Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): Full Truckload
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Custom pallet trays are one of those packaging pieces that look “basic” until you realize they control three things that cost you real money: load stability, damage rate, and warehouse speed.
Because a pallet tray isn’t just a tray.
It’s the foundation layer that decides whether your pallet ships like a brick… or ships like a liability.
If you’ve ever dealt with pallets that lean, shift, scuff, crush, or show up with that “this looks like it got in a fight” vibe… there’s a good chance the tray (or lack of one) is part of the problem.
And when you go custom, you stop forcing a generic tray to do a specific job.
You get a tray that fits your pallet footprint, your product footprint, and your handling reality—so your team can build pallets faster and your shipments arrive cleaner.
This is the no-fluff guide to custom pallet trays: what they are, why they matter, where they’re used, what specs actually move the needle, and how Full Truckload ordering makes them cheaper and more consistent than most people expect.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
What is a pallet tray (in plain English)?
A pallet tray is a corrugated or paperboard tray designed to sit on a pallet and hold product in a defined footprint.
Think of it like a “base pan” that helps:
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contain product
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protect the bottom layer
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create clean edges for stacking
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keep the load uniform
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reduce shifting and scuffing
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improve stability under wrap and straps
Depending on the application, pallet trays can be:
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open-top trays with low walls
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full perimeter trays designed to contain product tightly
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die-cut trays that lock together for stronger corners
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trays paired with a lid (tray + cover systems)
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display trays that go from pallet to retail floor
But no matter the style, the purpose is the same:
A pallet tray makes your load easier to build, easier to handle, and harder to damage.
Why custom pallet trays beat stock trays
Stock trays are designed to “sort of” work for “sort of” everything.
That’s fine… until you scale.
Then you start seeing what stock trays create:
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product overhang (unstable and damage-prone)
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wasted space (shipping air)
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misfit pack-outs (labor pain)
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corner crush (weak corners + heavy stacks)
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inconsistent pallet builds (process chaos)
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doubling materials to compensate (wasted money)
Custom pallet trays fix this by matching the tray to your reality:
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exact footprint for your pallet
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exact internal dimensions for your product layout
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correct wall height for containment and access
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correct board strength for stacking load
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correct design for forklift/conveyor handling
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consistent production runs so every tray behaves the same
Custom isn’t about “being fancy.”
Custom is about stopping the recurring problems that cost more than the tray itself.
The big problems pallet trays quietly solve (the money leaks)
1) Bottom-layer damage
Bottom layers take the most abuse:
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pallet deck board pressure
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friction and rubbing
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moisture exposure from floors/docks
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shifting under wrap/strap tension
A pallet tray creates a buffer and a stable base so the bottom layer isn’t the sacrificial lamb.
2) Load shifting
Load shifting creates:
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scuffs
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crushed corners
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leaning pallets
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unstable stacks
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damaged product
A good tray helps lock the footprint and reduce the micro-movements that become macro-problems.
3) Weak pallet edges and corner crush
Corners are where loads fail first.
Custom trays can be designed with:
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stronger corners
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better folds
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locking tabs
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the right board strength
So the tray doesn’t collapse when the load gets tall or heavy.
4) Slow pallet building
When trays fit correctly, pallet builds become repeatable.
Repeatable builds mean:
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less rework
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fewer mistakes
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faster output
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fewer “this one looks sketchy” moments
5) Freight inefficiency (shipping air)
If your product doesn’t pack out cleanly, you waste space.
Custom trays can be designed to maximize:
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units per layer
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layers per pallet
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pallet stability
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trailer cube utilization
Shipping air is expensive.
Trays can reduce air.
Where custom pallet trays are used most
Pallet trays show up in a lot of industries, but they’re especially common in:
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Food & beverage distribution
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Ingredients and bagged goods (with tray + slip sheet systems)
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CPG and retail-ready packaging
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Manufacturing and parts distribution
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Warehouses using high-speed picking and staging
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Any operation shipping mixed SKUs on pallets
If your pallets are getting handled multiple times (warehouse → truck → cross-dock → receiver), trays help keep the load together through the chaos.
Pallet trays vs. tier sheets vs. slip sheets (don’t mix these up)
Quick clarity:
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Pallet trays: contain and stabilize product at the pallet layer level (often with walls)
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Tier sheets: flat sheets placed between layers (tiers)
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Slip sheets: thin sheets used for push/pull handling with specialized equipment
A pallet tray is often used together with tier sheets:
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tray on the base
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tier sheets between layers
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top cap on top
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wrap/strap to lock it all in
That combo can dramatically improve stability.
The specs that matter when ordering custom pallet trays
This is where you either get a tray that performs… or a tray that becomes another problem.
1) Tray style (what are you trying to do?)
Different outcomes call for different tray designs:
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Want easy picking? Low walls + access cutouts.
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Want containment? Higher walls + tight footprint.
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Want heavy-duty stacking? Reinforced corners + stronger board.
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Want retail-ready? Printing + display features + tear-away panels.
So the first spec is: what’s the tray doing?
2) Inner dimensions (L x W x H)
This should match your product layout.
Not “close enough.” Close enough creates shifting.
Correct dimensions create stability.
3) Pallet footprint
Common footprints:
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48″ x 40″
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48″ x 48″
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44″ x 44″
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42″ x 42″
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custom footprints
Your tray should align with your pallet size and stacking pattern to prevent overhang and weak edges.
4) Wall height
Wall height affects:
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containment
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stack stability
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access for picking
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ability to nest/stack empty trays
Low walls = speed and access.
Higher walls = stronger containment.
5) Board strength and flute selection
Trays need to survive:
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stacking load
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forklift handling
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conveyor transfers (if applicable)
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transit vibration
Too weak = corners crush, walls bow, tray fails.
Too strong = overpay.
The goal is correct spec.
6) Corner design and reinforcement
Corners are the first failure point.
Custom trays can be built with:
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locking tabs
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reinforced folds
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glued joints (if needed)
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die-cut structures that strengthen corners
This matters most with heavy product or tall stacks.
7) Printing and labeling (optional but useful)
Even basic printing can improve:
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SKU identification
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warehouse accuracy
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retail presentation
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handling instructions
It’s not always necessary—but when it is, it’s a huge operational win.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Why Full Truckload MOQ is actually an advantage
Truckload ordering isn’t there to make life harder.
It’s there because at scale, the economics flip in your favor.
Full Truckload volume:
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lowers unit cost
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improves run consistency
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makes production efficient
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optimizes freight cost
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stabilizes your supply
And pallet trays get consumed quickly if you ship volume—especially if trays are part of a standardized pallet build process.
If you’re building pallets daily, you’re burning trays whether you think you are or not.
The hidden cost of bad pallet trays (what nobody budgets for)
Bad trays don’t just cost material.
They cost:
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rework labor
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damaged product
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unstable pallets
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slower warehouse throughput
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customer complaints
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returns and claims
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wasted freight space
One weak tray design can create friction everywhere.
One good custom tray design can remove it.
What we need from you to quote custom pallet trays fast
To quote accurately and quickly, send:
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Pallet size (48×40, 48×48, etc.)
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Tray inner dimensions (L x W x H)
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Product type and weight per tray
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Units per tray and layers per pallet
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Stack height requirements
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Shipping method (warehouse transfers, LTL/FTL, retail distribution, etc.)
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Any special features (hand holes, vents, printing, tear-away panels)
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Monthly usage (ballpark is fine)
Even if you don’t have everything, send what you have—especially dimensions and use case—and we’ll help dial in the spec.
Final word
Custom pallet trays are one of the simplest ways to make pallets cleaner, stronger, and faster to build.
They reduce bottom-layer damage.
They reduce shifting.
They improve corner strength.
They standardize pallet builds.
They improve freight efficiency.
And because your MOQ is Full Truckload, you’re in the volume lane where custom trays become consistent, cost-effective, and easy to standardize.