How Do I Reduce Freight Costs With Packaging?

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Reducing freight costs with packaging is where grown-ups print money—because freight is usually bigger than the box itself.

And the fastest way to cut freight is not “negotiate harder.”

It’s this:

Make packages smaller, denser, and more stable… without increasing damage.

Here’s the real playbook, broken down by parcel and freight/pallet shipping.

Part 1: Parcel Shipping (UPS/FedEx) — Beat Dimensional Weight

If you ship parcels, you’re usually paying for DIM weight, not actual weight.

That means every inch of wasted space is literally money.

1) Right-Size Boxes (This is the #1 Freight Lever)

  • reduce box height by 1–2 inches whenever possible

  • eliminate “shipping air”

  • reduce void fill by sizing correctly

Even small reductions can drop you into a cheaper billed-weight bracket.

2) Switch Boxes → Mailers (When the product allows it)

Rigid boxes cost more to ship because they’re bulky.

Mailers (poly or padded) can reduce:

  • dimensions

  • weight

  • handling fees (in some cases)

Just don’t get cute with fragile items—damage will erase savings.

3) Reduce Void Fill (Void fill = you’re paying to ship fluff)

Void fill increases:

  • dimensions

  • pack time

  • sometimes weight

  • and often damage (items moving inside)

Fix the box size first, then reduce void.

4) Optimize “Pack Geometry” (How the product sits)

Sometimes the product orientation changes everything:

  • laying flat vs standing

  • removing unnecessary inserts

  • nesting products for multi-quantity orders

The goal is the smallest stable footprint.


Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!


Part 2: LTL/FTL Freight — Reduce Cube, Increase Pallet Density

If you ship pallets, you’re fighting:

  • cube (space)

  • class (density and handling)

  • damage from instability

  • accessorials (rehandling, oversize, etc.)

5) Build a Better Pallet (Stability cuts damage and rehandling)

A sloppy pallet costs you twice:

  • more damage

  • more rework/rehandling fees

  • carriers treat unstable pallets like garbage

Improve pallet stability with:

  • consistent pattern (brick stack when possible)

  • corner boards

  • top caps

  • banding when needed

  • correct stretch wrap tension + wraps around the base

Stable pallets get handled better.

6) Reduce Pallet Height (Where it makes sense)

Some carriers price and handle differently around:

  • 48” / 60” / 72” / 84” height thresholds (common handling realities)

Shorter pallets:

  • stack better

  • reduce damage

  • can reduce cube in tight trailers

  • sometimes reduce accessorial risk

But don’t reduce height by creating more pallets unless density improves overall.

7) Increase Units Per Pallet (This is pallet ROI)

If you can safely increase product per pallet:

  • fewer pallets shipped

  • lower freight cost per unit

  • less handling

Ways to increase units per pallet:

  • tighter cartons (right-size master cartons)

  • better case pack count

  • improved pallet pattern

  • switching to stronger cartons so you can stack higher safely

8) Reduce Packaging Weight Without Killing Protection

Packaging weight matters in both parcel and freight.

Common wins:

  • downgrade corrugate where overbuilt (only if damage stays low)

  • optimize foam (right density and thickness)

  • remove redundant layers

  • reduce double-boxing by improving primary pack design

But the rule is:
Never save pennies and create damage dollars.


Part 3: Packaging Choices That Trigger Extra Freight Fees (Avoid These)

9) Eliminate Overhang and Odd Shapes

Overhang pallets get damaged and can trigger fees.

Odd shapes increase handling and damage.

Keep loads:

  • squared

  • strapped/wrapped

  • within pallet footprint

10) Avoid “Floppy” Cartons and Weak Unitization

If cartons crush, pallets bulge, wrap tears, bands snap:

  • carriers re-handle

  • shipments get refused

  • claims rise

  • accessorials show up

Use packaging that keeps the load rigid through transit.

11) Stop Using the Wrong Pallet

Using the wrong pallet causes:

  • forklift damage

  • poor stacking

  • instability

  • wasted trailer space

Standardize pallets where possible and use quality pallets for outbound.


Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!


Part 4: The “Freight Savings” Checklist (Most Useful Changes)

Here’s the fastest checklist of what actually reduces freight costs:

Parcel (UPS/FedEx)

  • âś… right-size boxes

  • âś… reduce height first

  • âś… switch to mailers where possible

  • âś… reduce void fill

  • âś… optimize pack orientation

  • âś… reduce packaging weight

LTL/FTL

  • âś… increase units per pallet

  • âś… improve pallet stability (corner boards, top caps, wrap)

  • âś… eliminate overhang

  • âś… reduce total pallets shipped

  • âś… optimize carton strength for stacking

  • âś… standardize pallet patterns


How to Measure the Savings (So You Know It Worked)

Parcel:

Track:

  • average billed weight

  • average package dimensions

  • average shipping cost per order

  • damage/return rate

Freight:

Track:

  • pallets shipped per week/month

  • units per pallet

  • freight $ per pallet

  • freight $ per unit

  • damage/claims rate

If you only track “box cost,” you’ll miss the real win.


Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!


Bottom Line

To reduce freight costs with packaging:

  • make packages smaller

  • increase density

  • stabilize loads

  • avoid overhang and odd shapes

  • reduce damage so savings stick

If you tell me what you ship (dimensions/weight), how you ship (parcel vs pallets), and your current packaging (box sizes, pallet patterns), I can point to the highest-ROI packaging changes that will cut freight cost per unit the fastest.

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