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If you’re searching for a chipboard pad thickness guide, you’re already asking the question that separates smart buyers from people quietly lighting money on fire.
Because chipboard pads are one of those packaging items everyone thinks they understand…
until pallets start bowing, cartons crush, freight costs spike, or somebody realizes they’ve been paying for thickness they never needed.
Chipboard looks simple.
It is not.
Thickness selection is where:
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damage is either prevented or guaranteed
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costs either stay tight or quietly balloon
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freight either stays efficient or bleeds you dry
This guide is here to make sure you pick the correct thickness — not the thickest, not the cheapest, but the one that actually does the job without wasting money.
First, let’s get clear: what is a chipboard pad?
Chipboard pads are solid paperboard sheets — no flutes, no air pockets, no corrugation.
They are made from compressed recycled paper fibers and are commonly used as:
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layer pads between palletized product
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pallet liners (top or bottom)
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slip layers for light-to-moderate loads
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surface protection sheets
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separators between cartons, bags, or components
If you need cushioning or heavy compression resistance, chipboard is not the right material. That’s corrugated territory.
Chipboard is about:
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load distribution
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surface protection
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stability
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low-profile strength
And thickness determines how well it does those jobs.
Why chipboard pad thickness matters more than people think
Most buyers think thickness only affects “strength.”
Wrong.
Thickness impacts:
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bending resistance
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load spread
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pallet flatness
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carton deformation
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stacking height
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units per pallet
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freight cube
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cost per sheet
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cost per truckload
That’s why thickness selection is both a packaging decision and a logistics decision.
Pick wrong, and you either:
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get damage complaints, or
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pay for excess material and freight forever
The biggest myth: “thicker chipboard is always better”
This is how money gets wasted.
Thicker chipboard:
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costs more per sheet
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takes up more vertical space
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reduces pallet density
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increases freight cost
If the extra thickness isn’t doing real work, it’s pure waste.
The goal is minimum thickness that does not fail.
How chipboard thickness is measured (important)
Chipboard thickness is typically measured in:
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points (pt)
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mils
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sometimes inches
Conversion basics:
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1 point (pt) = 0.001 inches
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20 pt = 0.020″
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30 pt = 0.030″
Most industrial chipboard pads fall between 16 pt and 40 pt, with a few heavier options beyond that.
Common chipboard pad thicknesses (from thinnest to thickest)
16 pt chipboard (~0.016″)
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Thin
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Flexible
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Low bending resistance
Best for:
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surface protection
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light carton separation
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minimal load distribution
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short-term handling
Not suitable for meaningful pallet stacking.
20 pt chipboard (~0.020″)
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Entry-level structural thickness
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Still flexible
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Slightly better load spread
Best for:
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light pallet layers
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small cartons
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low stack height
Common, but often under-specced for heavier loads.
24 pt chipboard (~0.024″)
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One of the most popular thicknesses
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Good balance of strength and cost
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Noticeable stiffness
Best for:
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standard pallet layer pads
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moderate weight loads
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carton protection
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slip layers
This is where chipboard starts doing real work.
30 pt chipboard (~0.030″)
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High stiffness
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Good bending resistance
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Strong load distribution
Best for:
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heavier palletized loads
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multiple stacked layers
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improved pallet stability
A go-to choice when damage prevention matters.
36–40 pt chipboard (~0.036″–0.040″)
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Very rigid
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Strong resistance to bowing
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Higher material cost
Best for:
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heavy cartons
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long-term stacking
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applications where corrugated is too thick but thin chipboard fails
Usually the upper end before corrugated becomes the smarter choice.
A “badass” chipboard thickness comparison table
| Thickness | Approx Inches | Strength Level | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16 pt | 0.016″ | ⚠️ Low | Surface protection |
| 20 pt | 0.020″ | ⚠️ Low–Medium | Light layers |
| 24 pt | 0.024″ | âś… Medium | Standard pallet pads |
| 30 pt | 0.030″ | 🔥 Medium–High | Heavier loads |
| 36–40 pt | 0.036–0.040″ | 🔥 High | Heavy stacking |
Chipboard thickness vs corrugated thickness (do NOT confuse these)
This mistake costs companies real money.
Chipboard:
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Solid
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Thin
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No cushioning
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Good for load spreading
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Poor for shock absorption
Corrugated:
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Fluted
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Thicker
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Cushions loads
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Better compression resistance
If you’re trying to prevent impact damage, chipboard won’t save you.
If you’re trying to prevent carton crushing or uneven load distribution, chipboard can be perfect.
Thickness won’t fix a material mismatch.
How to choose the correct chipboard pad thickness (step-by-step)
Step 1: Define the pad’s job
Ask:
What is this pad doing?
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separating layers
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spreading weight
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protecting carton tops
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stabilizing pallet loads
Chipboard pads that try to do too many jobs fail.
Step 2: Understand the load above the pad
Key questions:
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weight per layer
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number of layers above
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weight distribution (uniform vs point load)
Light cartons = thinner pads
Heavy cartons = thicker pads
Step 3: Consider stack height and duration
Short-term shipping is forgiving.
Long-term stacking is not.
Chipboard will creep under sustained load.
The longer the load sits, the thicker you should spec.
Step 4: Evaluate pallet flatness
Warped pallets magnify stress.
If pallets are inconsistent:
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thinner chipboard bows
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thicker chipboard compensates
This alone can justify jumping from 24 pt to 30 pt.
Step 5: Balance thickness vs freight efficiency
Every extra point of thickness:
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reduces vertical cube
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increases pallet height
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impacts freight cost
Over thousands of pallets, this matters.
Where buyers most commonly screw this up
Mistake #1: Using chipboard where corrugated is needed
Chipboard doesn’t cushion. It spreads load.
If you need shock protection, you picked the wrong material.
Mistake #2: Over-speccing thickness “just to be safe”
Fear-based specs get expensive fast.
If your damage rate is already low, thicker pads may be doing nothing.
Mistake #3: Under-speccing to save pennies
Thin chipboard that bows leads to:
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crushed cartons
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unstable pallets
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customer complaints
That “savings” disappears immediately.
Mistake #4: Ignoring pallet pattern changes
Change the pallet layout and your old thickness spec may no longer work.
Specs must follow the load, not history.
Recommended chipboard pad thickness by application
| Application | Recommended Thickness |
|---|---|
| Surface protection only | 16–20 pt |
| Light carton separation | 20–24 pt |
| Standard pallet layers | 24 pt |
| Moderate-heavy pallet loads | 30 pt |
| Heavy cartons / long-term stacking | 36–40 pt |
These are guidelines — not laws — but they keep you out of trouble.
Chipboard thickness and bulk ordering strategy (how buyers save)
Smart buyers don’t spec 5 different thicknesses.
They:
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standardize on 1–2 core thicknesses
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consolidate SKUs
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order in bulk tiers
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reduce freight events
Often, moving everything to:
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24 pt for light-to-medium
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30 pt for heavier loads
is enough to cover 90% of applications.
Fewer SKUs = better pricing + less waste.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Thickness vs sheet size (the hidden interaction)
Thickness doesn’t act alone.
A 24 pt pad at 48×40 behaves very differently than:
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the same thickness at 60×48
Larger sheets flex more.
As sheet size increases, thickness often needs to increase too.
Ignoring this relationship is a classic mistake.
Moisture, humidity, and thickness selection
Chipboard is paper.
Humidity:
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reduces stiffness
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increases bowing
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weakens load spread
In humid environments:
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thicker chipboard performs more consistently
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or you may need moisture-resistant alternatives
Thickness alone can’t fight moisture forever.
Freight impact: where thickness quietly costs you money
Thicker pads:
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increase pallet height
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reduce stackability
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increase freight cube
Example:
An extra 0.010″ per pad Ă— 40 layers Ă— thousands of pallets = real lost space.
This is why thickness optimization is not optional.
How to spec chipboard pads correctly (copy/paste)
When requesting quotes, don’t say:
“Need chipboard pads 48×40”
Say:
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sheet size
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thickness (or target load)
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application (layer pad, pallet liner, etc.)
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weight per layer
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stacking height
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environment (dry / humid)
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quantity per order + frequency
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ship-to zip code
This avoids re-quotes and misfires.
Truckload ordering and thickness strategy
Chipboard is bulky.
Freight often costs more than material.
Truckload orders:
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lower delivered cost per pad
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stabilize supply
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reduce handling damage
Even if you don’t buy truckloads monthly, seeing truckload pricing helps you plan smarter.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Bottom line (this matters)
There is no “best” chipboard thickness.
There is only:
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thickness that works, and
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thickness that wastes money
When thickness matches:
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load
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duration
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environment
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pallet pattern
You get:
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fewer damages
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better pallet stability
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lower freight cost
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predictable performance
That’s the win.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
If you want help selecting the right chipboard pad thickness for your exact load — without overpaying — we’ll walk you through it and quote it clean, fast, and correctly.