Insert Divider & Partition Calculator
Design the perfect box divider in seconds. Enter your box and product and get the optimal grid layout, compartment size, divider piece counts, material & board area, a protection score, a visual blueprint, and a downloadable spec — built for packaging engineers, designers, and buyers.
Divider blueprint —
- Rows × Columns —
- Vertical / Horizontal pieces —
- Divider piece size (H × L) —
- Total divider material —
- Waste (cutting) —
- Packaging density —
- Enter costs to estimate —
Get a quote for these dividers
Send us your calculated layout and we’ll quote die-cut inserts, partitions, or custom dividers — with material and protection advice. Your measurements are attached automatically.
Engineering estimates for planning. Grid layouts assume slotted dividers with the box as the outer boundary; honeycomb and custom builds vary. Material weights and costs are approximate — confirm against your board spec and printer quote before production.
Insert divider & box partition calculator
An insert divider calculator takes the guesswork out of designing the partitions that keep products safe inside a box. Enter your box and product and it works out the best grid of rows and columns, the exact compartment size, how many divider pieces you need, the board area and waste, a shipping protection score, and a visual blueprint — the kind of engineering a packaging designer would do by hand, in seconds.
What is an insert divider? What is a box partition?
An insert divider (also called a box partition) is a set of intersecting board strips that slot together to split a box into separate compartments. Each product sits in its own cell, so items can’t knock together or slide around during shipping — the main cause of in-transit breakage for bottles, jars, glassware, cosmetics, and electronics.
How to design packaging dividers
- Measure the box interior. Inside length, width, and height.
- Add the product. Shape and size (or diameter), weight, and fragility.
- Set divider details. Board thickness, divider type, and compartments wanted.
- Calculate. Get rows × columns, compartment size, piece counts, board area, and a protection score.
- Review & export. Check the blueprint and fit, then download the spec or request a quote.
Which flute for partitions?
| Flute | Approx. thickness | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| E-flute | ~1.5 mm | Light, printable partitions; retail inserts |
| B-flute | ~3 mm | All-round partitions; bottles & jars |
| C-flute | ~4 mm | More cushioning; heavier products |
| Double-wall | ~6–7 mm | Heavy or very fragile glass |
Divider materials comparison
| Material | Best for | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corrugated | Shipping, fragile goods | Cushions impact, light, recyclable | Thicker walls take cell space |
| Chipboard | Retail inserts, lighter goods | Rigid, smooth, printable | Less cushioning, heavier |
| Paperboard | Light retail dividers | Cheap, printable, thin | Low protection |
| Corrugated plastic | Reusable / wet environments | Durable, washable, water-resistant | Higher cost, recyclability |
How many compartments should you use?
Use one compartment per product and size the grid so each cell is the product plus about 2–3 mm clearance per side. Target 70–90% space utilization: too many small cells waste board and add cost, while too few let products shift. The calculator searches grid options and flags overcrowded, tight, perfect, and loose fits so you can dial it in.