Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): Full Truckload
đźšš Save BIG on Truckload orders!
If you’re buying corrugated boxes, you’re not buying “cardboard.” You’re buying protection, presentation, and predictable shipping… and you’re trying to avoid the two things that quietly murder margins: damage claims and wasted space (aka paying to ship air).
Corrugated Boxes 101 (The 10-Second Explanation)
A corrugated box is basically a sandwich:
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Flat paper on the outside (liners)
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A wavy layer in the middle (the “flute”)
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Sometimes more layers if you’re going heavy-duty
That flute is the secret sauce. It’s what gives the box strength without making it weigh a ton.
Now here’s the part people miss…
There is no such thing as “one best corrugated box.”
There’s only: the best box for your product, your shipping method, and your budget.
The #1 Reason Boxes Fail (And It’s Not “Cheap Material”)
Most box failures come from one of these:
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Wrong size (too big = movement, damage, extra void fill, higher freight)
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Wrong strength (too weak = crush, blowouts, returns)
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Wrong style (your product needs a die-cut mailer, you’re using a floppy RSC)
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Bad packing process (great box, terrible packout)
Fix those four and suddenly your shipping department stops living in chaos.
The Two Strength Ratings That Matter (And Which One You Actually Need)
When buyers ask for “strong boxes,” they usually mean one of these:
1) ECT (Edge Crush Test)
This is about stacking strength. If you’re palletizing, warehouse stacking, or shipping LTL where boxes get bullied… ECT matters.
2) Mullen / Burst
This is about puncture and burst resistance. Think rough handling, sharp corners, heavy irregular items.
If you don’t know which one you need, don’t guess. The easiest path is: tell us what you ship, how it ships, and how it’s stacked—we’ll spec it correctly so you’re not overpaying or under-protecting.
The Most Common Box Styles (And When To Use Each)
Here’s what shows up in real purchasing orders:
âś… RSC (Regular Slotted Container)
The classic “Amazon-looking” shipping box. Cheapest. Fastest. Works for most shipping.
âś… Die-Cut / Mailer Boxes
Better presentation, better fit, cleaner unboxing. Great for e-comm, subscription boxes, and retail-ready packaging.
âś… Full Overlap (FOL)
Extra strength because the flaps overlap. Great for heavy parts, dense products, export shipments, or anything that scares you.
âś… Multi-Depth / Adjustable
When you ship different SKUs but want fewer box sizes. Less inventory headache.
Flute Types (This Is The “Fit + Feel” of Your Box)
Flutes are the waves inside the board. Different flutes = different crush strength, thickness, and print surface.
Here’s a quick, practical cheat sheet:
| Flute | Best For | What It Feels Like |
|---|---|---|
| âś… B Flute | General shipping, good stacking | Strong, not too thick |
| ✅ C Flute | Classic shipping strength | The “standard workhorse” |
| âś… E Flute | Mailers, retail, nicer print | Thin, sharp, premium feel |
| 🔥 Double Wall | Heavy, fragile, export | “This thing ain’t bending” |
If you’re shipping small items and you want that “premium unboxing” vibe: E flute or a clean die-cut solution usually wins. If you’re stacking pallets and shipping heavier cartons: B/C or double wall starts making more sense.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
“Full Truckload MOQ” — What That Means For You (And Why It’s a Good Thing)
A full truckload MOQ sounds big… but it’s usually where the real money is.
Because when you buy truckload:
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Your per-box cost drops
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Your freight per unit drops
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Your supply gets more consistent
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You stop doing those panic reorders where pricing magically gets worse
This is why larger manufacturers and fast-growing e-comm brands eventually “graduate” to truckload on boxes. It’s not because they love inventory… it’s because they love margin and stability.
The “Spec List” To Get a Quote Fast (Copy/Paste This)
Want a clean quote without 47 back-and-forth emails?
Send this:
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Inside dimensions (L Ă— W Ă— H)
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Box style (RSC, die-cut mailer, FOL, etc.)
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Board strength request (ECT or Mullen — or tell us your product + shipping method)
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Flute preference (or let us recommend)
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Print needs (blank / 1-color / full print)
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How it ships (parcel, LTL, palletized, export)
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Estimated annual volume (or “truckload every X weeks/months”)
If you don’t have all that, it’s fine. Even just: product, weight, shipping method, and target box size gets us close fast.
7 Mistakes That Quietly Drain Money On Corrugated Boxes
These are the silent killers:
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Buying boxes that are too big (paying freight on air)
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Over-spec’ing strength “just to be safe” (overpaying every single shipment)
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Under-spec’ing strength (damage claims and replacements destroy profit)
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Using generic boxes when you need better fit (void fill costs add up fast)
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Ignoring how boxes are stacked in transit (crush happens, then blame starts)
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Not standardizing sizes (inventory chaos, more SKU management)
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Printing everything when only certain SKUs need branding (wasteful)
The goal is not “strongest.” The goal is right-sized + right-rated + right-style.
Badass “Which Box Should I Use?” Comparison Table
Here’s a simple decision tool.
| Scenario | Best Move | Why |
|---|---|---|
| âś… Shipping general products via parcel | RSC + proper ECT | Cheapest + reliable protection |
| âś… Premium unboxing / subscription box | Die-cut mailer (E flute) | Better presentation + fit |
| ⚠️ Heavy products (dense) | FOL or Double Wall | Handles weight + abuse |
| ⚠️ Pallet stacking in warehouse | Higher ECT board | Prevents crush failures |
| 🔥 Export / long transit / rough handling | Double Wall + tighter fit | Extra strength + fewer claims |
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Printing: When It’s Worth It (And When It’s Just Ego)
Printing can be smart… or it can be expensive decoration.
Printing is worth it when:
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You’re shipping DTC and your box is a brand touchpoint
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You want warehouse labeling consistency
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You need compliance markings or handling instructions
Printing is not worth it when:
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The box is just a shipper that gets tossed immediately
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You’re trying to cut cost per unit and branding isn’t the bottleneck
A lot of companies do a hybrid:
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Blank shippers for most SKUs
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Printed mailers for high-margin or flagship product lines
What CPP Does Differently (So You Don’t Get “Generic Box Problems”)
Most suppliers treat boxes like a commodity.
We don’t.
Because we’ve seen what happens when you buy boxes “cheap”:
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Wrong rating
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Wrong size
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Bad stacking
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Customer complaints
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Returns
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Damage claims
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And suddenly those “cheap boxes” are the most expensive part of your fulfillment line
With CPP, the goal is simple: quote you the right box the first time based on how you actually ship.
The “Hidden Enemies” of Corrugated Boxes (That No One Warns You About)
Most people think a box either “works” or “doesn’t.”
But in the real world, boxes fail because of environment and handling, not because some villain shipped you “bad cardboard.”
Here are the sneaky enemies:
1) Humidity (a.k.a. “Why did my boxes get soft?”)
Corrugated board is paper-based. Paper and moisture have a complicated relationship.
If your boxes sit in:
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humid warehouses
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non-climate-controlled trailers
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rainy docks
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cold storage environments with condensation
…your board strength can take a hit. That’s why the same box that survives your warehouse can suddenly crush in transit during a bad week of weather.
Fix: If you’re shipping into high humidity or cold storage, you may need a different board spec, coatings, or a different packout approach (tighter fit, less dead space, better void fill strategy).
2) Overhang (the silent pallet killer)
If your box overhangs the pallet even a little, you’re basically telling freight handlers:
“Please crush my corners, thank you.”
Overhang leads to:
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corner crush
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edge damage
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unstable pallets
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higher damage rates
Fix: Match pallet footprint and box footprint. If your pallet pattern requires overhang, change the box size or switch to a more suitable pallet pattern.
3) Shipping “air” inside the box
A box that’s too big is a box that invites damage.
Because your product moves.
Then it slams into the walls.
Then you get returns, replacements, and angry emails.
Plus you pay more in:
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dimensional weight (parcel)
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cube (LTL)
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trailer utilization (TL)
Fix: Tighten box sizes. Standardize around a handful of “money sizes.” If you have tons of SKUs, consider cartonization logic (even basic rules) so you’re not guessing.
What “Right-Sizing” Really Means (And Why It’s a Cheat Code)
Right-sizing isn’t just “small box good.”
It’s:
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enough room for the product
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enough room for protection
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no extra room for chaos
When you right-size correctly:
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you use less void fill
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you reduce movement
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you reduce damage
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you lower freight costs
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you increase how many units fit per pallet/truck
This is why high-volume shippers obsess over right-sizing.
Because one inch off on each dimension… multiplied by tens of thousands of shipments… becomes “why are we burning so much cash?”
The Box Compression Reality Check (Stacking Isn’t a Guessing Game)
If your boxes are stacked (warehouse or transit), you need to think like gravity:
Top boxes push down.
Bottom boxes suffer.
The bottom boxes don’t care what your intentions were. They only care:
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how much weight is above them
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how long they sit
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how stable the pallet is
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whether humidity got involved
Practical move: When you request a quote, tell us:
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how many layers high you stack
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product weight per box
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whether pallets are double-stacked in storage
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whether you ship LTL (more abuse) or TL (less touch)
Those details help spec the board correctly so you don’t overpay or under-protect.
“Single Wall vs Double Wall” (When You Actually Need the Upgrade)
A lot of buyers default to “double wall” because it sounds safer.
But here’s the money truth:
Double wall is great when:
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the product is heavy/dense
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you have long transit
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you export
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your pallets get handled multiple times
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you stack high
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your product has sharp edges
Single wall is fine when:
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the product is light to moderate
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your packout is tight
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you’re not stacking to the moon
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transit is short and controlled
The goal isn’t “strongest.”
The goal is strong enough without burning profit on unnecessary board.
Print vs No Print: The “Brand Tax” Decision
Printing on corrugated can be powerful… but it’s still a cost decision.
Print is worth it if:
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you’re DTC and the box is part of the experience
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you need branding for retention (subscription, gifting, premium)
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you want clean, consistent warehouse ID / labeling
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retail requires it
Print is not worth it if:
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the shipper is purely functional
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the product is already in branded retail packaging inside
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your customers don’t care and margins are tight
A smart strategy for many ops:
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blank shippers for the bulk
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printed for your “hero” products
That keeps the “brand tax” targeted where it actually returns value.
The Most Underrated Cost in Corrugated: Box Inventory Chaos
When companies have 40+ box sizes, here’s what happens:
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wrong box gets used
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packers improvise
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void fill usage spikes
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shipping errors increase
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reorder timing becomes messy
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you stock out of key sizes
Then leadership blames the shipping team when the real problem is: too many SKUs.
Fix: Standardize. Most businesses can cover 80–90% of shipments with a tight set of box sizes if they approach it intentionally.
“Tell Me What You Ship” and We’ll Tell You the Box That Wins
If you want corrugated boxes that perform (and stop leaking money), the best move is simple:
Send:
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product type
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product weight
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how it ships (parcel/LTL/TL)
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how it’s stacked
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any environment issues (humidity/cold storage/export)
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target dimensions (or current box specs)
Then we can recommend:
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style
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flute
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strength direction (stacking vs burst needs)
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and sizing strategy
That’s how you turn corrugated boxes from a commodity into a profit protector.
Bottom Line
If you want corrugated boxes that don’t betray you mid-shipment, the formula is:
Right size + right strength + right style + consistent supply.
And since your MOQ is Full Truckload, you’re in the sweet spot where you can lock in better unit economics and stop playing the reorder panic game.