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If you’re in Scranton, Pennsylvania and you’re searching for slip sheets… you’re not doing it because you’re “learning about packaging.”

You’re doing it because pallets are costing you money and you’re tired of pretending it’s normal.

Because pallets are the most socially accepted profit leak in shipping.

Everybody buys them.
Everybody stores them.
Everybody ships them.
And everybody pretends the extra weight and wasted space is just “the cost of doing business.”

Until volume climbs.

Then the pallet tax stops being background noise and becomes a real line item that keeps getting uglier.

Here’s the pallet tax in plain English:

You pay to buy pallets.
You pay to store pallets.
You pay to move pallets around the warehouse.
You pay to ship pallets (weight + wasted cube).
You pay to fix pallet-related problems (breakage, product damage, slowdowns).
You pay to dispose of pallets.
And sometimes you pay again when a customer rejects a shipment because the pallet is broken, dirty, or doesn’t meet their receiving standards.

That’s not “just logistics.”

That’s recurring overhead.

Slip sheets exist to reduce that overhead without changing what you ship.

But only if they’re specced correctly.

Because when slip sheets are wrong, you don’t get savings… you get ripped tabs, shifting loads, dock backups, and forklift operators who look at you like you personally ruined their day.

Slip sheets aren’t the problem.

Bad specs are the problem.

Let’s talk Scranton reality.

You’re in a freight-heavy corridor tied into Northeast distribution lanes—Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, New England. Scranton is a strategic spot for warehousing, fulfillment, manufacturing support, food distribution, industrial supply… and a whole lot of “we need it there fast.”

So when slip sheets come up, it’s usually because someone wants one of these outcomes:

  • Reduce pallet spend and pallet waste

  • Reduce shipment weight and improve freight efficiency

  • Load tighter (less wasted trailer/container space)

  • Free up warehouse space by eliminating pallet stacks

  • Meet customer receiving requirements (slip sheets preferred)

  • Improve export/container workflows

  • Lower cost per unit shipped over time

Slip sheets can deliver those wins—when the workflow fits.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

What Slip Sheets Actually Are (Plain English)

A slip sheet is a thin, flat sheet—made from kraft paper, corrugated fiberboard, laminated board, or plastic—that goes under a unit load.

Instead of building your load on a wooden pallet…

You build it on the slip sheet.

Then a forklift—typically with a push/pull attachment—grabs the slip sheet by its tab (the “lip”) and pulls the load onto the forks. It can also push the load off at destination.

That’s the whole system.

No pallet.
Less weight.
Less bulk.
Less wasted space.

And when you ship volume, “less” becomes money.

Why Slip Sheets Make Sense in Scranton

Slip sheets are popular in the Northeast because they hit multiple cost centers at once.

1) You stop paying to ship wood

Pallets add weight that doesn’t make you money.

Slip sheets are dramatically lighter.

That can matter depending on your freight structure.

2) You reclaim warehouse space

Pallet stacks take floor space and create clutter.

Slip sheets stack flat and stay out of the way.

3) You can load tighter

Pallets add bulk and waste space in trailers and containers.

Slip sheets reduce bulk and can help you load tighter in the right applications.

4) You reduce receiving friction

Dirty pallets, broken pallets, and inconsistent pallets create receiving problems.

Slip sheets can help you ship cleaner and meet certain customer standards.

5) Export and long-haul lanes get easier

Scranton shipping often means “it’s going somewhere.”

Slip sheets can help when every inch and every pound matters across repeat lanes.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Who Slip Sheets Are Perfect For (And Who Should Skip Them)

Slip sheets are a strong fit when:

  • Loads are uniform and repeatable

  • Loads are stable and properly wrapped

  • You ship consistent volume

  • You export or container-load

  • Customers prefer or require slip sheets

  • You have push/pull capability (or a plan to support the workflow)

Slip sheets are usually not ideal when:

  • Loads are irregular, unstable, or constantly changing

  • Your product needs pallet rigidity for protection

  • You have no realistic handling method and don’t want one

  • Volume is too low and switching creates more friction than savings

A supplier who tells you “slip sheets work for everyone” is selling you a fantasy.

Slip sheets work when the operation fits.

Slip Sheet Materials (Pick Wrong and You’ll Hate Slip Sheets)

Most slip sheet programs fail because someone chose the wrong material.

Here are the main options:

Kraft Paper Slip Sheets

Cost-effective and widely used.

Best for dry environments and moderate loads. Great for one-way shipments.

Corrugated Slip Sheets

More rigid than kraft.

Best when you need stiffness under the load due to footprint or stacking demands.

Laminated Slip Sheets

Paper-based with moisture resistance.

If humidity, condensation, or exposure is a factor, laminated prevents sagging and reduces tearing.

Plastic Slip Sheets

Durable, reusable, and strong.

Ideal for heavier loads, wet environments, or closed-loop systems where slip sheets return and get reused.

Plastic costs more upfront, but it can dominate long-term economics when reuse is real.

Material choice depends on load weight, environment, and handling.

We’ll help you choose the right one.

The Lip (Tab) Is Everything

Here’s what most buyers ignore until it fails:

The lip.

The lip is the tab your push/pull grabs.

If it’s too short, too weak, or oriented wrong, you’ll see:

  • Lips ripping mid-pull

  • Loads sliding and shifting

  • Operators slowing down and fighting the process

  • Dock congestion and wasted time

  • Damage claims

Common lip setups:

  • 1 lip (pull from one direction)

  • 2 lips (two-direction access)

  • 3–4 lips (multi-direction handling)

We spec lips based on workflow:

Where do you stage loads?
What direction do you pull?
How do you load trailers/containers?
How does the customer receive it?

That’s how you prevent ripping and keep throughput high.

Push/Pull Attachments: The Real Question

Can slip sheets be used without push/pull attachments?

Sometimes—especially in certain container workflows.

But if you want slip sheets to run consistently at scale in a warehouse, push/pull attachments are usually the difference between success and chaos.

If you already have them, perfect.

If you don’t, we help you evaluate:

  • Will the savings justify the attachment?

  • Are your loads consistent enough to benefit?

  • Are customer requirements driving the change?

  • Is your volume high enough that savings compounds?

Then we spec the slip sheet accordingly.

What We Need to Quote Slip Sheets Correctly (Fast)

To give you a quote that actually fits your operation, here’s what helps:

  1. Load dimensions (length Ă— width)

  2. Load weight (average and max)

  3. Product type (cases, boxes, bags, pails, etc.)

  4. Environment (dry, humidity, cold storage, export)

  5. Handling method (push/pull, manual, container workflow)

  6. Monthly usage (how many sheets you burn through)

  7. Customer requirements (receiving standards, lip direction, material preference)

Don’t have all of it? No problem.

Most buyers don’t.

We’ll ask only what matters and lock the spec fast.

Why CPP Is Built for Bulk Buyers

Custom Packaging Products is deliberately positioned for bulk buyers and big accounts.

That means:

  • Bulk pricing that rewards volume

  • Truckload efficiency that lowers landed cost

  • Consistent specs so your operation runs smooth

  • Reliable supply for repeat programs

  • Straight answers from people who understand procurement and operations

We’re not built for small orders.

We’re built for programs where savings compounds.

The Bottom Line for Scranton, PA Slip Sheets

Slip sheets are a leverage move.

They can reduce pallet spend, reduce shipping weight, free up warehouse space, and improve shipping efficiency—without changing what you ship.

But only if they’re specced correctly:

Right material.
Right thickness.
Right lip configuration.
Right handling method.

If you want bulk slip sheets delivered to Scranton, Pennsylvania, tell us what you’re shipping and how you handle unit loads—and we’ll quote the right spec for your operation.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!