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Shrink wrapping is the packaging process of covering a product (or a pallet load) in shrink film and then applying heat so the film shrinks tight around it, forming a tough, protective “skin.”
In plain English: shrink wrapping is how you lock something down with plastic + heat so it stays clean, tight, and stable through storage and shipping.
It’s used everywhere—from bundling retail multipacks to industrial pallet loads—because when done right, it dramatically improves load integrity and reduces damage.
Now let’s break down what shrink wrapping is, what it’s used for, how it works, the equipment involved, and the mistakes that make it fail.
How shrink wrapping works (simple step-by-step)
Shrink wrapping is basically four steps:
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Apply shrink film around the product (wrap it or sleeve it)
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Seal the film (if needed) so it stays in place before heating
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Apply heat using a heat gun or heat tunnel
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Film shrinks and tightens to conform to the product shape
Once it cools, the wrap becomes tight and stable.
What shrink wrapping is used for (the real jobs)
Shrink wrapping is used to:
1) Bundle products
Turn multiple items into one unit.
Examples:
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multipacks
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kits
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grouped cartons
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promotional bundles
2) Protect products
Adds a barrier against:
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dust
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scuffs
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light contamination
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minor moisture exposure (not always waterproof, but protective)
3) Stabilize loads
Especially pallet loads or large shipments where you need tighter containment than stretch film alone.
4) Improve presentation
Shrink-wrapped products look clean and “finished.”
5) Provide tamper resistance
If the wrap is cut or torn, it’s obvious.
Shrink wrapping vs stretch wrapping (quick difference)
People confuse these constantly:
Stretch wrapping
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uses stretch film
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no heat
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holds loads using tension + cling
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most common for pallet wrap
Shrink wrapping
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uses shrink film
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requires heat
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holds loads by shrinking tight like a skin
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often used for bundling and heavy-duty pallet unitization
Stretch = fast and common
Shrink = tighter, tougher, more “locked”
Shrink wrapping for pallets (industrial use)
For industrial pallet loads, shrink wrapping usually looks like:
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a shrink sleeve wrapped around the pallet and heated
or -
a shrink hood placed over the whole load and heated
This is popular when:
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loads sit in storage for long periods
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stretch wrap loosens over time
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you want better protection and a more rigid unitized load
Common shrink wrap materials (what you’ll hear)
Shrink wrap film type depends on the job:
Polyolefin (POF)
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common in retail and product packaging
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clear, clean, strong seals
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great for single units and multipacks
Polyethylene (PE)
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common in industrial shrink wrapping (including pallets)
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tougher, durable, suited for large loads
PVC exists in some places but is less preferred in many operations today.
Shrink wrapping equipment (basic options)
1) Heat gun shrink wrapping
Good for:
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low volume
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pallets
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occasional shrink needs
Pros: low equipment cost
Cons: operator skill matters, slower, can be inconsistent
2) Heat tunnel shrink wrapping
Good for:
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high-volume product shrink wrap
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consistent results
Pros: fast, consistent shrink
Cons: higher cost, requires setup
3) Automated shrink hood systems
Good for:
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high-volume pallet unitization
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consistent pallet containment
Pros: very stable loads, consistent
Cons: equipment investment
Common shrink wrapping mistakes (that cause ugly results and failures)
❌ 1) Underheating
Film stays loose and doesn’t conform—so the load still shifts.
❌ 2) Overheating
Film can burn through, thin out, or distort.
❌ 3) Wrapping unstable loads
Shrink film can’t save a bad pallet pattern or poor stacking.
❌ 4) No edge protection on sharp corners
Sharp edges can cut film during shrink or in transit.
❌ 5) Using the wrong film for the job
Light retail film used on industrial loads = tears and failures.
When shrink wrapping is the best choice
Shrink wrapping is often the best move when:
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you need tighter load containment than stretch wrap provides
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loads are in long-term storage
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you want better protection from dust and environmental exposure
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you’re bundling products into multipacks/kits
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tamper resistance matters
Bottom line
Shrink wrapping is the process of applying shrink film to a product or pallet and using heat to shrink it tight—creating a stable, protective wrap that improves containment, protection, and often tamper resistance.