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The 35x35x70 bulk bag is the upper limit of what most operations will run on a standard 35×35 footprint. This is a maximum-height, maximum-volume FIBC designed for situations where volume—not weight—is the constraint, and where reducing bag count is worth the added height.

This is not a “maybe” size. It’s a deliberate capacity play for facilities that have the clearance, the handling discipline, and the material profile to justify it.


What a 35x35x70 bulk bag actually means

A 35x35x70 bulk bag measures:

At this height, you are pushing the practical ceiling of the 35×35 footprint. The payoff is maximum usable volume per bag. The tradeoff is that construction, filling discipline, and clearance planning matter more than ever.

This size is chosen when buyers say:

“We want the most product per bag possible — and we can handle the height.”


Why buyers choose 35x35x70

1) Your material is extremely volume-limited

Lightweight products (flakes, resins, agricultural inputs, low-density powders) fill space long before they approach weight limits. This size helps you get closer to target loads.

2) You want to minimize bag count

More volume per bag means:

At scale, this adds up fast.

3) You’re optimizing freight and handling costs

When each bag carries more product, the cost per pound shipped improves — especially on truckload orders.

4) You’re locked into the 35×35 footprint

This size increases capacity without forcing changes to pallet layouts, staging lanes, or forklift handling geometry.


Clearance check (mandatory before standardizing this size)

Before committing to 35x35x70, verify:

If 60″ or 65″ bags are already tight in your facility, 70″ will create friction. If those run cleanly, 70″ can be a powerful upgrade.


Typical capacity behavior for a 35x35x70 bulk bag

Actual capacity depends on density, construction, and fill method, but this size is typically used when:

This is not a general-purpose size. It’s a throughput optimization size.


Common industries using 35x35x70 bulk bags

This size most often appears in:

If your product fills space fast and you’re trying to reduce total bags handled per day, this size earns its keep.


Construction options (non-negotiable at 70″ height)

At this height, construction is not optional — it’s the difference between success and frustration.

U-Panel

4-Panel

Circular

Baffle (strongly recommended at 70″)

At 70 inches tall, baffle construction is often the difference between a controlled load and a bag that becomes unstable.


Coated vs uncoated fabric (often the right call here)

Uncoated fabric

Coated fabric

With tall bags, fines have more opportunity to escape. For dusty or fine materials, coated fabric is commonly recommended at this height.


Top options (how you fill tall bags)

Duffle top

Spout top

Open top

For bags this tall, spout tops help maintain fill consistency and reduce mess.


Bottom options (how you discharge)

Spout bottom

Flat bottom

Closed bottom

Most operations running this height choose spout bottoms for control and safety.


Liner options (very common at this height)

Liners are frequently used when:

Common liner configurations include:


New vs used 35x35x70 bulk bags

Used / reconditioned bulk bags

Viable when:

New bulk bags

Preferred when:

CPP can quote both options depending on availability and your requirements.


Need 35x35x70 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

If you’re deciding between close options:

The right choice depends on whether your constraint is volume, weight, or clearance.


Buying at scale and want predictable pricing?

We quote 35x35x70 bulk bags based on your specs and truckload quantities, so your costs stay consistent as you scale.

👉 Request truckload pricing


FAQ: 35x35x70 Bulk Bag

Is 35x35x70 the tallest common size on a 35×35 footprint?
Yes — this is typically the upper practical limit before footprint changes are required.

Is baffle construction required?
Strongly recommended at this height to reduce bulging and improve stack safety.

Do I need coated fabric?
Often yes for fine or dusty materials due to increased sifting risk.

Can liners be used?
Yes — liners are common and often advisable for tall bags.


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.

👉 Quote 35x35x70 bulk bags now