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Box Size Optimizer

Find the right-size shipping box for your item in seconds. Enter your product, choose how much protection it needs, and get the ideal box dimensions, void space, dimensional weight, and the nearest standard box — so you cut shipping cost and damage.

inches of padding on each side

Recent boxes

  • Your recent box sizes appear here on this device — handy for comparing items on your next visit.

3D fit preview

Recommended boxYour item(s)

Drag to rotate · the gap is your padding

Recommended box (internal size)
Enter your item dimensions to get the ideal box size.
  • Best arrangement
  • Void (empty) space
  • Void fill needed
  • Dimensional weight
  • Nearest standard box

Estimates for planning. Box interiors are usually 1–2″ smaller than the labeled size, and the right padding depends on your item — always test-pack before shipping.

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Free shipping tool

What size box do I need? A simple way to find the right one

Choosing the right shipping box is the fastest way to cut shipping cost and damage at the same time. A box that is too big inflates your dimensional weight (so carriers charge you for air) and lets the product slide around; a box that is too small risks crushing it. This box size calculator takes your item dimensions and the protection it needs, then returns the ideal box size, the void space, the dimensional weight, and the nearest standard box — so you can order right-size packaging with confidence.

Step by step

How to find the right box size

  1. Measure your item. Record length, width, and height at the widest points.
  2. Add padding on every side. About 1″ for sturdy items, 2″ for most products, and 2–3″ for fragile ones.
  3. Account for multiples. Packing more than one? Arrange them in a grid and add the combined block dimensions first.
  4. Set the interior size. Item (or item block) plus padding on all sides equals the box interior you need.
  5. Match a standard box. Pick the smallest box that fits to keep void space and dimensional weight low.
Box interior = item size + (2 × padding) per side
Cushioning guide

How much padding do you need?

1″
Sturdy itemsBooks, tools, metal or solid plastic. A single layer of paper or bubble is enough.
2″
Standard itemsMost retail products. Two inches of cushioning on every side keeps them still.
2–3″
Fragile itemsGlass, ceramics, electronics. Use thicker cushioning and consider double-boxing.

Quick test: the item should not move when you gently shake the sealed box.

Reference

Standard shipping box sizes

Use these as a starting point, then match the optimizer’s recommended interior to the closest size. Remember box interiors run about 1–2″ smaller than the labeled size.

BoxDimensions (L × W × H)Good for
Small8 × 6 × 4 inSmall accessories, jewelry, parts
Medium (cube)14 × 14 × 14 inApparel, homeware, multi-packs
Large (cube)18 × 18 × 18 inBulky but light goods
Extra large24 × 18 × 18 inLarge or multiple items
USPS Flat Rate — Small8.6 × 5.4 × 1.6 inDense, heavy small items
USPS Flat Rate — Medium11 × 8.5 × 5.5 inMid-size heavy items
USPS Flat Rate — Large12 × 12 × 5.5 inHeavier flat shipments
Worked example

Box size example

You are shipping a 9 × 6 × 2 in item that needs standard protection (2″ padding). Add 2″ to each side: the interior you need is 13 × 10 × 6 in. The nearest standard box is roughly a 14 × 10 × 8 in carton.

Shipping 10 flat items of the same size? Stacking them 10 high gives an 8 × 6 × 20 in block — far smaller than laying them side by side — which is exactly the kind of arrangement the optimizer finds automatically.

Why it matters

Internal vs external dimensions (and why right-sizing pays)

Box sizes are usually quoted as internal dimensions, but the real clear opening is often 1–2″ smaller once you account for wall thickness and flaps — so always size to the interior. Getting it right pays off three ways:

Lower cost. Smaller boxes mean lower dimensional weight, so you stop paying carriers to ship air.
Less damage. A snug box stops the item shifting and hitting the walls in transit.
Less waste. Right-size packaging uses less board and less void fill, which customers notice.
Better unboxing. A well-fitted box simply looks more professional on arrival.
Key terms

Box sizing glossary

Internal dimensionsThe usable space inside the box; size your item to these.
External dimensionsThe outside of the box, used for carrier size limits.
Void spaceEmpty volume between the item and the box walls.
Void fillMaterial (paper, air pillows, foam) that fills void space.
Dimensional weightSize-based billing weight: L×W×H ÷ divisor.
Right-sizingChoosing the smallest safe box for an item.
CushioningPadding that protects the item and stops movement.
CubeA box with equal length, width, and height.
Double-boxingA box inside a larger box for very fragile items.
FAQ

Box size FAQ

What size box do I need for shipping?
Take your item’s length, width, and height and add cushioning on every side: about 1″ for sturdy items, 2″ for most products, and 2–3″ for fragile items. The result is the interior size you need. The optimizer above does this and suggests the nearest standard box.
How do I calculate the right box size?
Box interior = item dimensions + (2 × padding) on each axis. For multiple items, arrange them in a grid first, then add padding around the whole block. Choose the smallest box that fits to keep void space and dimensional weight low.
How much padding should I add around an item?
Roughly 1″ for sturdy items, 2″ for standard products, and 2–3″ on all six sides for fragile items. A good test: the item should not move when you gently shake the sealed box.
What are standard shipping box sizes?
Common sizes include small 8×6×4, medium 14×14×14, large 18×18×18, and extra-large 24×18×18 in. USPS flat-rate boxes include small (8.6×5.4×1.6), medium (11×8.5×5.5), and large (12×12×5.5). Interiors run 1–2″ smaller than the label.
Are box dimensions internal or external?
Usually internal, but the actual clear opening is often 1–2″ smaller than the labeled size because of wall thickness and flaps. Always size to the interior dimensions for fit.
What size box do I need for multiple items?
Arrange the items in a grid (for example 2×3×2) to find the smallest combined block, then add padding around the block. The optimizer tests arrangements and returns the most space-efficient layout and box size.
Why does box size affect shipping cost?
Carriers bill the greater of actual and dimensional weight, and dimensional weight is based on box size. A box that is too big raises the cost even when the contents are light, so right-sizing saves money.
Is a bigger box safer for shipping?
No. An oversized box lets the item shift and hit the walls, which increases damage. A right-size box with correct cushioning holds the item still and protects it better — for less.
How much space should I leave for bubble wrap?
Allow about 2″ on every side for a standard wrap, and 2–3″ for fragile items that need a thicker layer or double-boxing.
What box size avoids dimensional weight charges?
No size avoids it entirely, but smaller boxes have lower dimensional weight. Choose the snuggest box that still allows safe padding, and check the figure with our dimensional weight calculator.
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