

  • expensive mistakes.

When thickness matches application, you get:

  • fewer damages

  • lower freight cost

  • better pallet efficiency

  • predictable performance

  • lower total spend

That’s the real win.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

If you want help selecting the right thickness for your specific application — without overpaying — we’ll walk you through it and quote it clean, fast, and correctly.

Share This Post