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  • How Many Kraft Mailers Should You Order?

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    Ordering

    How Many Kraft Mailers Should You Order?

    06/12/2026

    Quantity is usually the hardest number to pin down on a first kraft mailer order — order too few and you’re reordering within weeks at a worse price tier; order too many and you’ve tied up capital in packaging that outlives your current design. Here’s a simple way to land on the right number.

    Start from your shipping cadence, not a round number

    Rather than picking a quantity that feels safe, work backward from how many orders you actually ship in a defined period. Take your average weekly or monthly shipment volume, multiply by how many weeks or months you want the order to cover, and add a buffer of about 10 to 15 percent for demand spikes, damaged mailers, or design testing.

    Business typeFormula basisSuggested coverage period
    E-commerce / DTC, steady volumeAverage weekly shipments8–12 weeks
    Subscription boxConfirmed subscriber count2–3 billing cycles
    Seasonal / apparel dropsPrior season’s sell-throughSingle season
    Corporate giftingRecipient list sizeSingle campaign, plus 10% buffer

    New brands: start at the minimum and reorder fast

    If you don’t have shipping history yet, our 250-piece minimum is a reasonable starting point for testing a first kraft mailer design before committing to a larger volume tier. Because reorders move faster once your artwork and specs are on file, there’s little downside to starting small and stepping up once you’ve confirmed real demand.

    Key takeawayBase your order on actual shipping volume over a defined coverage period, add a 10–15% buffer, and reorder rather than over-ordering speculatively on a new design.

    Established brands: order at the volume tier that lowers cost

    Once you have a stable shipping cadence, ordering at a higher volume tier — 1,000, 2,500, or 5,000-plus units — typically lowers your per-unit price meaningfully. The math is usually favorable if you can confidently forecast selling through the quantity within two to three quarters, since holding costs for kraft mailers are low compared to the price improvement at volume.

    Seasonal and drop-based ordering

    Brands running seasonal collections or limited drops should size their order to the specific season or drop rather than a rolling calendar period, using last season’s sell-through as the baseline and adjusting for expected growth or new customer acquisition.

    Accounting for growth and marketing pushes

    A quantity formula based purely on historical average shipping volume can undercount what you’ll actually need if you have a marketing push, a major sale event, or a press mention planned within your coverage period. When any of these are on the calendar, it’s worth padding your order beyond the standard 10 to 15 percent buffer, since running out of branded mailers mid-campaign forces either a rush reorder at a worse price tier or a temporary fallback to generic packaging during exactly the period when brand impression matters most.

    What happens if you order too much or too little

    Overordering ties up cash in inventory and risks holding stock that outlives your current design if you rebrand or update packaging before it sells through — kraft mailers store well, but a large excess still represents capital sitting on a shelf. Underordering forces a rush reorder, typically at a smaller quantity and therefore a less favorable price tier than your original order, and it can create a packaging gap if the reorder doesn’t arrive before you run out. Both outcomes are avoidable with a quantity built from real shipping data plus a reasonable buffer, revisited every few months as your business changes.

    Not sure what to order? Get a custom quote and tell us your shipping volume — we’ll help you land on the right quantity. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • Poly-Lined vs. Padded vs. Flat Kraft Mailers: Which to Choose

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    Buyer guides

    Poly-Lined vs. Padded vs. Flat Kraft Mailers: Which to Choose

    06/05/2026

    These three constructions cover the majority of orders we produce, and the right choice usually comes down to one question: what does your product need protection from — impact, moisture, or nothing beyond a clean presentation?

    Flat Kraft Mailer: for goods that protect themselves

    The Flat Kraft Mailer is the lowest-cost, fastest-packing option, built from heavyweight uncoated kraft stock with a self-adhesive closure. It’s the right call when your product doesn’t need cushioning or moisture protection — folded apparel, paper goods, small accessories, and anything sturdy enough to travel on its own.

    Padded Kraft Mailer: for impact protection

    When a product has corners, weight, or fragility — a glass bottle, an electronics accessory, a piece of jewelry, a multi-item subscription box — the Padded Kraft Mailer’s bubble-cushion interior absorbs impact during transit while keeping the printable kraft exterior. It costs more per unit than a flat mailer, but far less than the cost of a damaged product and a replacement shipment.

    Poly-Lined Kraft Mailer: for moisture and weather risk

    The Poly-Lined Water-Resistant Kraft Mailer adds a laminated water-resistant layer to the interior, sealed fully at the seams. This is the right choice for liquid or cream-based products with any leak risk, or for shipments traveling through unpredictable weather or long-haul routes where a standard kraft mailer might show water damage before arrival.

    ConstructionProtects againstBest for
    Flat Kraft MailerNothing extra — presentation onlyApparel, paper goods, sturdy small items
    Padded Kraft MailerImpact, crushingGlass, electronics accessories, jewelry, subscription boxes
    Poly-Lined Kraft MailerMoisture, weather exposureLiquids, creams, weather-exposed shipping routes
    Key takeawayChoose based on your product’s actual risk — impact calls for Padded, moisture calls for Poly-Lined, and anything else can usually ship in a Flat Kraft Mailer.

    Can you mix constructions in one order?

    Yes. Many brands run a Flat Kraft Mailer for their lightest SKUs and a Padded or Poly-Lined mailer for higher-risk products, combining the total volume toward one price tier. If your product line spans multiple risk profiles, this is usually the most cost-effective approach rather than over-speccing every SKU into the same heavy-duty construction.

    What it costs to over-protect vs. under-protect

    It’s worth being honest about the cost trade-off on both sides of this decision. Choosing a Padded or Poly-Lined construction for a product that doesn’t need it adds unnecessary per-unit cost across every shipment, which compounds meaningfully at volume. Choosing a Flat construction for a product that actually needed cushioning or moisture protection risks a damaged-goods rate that costs far more per incident than the unit price difference would have — in replacement product, return shipping, and customer trust. The right construction choice usually pays for itself quickly in avoided damage claims, even when it costs slightly more per unit than the cheapest option.

    When to test before committing to a full order

    If you’re genuinely unsure which construction fits a new product, ordering a smaller test batch — at or near our 250-piece minimum — in your top candidate construction is a reasonable way to validate real-world performance before locking in a large order. Ship a portion of a normal order cycle in the test construction, watch for any damage or complaint patterns, and use that data to confirm or adjust your choice before scaling up to a full production run.

    Not sure which fits your product? Get a custom quote and tell us what you’re shipping — we’ll recommend a construction. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • Kraft Mailers as Unboxing Marketing: The Overlooked Margin Booster

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    HomeBlog › Kraft Mailers as Unboxing Marketing: The Overlooked Margin Booster

    Marketing

    Kraft Mailers as Unboxing Marketing: The Overlooked Margin Booster

    05/22/2026

    Most brands budget packaging as a cost center — a necessary expense to get product from warehouse to doorstep safely. That framing misses what a well-designed kraft mailer actually does once it lands: it becomes a piece of content, a brand touchpoint, and in some cases free marketing that a plain poly mailer simply can’t generate.

    The doorstep moment is a marketing moment

    Every package delivery is a brand impression whether or not the brand plans for it. A plain grey or white poly mailer with a shipping label communicates nothing beyond “this is a package.” A full-color, edge-to-edge printed kraft mailer communicates brand identity before the recipient has even opened it, and it does so on a surface — natural paper — that looks and feels more premium than commodity poly to most people, independent of what’s inside.

    Unboxing content has real distribution value

    Unboxing photos and videos are a significant category of organic social content, particularly for beauty, apparel, and subscription box brands. A kraft mailer with strong branding photographs better than a poly bag in nearly every case — natural texture takes light well, and full-color print sits cleanly on the surface. Brands that lean into this often see their packaging itself become part of what gets shared, at no incremental marketing spend beyond the mailer’s unit cost.

    Packaging typeBrand impressionContent value
    Plain poly mailerGeneric, forgettableLow — rarely photographed
    Poly mailer with stickerSlightly brandedLow to moderate
    Full-color printed kraft mailerPremium, intentionalHigh — frequently shared

    Reuse and recognition compound over time

    Kraft mailers are sturdy enough that customers sometimes reuse them for storage or repurpose the paper, extending the brand impression well past the original delivery. And because kraft paper is recyclable, brands leaning into sustainability messaging get a packaging choice that actually backs up the claim rather than contradicting it.

    Key takeawayTreat your kraft mailer as a marketing asset, not just a shipping cost — the unboxing moment and any resulting content are real, if hard-to-measure, contributors to customer acquisition and retention.

    Putting a number on it

    The unit cost difference between a plain poly mailer and a full-color printed kraft mailer is typically a modest fraction of your total order cost, especially at volume. Brands that track repeat purchase rate or social mentions before and after switching to branded kraft packaging frequently find the upgrade pays for itself well beyond the packaging line item alone.

    How to make your mailer more shareable without overdesigning it

    The most-shared branded mailers tend to be simple rather than busy — a bold logo treatment, a distinctive color choice, and enough negative space for the kraft texture itself to read clearly in a photo. Overcrowding the print area with too much messaging or too many colors can actually reduce shareability, since it competes with the product itself for visual attention in an unboxing shot. A clean, confident design that photographs well in ordinary daylight, without needing special lighting or staging, tends to perform best across the range of ways customers actually photograph their deliveries.

    Measuring whether it’s working

    Because unboxing value is genuinely hard to attribute directly to a single packaging choice, most brands track it as one input among several rather than isolating it perfectly. Watching for an uptick in social mentions or user-generated content after a packaging redesign, tracking repeat purchase rate before and after a switch to branded kraft mailers, and simply asking new customers how they heard about you are all reasonable proxies. None of these prove causation on their own, but together they build a reasonable picture of whether the packaging upgrade is contributing to growth beyond its direct cost.

    Ready to make your packaging work harder? Get a custom quote today. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • Custom Kraft Mailers for Apparel & Beauty Brands

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    HomeBlog › Custom Kraft Mailers for Apparel & Beauty Brands

    Apparel & beauty

    Custom Kraft Mailers for Apparel & Beauty Brands

    05/08/2026

    Apparel and beauty brands share a packaging challenge that most other categories don’t face quite as acutely: the product itself is often the reason for the purchase, so the packaging around it needs to support that quality signal rather than undercut it. A kraft mailer that looks premium and functions correctly does real work toward that goal — one that looks like generic shipping packaging works against it.

    What apparel brands need from a mailer

    Folded garments need room without excess bulk, protection from moisture on unpredictable delivery routes, and a mailer surface that photographs well, since flat-lay and unboxing shots are a staple of apparel brand content. Our Large-Format Kraft Mailer is sized specifically for folded sweaters, outerwear, and multi-item apparel orders, and our Poly-Lined Water-Resistant Kraft Mailer adds a water-resistant interior layer for brands shipping through rainy climates or long-haul routes without sacrificing the printable kraft exterior.

    What beauty brands need from a mailer

    Beauty and skincare products often involve glass, liquid, or cream formulations, which raises the stakes on both cushioning and moisture protection. Our Padded Kraft Mailer handles the impact protection for bottles and jars, while the Poly-Lined construction adds a layer of defense against any leak risk. Many beauty brands also use our Kraft Mailer with Die-Cut Window to let a bottle’s color or a compact’s finish show through before the package is even opened — a small design touch that reinforces the sensory, visual nature of the category.

    Brand typeRecommended constructionWhy
    Apparel, folded goodsLarge-Format Kraft MailerSized for garments, minimizes wrinkling
    Apparel, weather-exposed routesPoly-Lined Kraft MailerWater resistance without losing brand look
    Beauty, glass/liquid productsPadded Kraft MailerImpact cushioning for fragile items
    Beauty, gifting-forwardWindow Kraft MailerProduct preview before opening
    Key takeawayMatch your construction to your product’s physical risk profile first — moisture, impact, or bulk — then layer branding and design details like a window on top.

    Consistency across seasons and drops

    Both categories tend to run seasonal or drop-based release calendars, which means packaging needs updating on a cadence too. Because we keep your artwork and specs on file, reordering with an updated seasonal design moves faster than a first-time order, which matters when a launch date is fixed and packaging can’t be the bottleneck.

    Balancing brand storytelling with practical protection

    It’s tempting for apparel and beauty brands to prioritize the look of a mailer over its functional fit for the product, but the two goals aren’t actually in tension if the construction is chosen correctly first. Start from the physical risk profile — moisture, impact, or bulk — and then apply your brand’s color palette, wordmark, and any seasonal design elements on top of the right construction. A beautifully printed mailer that’s the wrong construction for the product still results in damaged goods and a poor first impression, which undoes the branding investment entirely.

    Cross-category lessons apparel and beauty brands can borrow from each other

    Apparel brands increasingly borrow the window construction from beauty packaging to preview a standout colorway or pattern before a customer opens the mailer, and beauty brands have picked up the large-format sizing apparel brands use for gift sets and multi-product bundles. Both categories are also converging on poly-lined construction as more brands ship year-round rather than seasonally, since a mailer that only performs well in dry weather limits when and where a brand can confidently ship without weather-related damage claims.

    Ready to find the right fit for your brand? Get a custom quote today. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • Kraft Mailer Sizes Guide: Flat, Padded, and Large Format Compared

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    HomeBlog › Kraft Mailer Sizes Guide: Flat, Padded, and Large Format Compared

    Buyer guides

    Kraft Mailer Sizes Guide: Flat, Padded, and Large Format Compared

    04/24/2026

    Choosing the right kraft mailer size is mostly about avoiding two failure modes: a mailer so tight the product barely fits and arrives crushed at the corners, or one so oversized it wastes material, looks under-filled, and costs more to ship than necessary. Here is how to think through sizing across our three most common construction families.

    Flat Kraft Mailer Envelope: sizing for lightweight goods

    Our flat mailers run from 6×9 in up to 14.5×19 in. As a rule of thumb, leave about half an inch of clearance on each dimension beyond your product’s footprint — enough to slide the item in without forcing it, but not so much that it shifts around loosely in transit. Apparel folded flat, paper goods, and small accessories are the most common fits here.

    Padded Kraft Mailer: sizing around cushioning

    Padded mailers range from 4×8 in to 12×15.5 in, and because the bubble lining adds a bit of internal thickness, it is worth sizing slightly generous compared to a flat mailer for the same product — enough room for the item plus the cushion layer to close naturally without straining the seal.

    ConstructionSize rangeTypical fit
    Flat Kraft Mailer6×9 in – 14.5×19 inFolded apparel, paper goods, small accessories
    Padded Kraft Mailer4×8 in – 12×15.5 inSmall hard goods, glass bottles, electronics accessories
    Large-Format Kraft Mailer14.5×19 in – 19×24 inFolded sweaters/outerwear, multi-item bundles

    Large-Format Kraft Mailer: sizing for bulk and apparel

    Once a shipment outgrows a standard mailer — bulkier folded apparel, a multi-item order, or a corporate gift bundle — our large-format construction, from 14.5×19 in up to 19×24 in, takes over. These larger mailers benefit from a reinforced gusset on the biggest sizes, so don’t hesitate to size up rather than force a bulky order into a mailer that’s technically large enough on paper but too tight in practice.

    Key takeawaySize for your product plus a small clearance margin, not the mailer’s maximum capacity — a snug, well-sized mailer protects better and looks more intentional than an overstuffed or overly loose one.

    When to just send us your dimensions

    If you’re not sure which size or construction fits, the fastest path is sending us your product’s dimensions along with your target quantity — we’ll recommend the closest stock size or quote a custom one as part of your mockup.

    Why sizing accuracy affects more than fit

    Getting the size wrong doesn’t just look sloppy — it has real cost and damage implications. A mailer that’s too large for its contents lets the product shift during transit, which increases the odds of crushed corners or a damaged item on arrival, and it also wastes material and shipping cost on excess dimensional weight. A mailer that’s too small forces the product against the seams, which can strain the closure and lead to a compromised seal or a torn corner before the package even leaves the building. Both failure modes are avoidable with the same fix: measure the actual product, not an assumed “standard” size.

    Sizing for multi-item and bundled orders

    Bundled orders — a multi-item subscription box, a bundled apparel set, or a corporate gift with several components — need sizing based on the combined footprint of everything going in, not just the largest single item. It helps to physically stack or lay out the full bundle before finalizing a size, since items that fit individually can add up to more volume than expected once combined. For recurring bundled shipments, it’s worth locking in a size early and keeping bundle contents consistent where possible, since changing the bundle composition later may require a size adjustment on your next mailer order.

    Ready to find your size? Get a custom quote and we’ll recommend the right fit. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • How to Order Custom Kraft Mailers: A Step-by-Step Checklist

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    HomeBlog › How to Order Custom Kraft Mailers: A Step-by-Step Checklist

    Ordering

    How to Order Custom Kraft Mailers: A Step-by-Step Checklist

    04/10/2026

    Ordering custom kraft mailers for the first time can feel like it involves more decisions than it actually does. In practice, most orders move through the same five steps, and knowing what to prepare before you request a quote shortens the whole process considerably.

    Step 1: Choose your construction

    Start with what you are shipping. Lightweight goods that do not need cushioning fit our Flat Kraft Mailer or Self-Seal Kraft Shipping Mailer. Fragile or small hard goods call for the Padded Kraft Mailer. Anything with liquid risk or weather exposure should look at the Poly-Lined Water-Resistant Kraft Mailer. Beauty and gifting brands often want the Kraft Mailer with Die-Cut Window, and folded apparel or multi-item bundles fit the Large-Format Kraft Mailer. If you are unsure, describe your product on the quote form and we will recommend one.

    Step 2: Gather your artwork

    Vector files — AI, EPS, SVG, or PDF — print the cleanest, but a high-resolution photo or PNG works too; our designers will recreate it print-ready at no charge if needed. If you do not have a logo at all, send a reference image or description and we will build one.

    Step 3: Confirm size and quantity

    Measure your product or existing packaging so we can recommend the closest stock size, or quote a custom one. Quantity can be approximate at this stage — our 250-piece minimum applies across every construction, and pricing improves at higher volumes.

    StepWhat you provideTypical turnaround
    Quote requestUse case, rough quantity, product sizeSame or next business day
    MockupLogo file, color preference24–48 hours
    ApprovalSign-off on final mockupAs soon as you are ready
    ProductionNothing further needed2 weeks standard

    Step 4: Review your mockup

    We turn around a photo-real mockup within 24 to 48 hours of receiving your logo and specs. Revisions are unlimited and free until you approve — there is no charge until the design is locked and production begins.

    Key takeawayGather your artwork and product dimensions before requesting a quote, and build in at least three weeks from quote to delivery for standard production.

    Step 5: Approve and plan for delivery

    Once you approve, production starts the same day and standard runs ship in two weeks. If you have a firm launch date, mention it when you request your quote — rush production may be available.

    Common mistakes that slow down a first order

    The most common delay is not on our end — it is incomplete or low-resolution artwork submitted at the quote stage, which sends the process back a step while we request a usable file or build one from scratch. A close second is an unclear quantity range, which can lead to a mockup and price quote that has to be redone once the real order size is confirmed. Submitting your best-available artwork and a realistic quantity range up front, even if both are estimates, keeps the whole process moving in one pass rather than several rounds of back-and-forth before production even starts.

    What happens after you place a repeat order

    Once you have completed a first order, reorders move noticeably faster because your artwork, construction, size, and color specs are already on file and do not need to be rebuilt from scratch. Most repeat customers can skip straight from a quantity and timeline request to an updated price and confirmed delivery date, without needing a new mockup unless the design itself is changing. This is one of the practical advantages of sticking with one supplier for recurring packaging needs rather than re-sourcing and re-briefing a new vendor each time volume needs change.

    Ready to start your order? Get a custom quote today. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • Kraft Mailers for Subscription Box Launches

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    HomeBlog › Kraft Mailers for Subscription Box Launches

    Subscription

    Kraft Mailers for Subscription Box Launches

    03/27/2026

    A subscription box lives or dies on the same unboxing moment, repeated every month. Unlike a one-time DTC purchase, the mailer is not just a first impression — it is a recurring touchpoint that either builds anticipation for renewal or quietly erodes it, order after order. Getting the mailer right before launch matters more here than almost any other packaging category.

    Why padded kraft is the default for subscription launches

    Most subscription boxes ship a mix of items — a few small products, sometimes with glass or delicate packaging of their own — which makes our Padded Kraft Mailer the natural starting point. The bubble-cushion lining protects contents through the postal system without adding the bulk or cost of a rigid box, and the kraft exterior takes full-color printing so your monthly branding, seasonal themes, or member-tier signaling can change without changing your packaging supplier.

    Planning your launch quantity

    New subscription programs face a specific quantity problem: you need enough mailers to cover your first few billing cycles without overcommitting capital before you know your churn and growth rate. A common approach is ordering enough for your first two to three months of expected subscribers plus a buffer, then reordering against actual signups once the first cycle confirms your numbers.

    Launch stageTypical order sizeReorder trigger
    Pre-launch / founding cohort250–500First month sell-through
    Early growth1,000–2,500Confirmed month-over-month growth
    Established program5,000+, recurringStanding reorder schedule
    Key takeawayOrder for your first two to three billing cycles at launch, then move to a standing reorder schedule once your subscriber growth rate is confirmed.

    Timing your first order against your launch date

    Standard production ships in two weeks after you approve your mockup, so plan your first kraft mailer order at least three weeks ahead of your announced launch date to leave room for the design and approval process plus a buffer for your fulfillment team to prep the first shipment cycle. If your launch date is firm and tight, ask about rush production when you request your quote.

    Designing for a recurring reveal

    Because a subscriber sees the same mailer construction month after month, small design choices compound in a way they do not for a one-time DTC purchase. Many subscription brands print a consistent base design year-round and rotate a smaller seasonal or thematic element — a corner badge, a color accent, or a printed message tied to that month’s contents — so the mailer feels fresh without requiring a full reprint cycle each time. This approach also keeps reorders fast, since the base artwork stays on file and only the seasonal element needs updating between production runs.

    Coordinating mailer delivery with your billing cycle

    Subscription fulfillment runs on a tight, recurring calendar, so kraft mailer delivery needs to land comfortably before your pack-and-ship window opens each cycle, not on the day itself. Building a two-to-three-week buffer between your kraft mailer delivery date and your fulfillment start date protects against the ordinary variability in production and shipping timelines, and it means a single delayed carrier shipment does not threaten your entire month’s subscriber deliveries. Many subscription brands set a standing reorder trigger — for example, when on-hand mailer stock drops to one month’s remaining supply — so replenishment happens automatically well ahead of need rather than as a reactive scramble.

    Ready to plan your subscription launch? Get a custom quote for pricing at your target volume. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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  • A DTC Brand’s Guide to Kraft Mailer Margins

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    Retail

    A DTC Brand's Guide to Kraft Mailer Margins

    03/13/2026

    For direct-to-consumer brands, packaging is a line item that is easy to underprice into your unit economics — but getting the volume tier right on your kraft mailers can meaningfully change your landed cost per shipment, and therefore your effective margin on every order you ship.

    Understand your landed cost

    Landed cost includes the per-unit mailer price at your order quantity, plus shipping the mailers to your warehouse or 3PL, divided across every unit. Because our pricing improves as order size grows, doubling your order quantity often lowers landed cost enough to offset the larger up-front spend within a single selling season, especially for a brand shipping several hundred orders a week.

    Pricing tiers to plan around

    Most DTC brands settle into one of three tiers: a starter tier around our 250-piece minimum for testing a new mailer design before a full rollout, a growth tier around 1,000 to 2,500 pieces once the design is proven and order volume is steady, and a full-program tier above 5,000 pieces for brands shipping daily out of their own warehouse or a 3PL.

    TierTypical quantityBest construction
    Starter250–1,000Flat or Self-Seal
    Growth1,000–2,500Flat, Padded, or Poly-Lined
    Full program5,000+Self-Seal or Large-Format

    Do not undercount the marketing value

    A branded kraft mailer that shows up looking intentional rather than generic functions as free, ongoing marketing every time a package sits on a porch or gets unboxed on camera — which is a real, if hard-to-line-item, contributor to your effective margin beyond the unit cost alone. Brands that track this consistently find it shows up in repeat purchase rate and organic social mentions, not just in the initial impression.

    Key takeawayOrder at the volume tier that matches your shipping cadence, and factor unboxing and repeat-purchase value into your margin math, not just landed cost.

    Where the numbers usually land

    Across the constructions we produce, per-unit pricing typically runs from about $0.45 to $1.60, with the low end reserved for flat and self-seal styles at higher volumes, and the high end reflecting padded, poly-lined, or large-format builds at smaller minimums. Most DTC brands find that even at the higher end of that range, a branded mailer adds only a small fraction to total order cost while meaningfully improving the unboxing experience.

    Factoring in decoration and construction choice

    Decoration method and construction both move the needle on landed cost independently of quantity. Full-color offset printing costs less per unit than digital printing at high volumes but has a higher setup cost, which is why offset only pencils out once you are ordering in the thousands. Construction matters too: a Flat Kraft Mailer or Self-Seal Kraft Shipping Mailer sits at the lower end of our $0.45–$1.60 range, while Padded, Poly-Lined, and Window constructions cost more per unit because of the added material and production steps. Brands optimizing margin hardest often standardize on the simplest construction that still protects the product adequately, rather than defaulting to the most protective option across every SKU.

    Building packaging into your unit economics from day one

    The brands that manage kraft mailer costs best treat packaging as a line item in their unit economics model from the first order, not as an afterthought once a launch is already underway. That means quoting your target volume before finalizing pricing on the product itself, so the mailer cost is baked into your margin target rather than discovered after the fact and squeezing margin already committed elsewhere. It also means revisiting your volume tier at least once a year as your shipping cadence grows, since a brand that scales from 1,000 to 10,000 monthly shipments without renegotiating its packaging tier is very likely leaving margin on the table.

    Ready to plan your program? Get a custom quote for pricing at your target volume. Learn more about how we work, or browse more guides.

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