How to Choose the Right Corrugated Box Strength for Your Products
When it comes to shipping and storage, not all corrugated boxes are created equal. Choosing the right box strength protects your product, reduces damage claims, and avoids unnecessary material costs. For companies that rely on dependable packaging, understanding corrugated strength ratings is essential.
At ADS Paper Supply, we help businesses select the right corrugated solution based on weight, stacking needs, transit conditions, and storage requirements. Here’s what you need to know.
1. Understand the Two Main Strength Ratings: ECT vs. Mullen
Corrugated boxes are commonly rated using one of two tests:
Edge Crush Test (ECT)
Measures stacking strength
Indicates how much vertical compression a box can handle
Ideal for palletized shipments and warehouse storage
Common ratings: ECT 32, ECT 44, etc.
Mullen Test (Bursting Strength)
Measures how much pressure the box walls can withstand before rupturing
Focuses on puncture resistance
Often used when rough handling is a concern
Today, most modern distribution systems rely on ECT ratings because stacking performance is typically the critical factor.
2. Match Box Strength to Product Weight
A general guideline:
Up to 30 lbs → 32 ECT single-wall
30–65 lbs → 44 ECT single-wall
Heavier or fragile items → Double-wall construction
However, product weight alone isn’t the full story. Consider:
How high boxes will be stacked
Whether they’ll sit in a warehouse long-term
Humidity exposure
International vs. domestic shipping
3. Choose the Right Wall Construction
Corrugated boxes are built in layers:
Single-wall: One layer of fluting between two liners
Double-wall: Two fluted layers for added durability
Triple-wall: Industrial-level strength for very heavy loads
For retail shipments or light industrial goods, single-wall is often sufficient. For heavier components, machinery parts, or export freight, double-wall may be the safer investment.
4. Consider Flute Type
Flutes affect cushioning, stacking strength, and print surface quality.
A-Flute: Excellent cushioning
B-Flute: Stronger stacking, good puncture resistance
C-Flute: Balanced strength and cushioning (most common)
E-Flute: Thinner profile, great for retail packaging
Your choice depends on whether protection, stacking, or presentation matters most.
5. Think About the Shipping Environment
Ask yourself:
Will boxes be shrink-wrapped and palletized?
Are they going through automated fulfillment systems?
Will they experience temperature or moisture changes?
Are they being exported overseas?
Long transit times and humid environments may require heavier board grades or double-wall construction.
6. Avoid Over-Specifying (and Overspending)
Bigger and stronger isn’t always better. Over-engineered boxes increase:
Material cost
Shipping weight
Storage space
The goal is the right strength — not the strongest available.
7. Work With a Packaging Partner
Choosing corrugated strength isn’t guesswork. A knowledgeable supplier can:
Analyze product weight and dimensions
Evaluate stacking and warehousing conditions
Recommend board grade and flute type
Optimize for cost and protection
At ADS Paper Supply, we’ve been helping businesses protect their products for over 45 years. From single-wall shipping cartons to heavy-duty industrial packaging, we match box strength to real-world conditions — not just textbook specs.
Final Takeaway
The right corrugated box strength depends on:
Product weight
Stacking requirements
Transit conditions
Storage duration
Budget
Selecting properly ensures your products arrive intact while keeping packaging costs under control.
If you’re unsure whether your current packaging is overbuilt — or not strong enough — our team can help you evaluate and optimize your solution.
Need guidance on selecting the right corrugated box strength? Let’s talk.