Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 2,000
đźšš Save BIG on Truckload orders!
If you’re moving masterbatch (or any kind of resin/additive compound) and you’re sick of torn bags, messy product loss, contaminated loads, and “mystery moisture” ruining a run… you’re in the right place. Masterbatch is expensive. And it’s one of those products where one little packaging mistake turns into a domino effect: clumping, inconsistent dosing, wasted material, and a crew scrambling to clean up a disaster nobody has time for.
That’s why Masterbatch New Bulk Bags (FIBCs) aren’t something to “grab whatever’s cheapest and pray.” The right bag protects your product, protects your process, protects your profit… and makes your shipping team look like absolute pros.
Now let’s talk straight.
What “Masterbatch New Bulk Bags” really means (and why it matters)
Masterbatch is typically shipped in bulk because it’s efficient. But efficiency disappears real quick when:
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Bags split in transit
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Dust leaks out (or moisture gets in)
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Your receiving team rejects loads
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Static becomes a safety headache
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The product bridges and won’t discharge cleanly
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Your operators have to “massage” bags like they’re doing physical therapy
A new bulk bag (not used) is the go-to for masterbatch when you care about consistency and cleanliness. Masterbatch touches your end product — and many facilities can’t risk residual contamination from previous contents. New bags help reduce the “unknowns” that cause quality issues.
But here’s the part most suppliers won’t tell you:
Not all “new bulk bags” are built the same.
Same size doesn’t mean same performance. Same fabric weight doesn’t mean same discharge. Same “coated” claim doesn’t mean the same barrier.
Masterbatch is a picky product. So the bag needs to match how you handle it.
The fastest way to pick the right bulk bag for masterbatch
When you request a quote, you’re going to get asked a few questions. Most people guess. Then they end up with “close enough” bags that cause problems.
So here’s the cheat code — the stuff that actually matters:
1) What form is your masterbatch?
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Pellets (common)
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Granules
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Powdery or dusty blends
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Specialty additives that act “sticky”
This matters because dust control and flow can change drastically based on particle behavior.
2) How are you filling the bag?
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Gravity fill spout?
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Hopper fill?
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Auger fill?
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Scale system with clamp?
Filling method determines the best top configuration and how much stress the bag takes during loading.
3) How are you discharging?
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Forklift to hopper with bottom spout?
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Bag dump station?
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Cut-and-dump?
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Full discharge required or partial?
Discharge style determines whether you need:
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A bottom discharge spout
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A duffle bottom
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A flat bottom
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Special anti-bridging considerations
4) Static risk or safety requirements?
Masterbatch and resin environments can involve dust, friction, and static buildup. Depending on your operation, you might need specific static-dissipative options (and yes — this is one area where “cheap” can become extremely expensive if you choose wrong).
5) Moisture sensitivity and storage time
If your masterbatch is being stored for a while or shipped through humid lanes, you’ll want to think about:
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Liners
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Coating
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Tight seams
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Dust proofing
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Barrier options
And we’ll guide you through it without making it complicated.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Common bulk bag configurations for masterbatch
Let’s break down the main bulk bag “styles” you’ll see for masterbatch and what they’re good for.
A) U-Panel and 4-Panel (workhorses)
These are extremely common, dependable, and typically the “default” structure.
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Great for consistent shape
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Solid stackability
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Reliable for standard pellet masterbatch
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Great for warehouse + transit
B) Baffle Bags (when you need max cube + stack)
If your operation stacks bags tight, ships a lot, or needs to optimize freight, baffle bags are a beast.
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Better shape retention
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Less bulging
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More stable stacking
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Better container utilization
If you’re shipping significant volume, baffles can pay for themselves with fewer headaches and better loads.
C) Top options
Your top matters more than people think:
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Open Top: simple, fast, but less protection
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Duffle Top: easy access, common for many facilities
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Fill Spout: cleaner fills, better dust control
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Conical Top: specialty setups
For masterbatch, fill spouts are popular because they keep things clean and controlled.
D) Bottom options
Masterbatch is often discharged into hoppers, mixers, or processing lines — so discharge matters.
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Flat Bottom: simple, but often requires cutting (messy)
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Discharge Spout: cleaner, controlled discharge
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Duffle Bottom: easier access
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Full Open Bottom: specialty
If your team is tired of product loss and cleanup, a discharge spout is usually the move.
Dust control and “cleanliness” — the silent profit killer
Dust isn’t just annoying. Dust is:
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Product loss
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Dirty facilities
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Slip hazards
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Inconsistent weights
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Customer complaints
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More time spent cleaning than producing
For masterbatch, dust can also lead to:
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Cross-contamination concerns
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Inaccurate dosing
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Material buildup in equipment
That’s where design details come in:
Coating vs uncoated
Coated fabric can help reduce weeping and improve containment, especially if your masterbatch has fine components or creates dust during handling.
Liners
A liner can be a game-changer for moisture control and cleanliness. Depending on your use, you may want:
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Form-fit liners
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Loose liners
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Anti-static liners
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Barrier liners
We won’t pretend there’s one “best.” There’s the right answer for your process.
Sift-proof / dust-proof construction
If you’re dealing with fines, these options can reduce leakage dramatically. The difference shows up in real life when the bags arrive… and your dock doesn’t look like a snowstorm happened.
Moisture protection (because masterbatch hates surprises)
Some masterbatch materials handle moisture fine. Some absolutely do not.
Humidity and moisture can cause:
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clumping
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inconsistent processing
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poor dispersion
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quality drift
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scrap and downtime
If your product is sensitive, we’ll look at:
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liners
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coatings
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sealed seams (where applicable)
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better closures
And we’ll help you decide what’s necessary vs what’s overkill.
How much weight can these bags handle?
Bulk bags come in different safe working load categories (SWL). Instead of throwing random numbers at you, here’s the reality:
You tell us:
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your target fill weight
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your product density
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how you lift/stack/ship
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any special safety requirements
…and we’ll quote you a bag that matches the job.
Because if a supplier “assumes” and ships something underbuilt, you’re the one stuck holding the problem.
What makes CPP different (and why buyers stick with us)
There are two types of packaging suppliers:
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The ones who sell you a bag and disappear
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The ones who help you avoid bad orders and keep your operation smooth
Custom Packaging Products is built for the second type.
Here’s what you get with us:
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Real packaging experience (not a call center reading a script)
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Straight answers when something doesn’t make sense
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Options that match your use-case instead of a “one size fits all” push
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Nationwide supply capability (you’re not stuck with one location’s inventory)
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A supplier that understands that procurement doesn’t have time for back-and-forth nonsense
And yes — we can scale. If you’re shipping masterbatch consistently, we’ll structure pricing to reward volume.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
The questions we’ll ask (so you can get a quote fast)
If you want the fastest quote turnaround, send these details (even partial is fine):
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Bag size (if you know it) — common is 35x35x60, but tell us your preference
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Product type — pellet masterbatch, additive, dusty blend, etc.
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Target fill weight — how many pounds per bag
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Top — open, duffle, fill spout (and spout size if known)
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Bottom — flat, discharge spout, duffle (and spout size if known)
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Loops — standard 4 loops, any special lifting requirements
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Liner? — yes/no/unsure
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Static needs? — unsure is okay; tell us your facility environment
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Zip code — shipping destination
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Quantity — MOQ is 2,000, but if you’re near truckload volume, tell us
If you don’t know the specs, don’t stress. We can work backwards from how you fill and discharge.
When should you go truckload on masterbatch bulk bags?
This is where the money is.
If you’re ordering new bulk bags and you’re going to reorder again in 30–90 days, truckload pricing is usually where you stop bleeding cash.
Here’s why truckload wins:
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Lower cost per unit
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More consistent supply
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Better freight economics
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Fewer “emergency orders”
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Better planning for production
Even if you don’t need them all today, many buyers stage inventory because the savings outweigh the storage cost.
And if you’re doing serious volume, we can structure it so you’re not constantly chasing bags.
Common mistakes buyers make with masterbatch bulk bags
I’m going to save you some pain here.
Mistake #1: Buying purely on price
If a bag fails, the “cheap” bag becomes the most expensive decision you made all quarter.
Mistake #2: Guessing on liner/coating
Some masterbatch doesn’t need it. Some absolutely does. Guess wrong and you’ll see it in quality issues.
Mistake #3: Choosing the wrong discharge
If your product bridges or won’t flow, your team starts doing weird workarounds that slow everything down.
Mistake #4: Ignoring static
If your facility needs static control and you skip it, you’re gambling with safety and compliance.
Mistake #5: Ordering the minimum forever
MOQ is 2,000 — but if you’re constantly reordering, you’re paying the “small order tax” repeatedly. Truckload gets you out of that trap.
Who uses Masterbatch New Bulk Bags?
If you’re in any of these worlds, you’re in the right lane:
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Plastic processors
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Injection molding facilities
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Film and extrusion plants
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Compounding operations
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Additive manufacturers
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Resin distributors
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Packaging and blending facilities
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Warehouses handling polymer additives
Basically: if masterbatch touches your production line, this is a bag you can’t afford to mess up.
What you can expect when you request a quote from CPP
You send us your basics. We respond fast with:
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Correct bag configuration options (based on your use)
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Pricing based on volume
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Freight options (and truckload savings when applicable)
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Lead time expectations
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Simple next steps to place the order
No corporate fluff. No drawn-out email chains where everyone’s “circling back.”
Just: the right bag, the right price, the right timeline.
Ready to price out Masterbatch New Bulk Bags?
If you want the smoothest path, send what you know — even if it’s just:
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“Masterbatch pellets”
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“Need 2,000 new bulk bags”
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“Shipping to (zip)”
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“We fill by spout and discharge by spout”
That’s enough to start.
And if you’re not sure what you need, we’ll ask the right questions and make it painless.