Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ): 5,000
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If you’re shipping product out of Rochester Hills, Michigan, you’re sitting in the shadow of one of the most demanding supply chains on Earth. Automotive. Manufacturing. Tier suppliers. Distribution hubs. Tight windows. No excuses. And when your lane is built on deadlines, there’s one thing you learn fast:

Operations doesn’t lose money in one big dramatic moment.
It loses money in tiny, repeated leaks you’ve accepted as “just how it is.”

The biggest leak most companies refuse to question?

Pallets.

You buy pallets.
You store pallets.
You move pallets.
You ship pallets.
You repair pallets.
You dispose of pallets.
You deal with inconsistent quality and broken boards.
You pay to ship wood even when the customer doesn’t care about the wood.

Slip sheets are what smart, high-volume shippers use to cut the “wood tax” and tighten outbound efficiency—without changing what they sell.

Now, slip sheets have a reputation problem, and it’s not their fault.

They look too simple.

So people buy them like they’re ordering printer paper—generic spec, cheapest price, no thought. Then the first time a tab tears or a load shifts, the dock turns into a complaint factory and slip sheets get blamed.

That’s not a slip sheet problem.

That’s a spec problem.

Slip sheets are an engineered part of a handling system. When the spec matches the load, the environment, and the equipment, they run smooth and save real money.

What Slip Sheets Actually Are (Plain English)

A slip sheet is a thin sheet—paperboard, corrugated fiber, plastic, or laminated/coated—placed under a unit load so it can be moved without a wooden pallet. Most slip sheet programs use a push/pull forklift attachment that grabs a tab, pulls the load onto the forks, then pushes it off at the destination.

Instead of shipping your product on a heavy wood platform, you ship it on a thin engineered sheet.

That changes the math:

  • Less dead weight shipped

  • Better trailer/container utilization (depending on lane/load)

  • Reduced pallet purchases over time

  • Less pallet storage and disposal headache

  • Cleaner, more consistent unit loads in many operations

But only if you respect the rule:

Slip sheets only work when the spec matches your operation.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Why Rochester Hills Operations Use Slip Sheets

Nobody switches because slip sheets are “cool.”

They switch because something hurts:

  • Pallet costs keep creeping up

  • Freight costs squeeze margins

  • Trailer space is getting wasted

  • Dock turns need to be faster

  • Damage and claims are creeping up

  • Customers want consistent unitization

  • Procurement is under pressure to reduce total landed cost

And in Michigan supply chains, consistency isn’t a preference—it’s a requirement.

The #1 Mistake: Treating Slip Sheets Like a Commodity

This is how slip sheet programs die:

Somebody buys “standard slip sheets” on price alone.

Then you see:

  • Tabs tearing

  • Sheets buckling

  • Edge crush

  • Loads shifting

  • Bottom cartons crushing

  • Operators refusing to use them

Then someone concludes: “Slip sheets don’t work.”

Wrong.

Wrong specs don’t work.

A correct slip sheet spec must match:

  • Load weight

  • Load footprint (length Ă— width)

  • Product type (cartons, bags, shrink-wrapped cases, bundles)

  • Handling method (push/pull, clamp, conveyors)

  • Storage conditions (humidity, time stacked, temperature swings)

  • Trailer conditions and floor friction

  • Unitizing method (wrap pattern + corner protection matter)

When those variables align, slip sheets become routine.

Slip Sheet Materials (What Actually Works)

Here’s the practical breakdown.

Paperboard / Fiber Slip Sheets

Best for dry environments and stable loads.

  • Cost-effective at volume

  • Common for boxed goods

  • Strong when properly spec’d

  • May need coating/lamination if moisture is a factor

Corrugated Slip Sheets

Best when you need stiffness and some cushioning.

  • Helps distribute weight

  • Can reduce bottom-layer crush

  • Useful for loads needing rigidity without plastic

Plastic Slip Sheets

Best when durability, moisture resistance, and reuse matter.

  • Tough and consistent

  • Clean handling

  • Great for reuse programs

  • Higher upfront cost, often strong long-term ROI

Laminated / Coated Slip Sheets

Best when humidity, friction, and tearing issues show up.

  • Better moisture resistance

  • Better pull performance

  • Reduced curling and tab failure

Michigan weather swings are real. Trailers sit. Conditions change. Material selection matters if you want consistent performance.

Tabs: The Small Part That Controls Everything

That tab is where the push/pull grabs the sheet and moves the entire load.

Tab setups include:

  • Single tab

  • Two tab

  • Four tab

  • Reinforced tabs

  • Custom tab lengths

If tabs fail, the program slows down fast—re-handling, delays, and damage risk increase.

So we spec tabs based on load weight and pull force—not guesswork.

Do You Need a Push/Pull Attachment?

If you want slip sheets to run consistently at scale, a push/pull forklift attachment is usually the correct move.

Yes, workarounds exist.
Yes, workarounds usually waste labor and create inconsistency.

Slip sheets are a system:

sheet + equipment + process

If you already have push/pull, great. If you don’t, many Rochester Hills operations start with specific lanes where ROI is obvious, then expand.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!

Quick “Badass” Comparison (So You Can Decide Fast)

Option Best For The Tradeoff
âś… Slip Sheets Lower freight weight, better trailer utilization, bulk savings Needs correct spec + handling plan
⚠️ Wood Pallets Universal acceptance, easy handling Heavy, bulky, costly, inconsistent quality
🔥 Plastic Pallets Hygiene + reuse programs Higher cost + reverse logistics

If you ship volume out of Rochester Hills, slip sheets are one of the cleanest levers you can pull.

The Freight Math That Makes Slip Sheets Worth It

Here’s the logic:

  • Pallets add dead weight

  • Pallets waste space

  • Weight and space cost money

  • Slip sheets reduce both

That can mean:

  • Lower freight cost per unit shipped

  • Better trailer/container utilization

  • Reduced pallet purchases

  • Less pallet storage and disposal

  • Cleaner, more consistent loads

And because your MOQ is 5,000, you’re positioned for real unit pricing—not small-order pricing.

What We Need to Quote Slip Sheets for Rochester Hills (Fast + Accurate)

To quote correctly and avoid performance issues, here’s what helps:

  • Slip sheet dimensions needed (load footprint)

  • Load weight

  • Product type (cartons, bags, shrink, bundles)

  • Handling method (push/pull or other)

  • Storage/environment conditions

  • Material preference (if known)

  • Estimated monthly usage

If you don’t have every detail, that’s normal. Tell us what you ship and what you’re trying to improve—freight cost, pallet dependency, dock speed, damage—and we’ll guide the right spec.

Why Custom Packaging Products

Because you’re not looking for “some slip sheets.”

You’re looking for:

  • Bulk-ready supply (5,000 MOQ and beyond)

  • Specs that hold up in real handling

  • Reliable supply and clean communication

  • A supplier that understands procurement and ops must agree

We’re built for serious operations and serious buyers who want predictable performance and long-term savings.

Bottom Line

If you’re shipping out of Rochester Hills and you’re still paying to ship wood and wasted space because “that’s how it’s always been”… you’re leaving profit on the dock.

Slip sheets—spec’d correctly—can:

  • reduce freight weight

  • improve trailer utilization

  • reduce pallet spend and dependency

  • tighten handling and reduce damage risk

Once it’s dialed in, it becomes routine: quiet, fast, and profitable.

Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!