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The 35x35x50 bulk bag is where the standard 35×35 footprint starts delivering serious volume. Same base size your pallets and forklifts already love — but with extra height that helps you pack more product per bag, reduce handling cycles, and tighten up cost per unit moved.
This is the size buyers step into when 40″ and 45″ tall bags are almost enough… but not quite — especially for lighter-density materials where volume becomes the limiting factor long before weight does.
What a 35x35x50 bulk bag actually means
A 35x35x50 bulk bag measures:
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35 inches wide
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35 inches deep
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50 inches tall
That extra height increases usable capacity while keeping the same footprint. Translation: you can scale volume without reworking pallet patterns, staging lanes, forklift handling, or warehouse flow.
This size is often chosen by teams saying:
“We need to move more product per bag, but we don’t want to change our whole setup.”
Why buyers choose 35x35x50 (and when it’s the right move)
1) Your material is light or fluffy
If your product is lower density, you hit volume limits before weight limits. 50″ height gives you more room to hit your target load efficiently.
2) You want fewer bags per shift
More product per bag means fewer fill cycles, fewer bag changes, and less labor overhead.
3) You want better freight efficiency
When you reduce the number of bags needed to move the same total volume, the logistics math improves fast.
4) You’re trying to standardize around the 35×35 footprint
Sticking to 35×35 keeps everything consistent operationally, while height lets you dial in capacity.
Typical capacity range for a 35x35x50 bulk bag
Capacity depends on material density, fill method, and construction. But this size is commonly used when:
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the product is volume-limited
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target weights require more headspace
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operations want a higher-capacity bag without moving to a larger footprint
It’s a strong middle ground between “workhorse” sizes and the extra-tall profiles.
Common industries using 35x35x50 bulk bags
You’ll often see 35x35x50 in:
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Plastics & polymer resins
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Agricultural products and inputs
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Industrial compounds and blends
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Powders and granules (non-extreme density)
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General manufacturing materials
If your line benefits from higher capacity per bag but still wants predictable handling, this size is a natural fit.
Construction options (height makes this part matter more)
As bag height increases, construction choices start to show up in real operational performance.
U-Panel (most common)
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Strong and cost-effective
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Great general-purpose construction
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Works well for many materials
4-Panel
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More “square” stacking behavior
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Better pallet appearance and stability
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Often preferred for longer-term staging
Circular
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Common for commodity environments
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Efficient and economical at scale
Baffle (more valuable at 50″ height)
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Helps hold shape
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Reduces bulging
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Improves stack stability and edge definition
At 50″ tall, baffle construction can be a major upgrade if stacking cleanliness matters.
Coated vs uncoated fabric (more important at 50″ height)
Uncoated
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Breathable
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Cost-effective
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Great for general materials
Coated
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Better sift control
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Helps with moisture resistance
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Reduces dust and leakage
At taller heights, dust control issues become more noticeable. If your product is powdery, coated builds often prevent a warehouse mess.
Top options (how you fill)
Duffle top
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Fast filling
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Flexible access
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Common choice for this size
Spout top
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Controlled fill
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Cleaner
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Ideal for dust-sensitive or automated filling
Open top
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Simple
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Often paired with liners or flap covers
If you want clean, repeatable fills at higher volumes, spout tops are usually the smart choice.
Bottom options (how you discharge)
Spout bottom
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Controlled discharge
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Cleaner flow
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Strong choice for powders and granules
Flat bottom
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Used when dumping or when discharge is handled differently
Closed bottom
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Used for specialized workflows
Most operations that care about process control go spout bottom at this size.
Liner options (when protection is required)
Liners are common when:
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moisture barrier is needed
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contamination protection matters
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fine powders need extra containment
Common liner types:
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tabbed liners
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form-fit liners
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PE liners in various thicknesses
New vs used 35x35x50 bulk bags
Used / reconditioned bulk bags
A great option when:
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your product is non-hazardous
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cost savings matter
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you can accept minor cosmetic variability
New bulk bags
Preferred when:
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specs must be consistent
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product sensitivity is higher
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repeatability matters across long-term supply
CPP can quote both depending on availability and your requirements.
Need 35x35x50 bulk bags fast?
Send your material type, target fill weight, and how you fill and discharge — and we’ll confirm the right build before you place an order.
👉 Get a fast recommendation + quote
Related sizes to compare
Most common comparisons:
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35x35x45 Bulk Bag (shorter, less volume)
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35x35x52 Bulk Bag (slightly taller, more capacity)
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35x35x55 Bulk Bag (taller, more volume)
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37x37x60 Bulk Bag (bigger footprint, higher capacity)
The right size depends on your constraint: volume, weight, or clearance.
Buying at scale and want real pricing?
We quote 35x35x50 bulk bags based on your specs and truckload quantities so your numbers stay stable as you scale.
👉 Request truckload pricing
FAQ: 35x35x50 Bulk Bag
Is 35x35x50 considered tall?
It’s taller than the standard 40″ and 45″ profiles, but still manageable in most warehouses.
Is baffle construction worth it at this size?
Often yes, if stacking precision and reduced bulging matter.
Do I need coated fabric?
If you’re handling fine powders or dusty products, coated builds help a lot. For general materials, uncoated may be fine.
Can liners be added?
Yes—liners are commonly used in this size depending on product requirements.
Ready to stop guessing and order the right bag?
Tell us what you’re filling, how much it weighs, and how you handle it — we’ll take it from there.