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A distribution center lives or dies by one thing: flow. Product comes in. Product gets staged. Product gets picked. Product gets packed. Product goes out. And every time that flow gets interrupted—because something arrived damaged, got scuffed, got crushed, or shifted in transit—you don’t just “lose a box.” You lose time, labor, dock space, and sanity. That’s why corrugated pads are one of the most underrated profit tools in a DC… because they prevent chaos before it starts.
Let’s talk like real distribution people.
If you’re running a warehouse or DC, you’re not buying packaging because it’s “nice.” You’re buying packaging because it makes your operation faster, cleaner, and less expensive when the volume is real. Corrugated pads don’t look glamorous, but they solve some of the most expensive problems a DC deals with every day:
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crushed corners
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shifting pallets
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scuffed product
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puncture damage
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strap and stretch wrap cutting into cartons
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top-layer damage
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load instability during LTL shipments
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and those lovely “mystery damages” where nobody knows what happened, but everyone knows you’re eating the cost
Corrugated pads are the simple, cheap layer between “smooth operation” and “daily fire drill.”
What are corrugated pads (in DC terms)?
A corrugated pad is a flat sheet of corrugated material (think cardboard, but built for protection) used to:
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protect product surfaces
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stabilize loads
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separate layers
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distribute weight
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create a barrier between product and straps/wrap
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reduce friction damage
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and keep pallets from turning into leaning towers
In distribution centers, corrugated pads are used like duct tape: everywhere, for everything, because they solve a hundred small problems that add up into big money.
And that’s the key point:
DCs don’t lose money from one big catastrophic event every day.
They lose money from 50 small preventable issues that happen over and over again.
Corrugated pads are designed to kill those issues.
Why distribution centers specifically need corrugated pads
Because DCs handle product like a high-speed machine.
Your pallets don’t get gently carried like a newborn baby. They get:
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forked
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bumped
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staged
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re-staged
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wrapped
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unwrapped
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cross-docked
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loaded
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unloaded
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stacked
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moved again
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and then shipped out under time pressure
Every touchpoint is a chance for damage.
And the faster you run, the more you need simple “buffers” that prevent products from getting chewed up by the process.
Corrugated pads are that buffer.
The big DC reality: not all damage is obvious
Some damage is instant—crushed cartons, punctures, broken product.
But a lot of it is subtle:
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scuffs that make product unsellable
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rub marks from vibration
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strap indentation
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corner wear
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label abrasion
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top-layer compression
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dust and grime transfer from dirty pallets
All that stuff turns into:
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rework
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repack
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relabel
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claims
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credits
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and customer complaints
If you’re shipping high volume, that’s death by a thousand cuts.
The 7 most common ways DCs use corrugated pads (and why each one matters)
1) Layer pads for pallet stability
This is the classic: you put a corrugated pad between layers on a pallet.
Why it works:
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makes each layer “lock” cleaner
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helps distribute weight evenly
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reduces carton bite and compression
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improves load squareness
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reduces shifting during transit
If you’ve ever had a pallet arrive with that “lean” and you knew the truck driver slammed the brakes… layer pads help reduce that.
2) Top caps to protect the top layer
Top layer damage is common because the top is exposed to:
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straps
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wrap tension
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stacking pressures
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random warehouse contact
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trailer vibration
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and “somebody put something on top of it”
A top cap pad protects the top layer from getting crushed, scuffed, or cut.
3) Bottom pads to reduce pallet-related damage
Wood pallets are rough. Splinters, nail heads, broken boards, grime—your bottom layer takes the punishment.
A corrugated pad on the pallet deck helps:
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smooth the contact surface
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reduce snagging
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reduce punctures
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reduce bottom-layer crush points
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keep cartons cleaner
For DCs that ship retail or customer-facing packaging, this matters a lot.
4) Strap protection pads
Strapping is great… until it isn’t.
Straps can:
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cut into cartons
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leave indentations
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crush corners
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damage labels
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weaken packaging integrity
A simple corrugated pad under the strap spreads the force and prevents “strap bite.”
5) Slip-sheet style staging and sorting protection
Even if you’re not using true slip sheets, corrugated pads are often used for:
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staging fragile product
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creating temporary layers during picking
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protecting goods on conveyor transitions
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separating mixed SKU stacks
DCs love corrugated pads because they’re lightweight, easy to grab, and fast to deploy.
6) Protection for returns and rework
Returns processing is messy. Boxes are beat up. Items are exposed. You need quick protection layers to keep product from getting worse while you sort, inspect, and repackage.
Corrugated pads help keep returns from turning into scrap.
7) Case-pick and mixed pallet reinforcement
Mixed pallets are chaos. Different box sizes, weights, and shapes create weak points.
Corrugated pads help create “platforms” inside the mixed pallet so the load doesn’t collapse or shift.
This is huge in e-commerce distribution and mixed retail orders.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Why corrugated pads are secretly a “labor savings” product
Most buyers think about corrugated pads like this:
“They prevent damage.”
True. But the bigger win in a DC is what they prevent behind the scenes:
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less time restacking pallets
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fewer rewrap jobs
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fewer repack jobs
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fewer “go find another box” moments
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fewer dock delays from damaged freight
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fewer customer escalations
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fewer claims
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fewer returns caused by transit damage
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fewer “we need to re-palletize this now” emergencies
In other words: corrugated pads reduce the stupid work.
And the stupid work is expensive because it steals labor from actual throughput.
DC labor is not cheap. And it’s usually the #1 cost you’re protecting.
Corrugated pads are a small cost that protects a big cost.
The DC damage chain reaction (what actually happens when you don’t use pads)
Here’s the pattern:
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Product ships without adequate protection
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Pallet shifts or cartons crush
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Receiving rejects or flags it
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You get a claim, a credit request, or a return
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Somebody has to inspect it
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Somebody has to rework it (new cartons, new wrap, new labels)
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Inventory gets delayed or written off
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The customer gets annoyed
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Your team spends time in email hell instead of moving freight
And if you’re shipping to retail or strict receiving standards, it gets worse.
All because a protective layer wasn’t there.
A DC is a system. When one part fails, everything downstream gets slower.
Corrugated pads keep the system running.
“Are corrugated pads worth it?” Here’s the honest DC answer.
If you’re shipping low volume, maybe you can wing it.
But if you’re running real throughput—multiple trucks a day, constant outbound, constant staging—then yes, corrugated pads are worth it if they reduce even a small percentage of:
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damages
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restacks
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returns
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and rework
Because at DC scale, small percentages become big money.
Let’s make it plain:
If your DC ships 1,000 pallets a week and you have a 1% avoidable damage/rework rate, that’s 10 pallets a week.
Now add:
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labor
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wrap
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cartons
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dock time
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claims time
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customer friction
That’s not a “little issue.” That’s a consistent leak.
Corrugated pads plug that leak.
Corrugated pads also help you ship “ugly product” safely
Some products ship in awkward packaging:
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heavy items in weak cartons
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irregular shapes
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sharp edges
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items that compress lower layers
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products that hate vibration
Corrugated pads help you make those shipments behave.
In distribution, “make it behave” is half the battle.
The types of corrugated pads DCs typically use
We’re not going to play the “technical jargon” game here. In most DC programs, pads fall into a few practical categories:
Standard layer pads
Used between pallet layers, on top, or on bottom.
Heavy-duty pads
Used when product weight is high or compression risk is real.
Custom cut pads
Used when you need a specific footprint for a specific pallet size, carton footprint, or mixed load program.
Full pallet footprint pads
Used for fast layering—operators can grab one pad and drop it without thinking.
DCs love anything that reduces decisions and speeds up flow.
“Custom size or standard size?” What DC buyers actually do
Here’s the truth: most DCs end up with a mix.
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Standard sizes for common pallets and common SKUs
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Custom sizes when there’s a high-volume lane or a recurring damage issue that needs a tighter fit
If you’ve got a recurring problem load, custom pads are often the simplest fix.
And if you’re moving volume, custom pads usually make sense because they eliminate waste and reduce “operator improvisation.”
Operator improvisation equals inconsistency.
Inconsistency equals random damage.
Corrugated pads vs. other protective options
You can protect pallets a lot of ways:
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more wrap
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corner boards
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foam layers
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plastic sheets
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edge protectors
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strapping protectors
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honeycomb
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etc.
Corrugated pads win because they’re:
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fast
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cheap
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light
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easy to store
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easy to use
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and adaptable to almost any product
They’re the “first line” solution in most DCs.
If you need more protection, you can stack solutions. But pads are often the foundation.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
The biggest mistake DCs make with corrugated pads
They buy them like they’re a generic commodity.
They say:
“Just get us pads.”
But DC success comes from matching pads to the actual use case.
Because a pad that’s fine for light cartons might not be fine for:
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heavy pails
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dense industrial boxes
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stacked bags
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high compression loads
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long-haul vibration lanes
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LTL shipments with extra handling
So the “right pad” depends on:
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product weight
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stacking height
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pallet footprint
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how it’s wrapped/strapped
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whether it ships LTL or FTL
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how often it gets handled
When you match it correctly, pads become a set-it-and-forget-it win.
LTL vs. FTL: why pads matter even more in LTL
If you ship LTL out of a distribution center, you already know:
LTL means more touches.
More touches means:
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more chances to puncture
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more chances to crush
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more chances to tip
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more chances to scrape
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more chances to have your pallet stacked under something heavy and stupid
Corrugated pads help reinforce and protect during that extra handling.
They’re not the only answer, but they’re one of the best low-cost upgrades for LTL lanes.
The “retail compliance” angle
Retailers don’t want to hear your reasons.
They want:
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clean pallets
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clean cartons
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readable labels
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minimal damage
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consistent presentation
Corrugated pads help keep loads looking professional, especially on:
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top caps
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bottom protection
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and layer stability
If you’ve ever had a retail load rejected or flagged for “presentation damage,” you know how expensive that can get.
Pads reduce that risk.
Warehouse ergonomics: pads make work easier
Here’s another underrated benefit:
Corrugated pads are easy for operators to use.
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lightweight
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easy to grab
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fast to deploy
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no special tools
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no complex instructions
In a DC, anything that requires training and perfect execution is risky.
Pads are simple. Simple scales.
And if you’re training new warehouse staff constantly, simplicity is worth real money.
How CPP supplies corrugated pads for distribution centers
Distribution centers need three things from a supplier:
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Consistency (same pads, same size, same performance)
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Availability (you can’t “run out” and improvise)
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Volume pricing (because you don’t buy 50 at a time—you buy programs)
CPP supplies corrugated pads in volume (MOQ 5,000) and supports DC programs where the goal is simple:
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reduce damages
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increase throughput
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keep outbound clean and stable
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and make packaging predictable so operations don’t have to think about it
Because when your DC is running, the last thing you want is a packaging surprise.
What we need to quote your DC corrugated pad program fast
To get you accurate pricing and the right setup, here’s what matters most:
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Typical pallet footprint (48×40 is common, but not always)
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Whether pads are for layer separation, top caps, bottom protection, or all of the above
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Typical load weight and stack height
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Any problem lanes (LTL, retail, long-haul, high-damage SKUs)
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Whether you want standard sizes or custom cut pads
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Monthly or quarterly usage volume
Even if you don’t know all of it, that’s fine. Give us the basics and we’ll guide the rest.
Bottom line
Distribution centers don’t need more complexity.
They need packaging that keeps freight moving.
Corrugated pads are one of the simplest ways to:
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stabilize pallets
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protect cartons
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reduce top and bottom damage
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prevent strap bite
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cut down restacks and rewraps
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reduce claims and rework
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and keep your DC flowing like it’s supposed to
If you’re tired of “random damage” and “mystery shifts,” corrugated pads are the easiest lever to pull.