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Label Size Recommender

Stop guessing label sizes. Tell us your package and goal, and get the ideal label dimensions, a live mockup with bleed & safe zones, coverage and shelf-visibility scores, barcode/compliance fit checks, print & material advice, and a branded spec sheet — intelligent recommendations, not just numbers.

1 · Packaging
2 · Dimensions
3 · Goal

Live packaging mockup

Label Bleed Safe area Branding zone
Recommended label
Best size
Coverage
Shape
  • Printable area (inside safe)
  • Safe margin
  • Bleed size (with 3 mm)
  • Corner radius
Coverage & visibility
Label coverage and shelf-visibility rating.
Size options
Label effectiveness scores
AI label advisor
Regulatory & element fit
Barcode & QR analyzer
Industry recommendation
Printing & material
Recommended methods
Best materials
Label cost estimator (optional)
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    Get a quote for these labels

    Send us your recommended label spec and we’ll quote printing on your chosen material — with design and compliance advice. Your dimensions attach automatically.

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    Intelligent recommendations for planning, based on your inputs and common packaging practice. Final artwork sizes, bleed, and compliance panels should be confirmed with your printer and the rules for your market and product category.

    Free design tool

    What is label size — and how to get it right

    Label size is the trim width and height of the printed label that goes on your package, plus the bleed and safe areas around it. Get it wrong and you waste shelf presence, fail to fit a barcode or legal text, or end up with labels that wrinkle and peel. This label size recommender looks at your package, purpose, placement, and style, then suggests the ideal label dimensions, coverage, shape, and corner radius — with a live mockup, bleed and safe zones, and fit checks for barcodes and compliance.

    Step by step

    How to choose label dimensions

    1. Pick the package. Bottle, jar, box, pouch, and so on.
    2. Enter dimensions. Size, or diameter and height for round containers (mm/cm/in).
    3. Set your goal. Purpose, placement, design style, and top priority.
    4. Get the recommendation. Best width & height, coverage, bleed, safe area, and shape.
    5. Check & export. Confirm barcode/compliance fit, review scores, export or request a quote.
    Quick guide

    Label size guide for bottles, jars & boxes

    PackageTypical label approachRule of thumb
    BottleFront/back or wrapFront width = 40–60% of circumference; wrap = circumference − 2–3 mm
    JarBody wrap + lidHeight = straight body − clearance; lid = lid diameter
    Box / cartonFront faceCover 50–80% of the face with a 3 mm safe margin
    Tube / canWrapWidth = circumference; keep content in central band
    Shipping boxFlat top/sideStandard 4 × 6 in (101.6 × 152.4 mm)
    Curved surfaces

    Wrap-around label guide

    A wrap-around label runs the full circumference of a cylinder. Set the width to the circumference (π × diameter) minus a small 2–3 mm gap, or plus a 5–10 mm overlap for a sealed wrap. Keep the height within the straight body so the label doesn’t fight the shoulder or base, and place critical content in the central 60% that stays flat to the eye as the label curves. Choose a conformable film for tight radii to avoid wrinkling.

    Shipping

    Shipping label dimensions

    The standard shipping label is 4 × 6 inches (about 101.6 × 152.4 mm), which matches common thermal printers and carrier layouts. Apply it flat on the largest top or side face, away from seams, edges, and tape, and keep the barcode square to the edge for reliable scanning.

    Design

    Product label design tips & best practices

    Always add bleed & safe area3 mm bleed beyond trim and 3 mm safe margin inside it — backgrounds run to bleed, key content stays inside safe.
    Right-size, don’t over-coverBreathing room often looks more premium than a full wrap; aim for 45–75% coverage on front labels.
    Reserve compliance spacePlan a clear panel for barcode, ingredients, warnings, and legal copy before finalising the size.
    Round the corners2–6 mm radius resists peeling and looks modern; square corners lift on handling.
    Avoid these

    Common label sizing mistakes

    No bleedWhite slivers appear at the edge when the cut shifts. Always extend artwork 3 mm past trim.
    Barcode too smallBelow ~30 × 20 mm with quiet zones, scans fail at the till. Reserve space early.
    Label taller than the straight bodyIt wrinkles over shoulders and bases on bottles and jars.
    OvercrowdingCramming text to the edge hurts readability and looks cheap — leave margins.
    Key terms

    Label glossary

    TrimThe final cut size of the label.
    Bleed3 mm of artwork beyond trim to avoid white edges.
    Safe area3 mm inside trim where key content stays.
    CoverageShare of the face the label occupies.
    Wrap-aroundA label that circles the whole container.
    Quiet zoneClear margin a barcode needs to scan.
    BOPPWater-resistant film, common for bottles.
    Die-cutA label cut to a custom shape.
    Visibility scoreHow well the label stands out on shelf.
    FAQ

    Label size FAQ

    How do I choose a label size?
    Size the label to a sensible share of the labelable face (about 45–75% for front labels), leave a 3 mm safe margin, and match it to the purpose — branding needs presence, information needs room. The tool does this and shows coverage and fit.
    What size label fits a bottle?
    Front/back: 40–60% of circumference wide and about half to two-thirds of the straight body tall. Wrap: width = circumference (π × diameter) − a 2–3 mm gap.
    What size label fits a jar?
    A wrap or front label sized to the straight body height with clearance above and below, plus an optional round lid label sized to the lid diameter.
    What label size for a box?
    Size to the chosen face (front = length × height) and cover 50–80% for branding with a safe margin; for full coverage, face minus ~2 mm each edge.
    How much space should a barcode occupy?
    About 30 × 20 mm minimum (roughly 80% magnification) plus quiet zones each side. Smaller risks scan failures.
    What is bleed area?
    The 3 mm of artwork extended beyond the trim edge so there’s no white sliver when the label is cut. Run backgrounds and images out to bleed.
    What is the safe margin on a label?
    The 3 mm inside trim where you keep important text and logos, so nothing critical is cut if the cut shifts.
    Can labels wrap around containers?
    Yes — a wrap label runs the full circumference with a small overlap or gap. Keep key content in the central readable band.
    How do I size a wrap-around label?
    Width = circumference − 2–3 mm gap (or + 5–10 mm overlap); height = straight body minus shoulder and base clearance.
    What is the ideal label size for cosmetic packaging?
    Often a smaller front label with generous whitespace reads more premium than a full wrap, plus a separate panel for mandatory information.
    What size is a standard shipping label?
    4 × 6 inches (about 101.6 × 152.4 mm), matching thermal printers and carriers. Apply flat, clear of seams and tape.
    How big should a QR code be on a label?
    At least 20 × 20 mm for reliable phone scanning, larger for more data or distance, with a quiet margin and away from curves.
    What is label coverage percentage?
    The share of the labelable face the label occupies. Higher = more branding; lower = cleaner/premium. Most front labels sit 45–75%.
    What label size for a supplement bottle?
    A wrap or front-and-back label sized to fit the Supplement Facts panel, ingredients, warnings, and batch/expiry — favour higher coverage.
    What label size for a candle?
    A body wrap or front label on the straight section, plus a separate base label for the required safety warnings.
    How do I size a label for a tube?
    A wrap around the body, width = circumference, keeping content off the crimp seal and cap shoulder.
    What is the best label shape?
    Rectangle or rounded rectangle for most; oval/circle for lids and premium looks; die-cut for luxury or irregular surfaces.
    What corner radius should a label have?
    2–3 mm for minimal/modern, 4–6 mm for premium/luxury, to resist peeling and look refined; compliance labels can stay near square.
    Do I need a different label for front and back?
    Often yes — front for brand and message, back for ingredients, instructions, barcode, and legal copy.
    What material is best for bottle labels?
    BOPP film resists water and oils (good for chilled/wet); paper suits dry products and a natural look; clear film and foil suit premium designs.
    What printing method should I use for labels?
    Digital for short runs and versions; flexo for large runs; offset for quality; Pantone spot or foil for premium/luxury. The tool suggests one from your style and quantity.
    How small can text be on a label?
    Keep body text at 6 pt or larger, and check any minimum type sizes required for ingredients, warnings, or legal copy in your market.
    How do I fit ingredients and nutrition facts?
    Reserve a dedicated panel and check the printable area can hold it. The tool estimates the space these elements need and flags if the label is too small.
    What is the difference between trim, bleed, and safe area?
    Trim = final cut size; bleed = 3 mm artwork beyond trim; safe area = 3 mm inside trim where key content stays clear of the cut.
    Why is my label wrinkling on a curved surface?
    Flat labels wrinkle on tight curves and shoulders. Size to the straight cylindrical section and use a conformable film material.
    How do I maximise shelf visibility?
    Front-facing label, high coverage, bold brand mark, strong contrast, one clear message. The tool gives a shelf-visibility score to compare options.
    What label size for a pouch?
    Use the flat front panel, keep artwork clear of seals and the gusset, and size it to cover the main display area.
    Should a label cover the whole package?
    Not always — full coverage maximises print but can look busy and is harder to apply; a well-placed partial label often reads as higher quality.
    How do I calculate label size from package dimensions?
    Flat: face width × height with a coverage factor and safe margin. Round: width from circumference (π × diameter), height from the straight body. The tool automates it.
    Does this tool give exact print-ready files?
    No — it recommends sizes, bleed, safe areas, and shapes and exports a spec. Final print-ready artwork and compliance panels should be set up in design software and confirmed with your printer.
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