Daniel sent us this one — he's been thinking about how international freight is essentially one giant operation of fitting smaller boxes inside bigger boxes, and he wants to understand the logistics of that nesting process. Specifically, he's asking five things: how consolidation actually works from factory floor to container ship, what the different pallet specifications are, which smaller pallets fit inside larger ones, which pallets fit inside trucks and boats and airplanes, and whether air freight's unique containers require their own pallets or if a common set can work across all freight methods. There's a lot here, and honestly it gets at something most people never think about.
The humble pallet. Everyone knows the shipping container — there are books about it, documentaries, it's the unsung hero of globalization. But the real magic happens one level down. The pallet is the thing that makes the container work. Without standardized pallets, the container is just an empty metal box that takes forever to load and unload.
It's the unsung hero's unsung hero. The bass player of global trade.
And with supply chains still recalibrating after all the disruptions of the past few years, and air freight rates bouncing around, understanding how cargo consolidation actually works — the physical geometry of it — has never been more relevant. Whether you're a logistics manager or just someone who's ever wondered why your Amazon box arrived in a box inside another box.
The Russian doll approach to commerce. So let's start with the factory floor — how does a pile of lumber become a standardized unit of global trade?
Right, so the core concept here is what the industry calls the unit load. The idea is that you take individual items — say, picture frames, to borrow the prompt's example — and you consolidate them upward through progressively larger standardized containers until you've got something a crane can grab. The pallet is the smallest unit that gets handled mechanically. Below the pallet, you've got master cartons and individual consumer packages, but those are handled by people or smaller equipment. Once something's on a pallet, it enters the world of forklifts, pallet jacks, and ultimately container cranes.
The pallet is the boundary between human-scale handling and machine-scale handling.
The pallet is the interface. And like any interface, if the standards don't match, nothing connects. The process works like this: at the factory, finished goods get packed into shipping cartons — those are your master cartons. Those cartons get stacked onto a pallet in a specific pattern called a palletizing pattern, which is designed to maximize stability and cube utilization. The loaded pallet gets wrapped in stretch film to hold everything together, and now you've got a unit load. That unit load gets forklifted into a truck or a shipping container. At the port, containers get stacked onto ships. At the destination port, the process reverses.
Every time that pallet gets moved, someone's making a decision about whether to keep the load intact or break it down and rebuild it.
Which is where the costs hide. Every handling event — what the industry calls a touch — costs money and risks damage. The fewer touches, the better. That's the entire economic logic behind containerization and palletization. But here's where it gets interesting: the pallet itself has a history, and the different standards we have today are the result of path dependence, not some grand rational design.
Path dependence — meaning once a standard gets locked in, you're stuck with it even if it's not optimal.
And the pallet world is a case study in that. Let me walk through the major standards. The most common pallet in Europe is the EUR-pallet, also called the Euro-pallet. It measures twelve hundred by eight hundred millimeters. It was standardized in nineteen sixty-one by the European Pallet Association, or EPAL, and there are over six hundred million of them in circulation today. The dimensions weren't chosen arbitrarily — they were designed to fit exactly two across in a standard European rail car, which has an internal width of about two point five meters.
The pallet was designed around the train, not the truck.
The railway loading gauge dictated the pallet, and the pallet then dictated everything else — warehouse racking, forklift dimensions, door widths. Now contrast that with the North American standard. The most common US pallet is forty-eight by forty inches — that's about twelve nineteen by ten sixteen millimeters. This size emerged from a different constraint: the width of a standard truck trailer. A typical US semi-trailer is a hundred and two inches wide internally. Two forty-eight-inch pallets side by side give you ninety-six inches, leaving about three inches of slack on each side. Just enough room to get a forklift in without wasting too much space.
Europe optimized for rail, America optimized for trucks. And now we've got two major standards that don't play nicely together.
Those aren't the only ones. The ISO — the International Organization for Standardization — recognizes several pallet footprints. There's the twelve hundred by one thousand millimeter pallet, which is common in Asia and is something of a compromise size. There's the eleven forty by eleven forty millimeter pallet used in Asian markets, designed to fit efficiently in the standard Asian truck. There are Australian pallets, which are eleven sixty-five by eleven sixty-five millimeters. The global pallet market was valued at roughly eighty-five billion dollars last year, and there are over four hundred different pallet sizes in use globally.
And that's before you get into custom pallets for specific products. So when people talk about pallet standardization, it's not that there's no standard — it's that there are too many standards, each one optimized for a specific regional or modal constraint.
It's the USB cable problem. The promise was one cable to rule them all, and now I've got a drawer full of incompatible connectors.
That's exactly the right analogy. And just like USB, each standard has its defenders and its ecosystem. Now let's talk about how these pallets relate to each other in terms of nesting — the smaller-box-inside-bigger-box problem. The ideal scenario is what's called a clean footprint fit, where a smaller pallet divides evenly into a larger pallet's surface area. For example, a twelve hundred by one thousand millimeter ISO pallet can hold two six hundred by eight hundred millimeter half-pallets cleanly, with no wasted space. But here's the thing: a twelve hundred by eight hundred millimeter EUR-pallet cannot cleanly fit a six hundred by four hundred millimeter quarter-pallet. You'd think it would — it's exactly half in each dimension — but because of the way the stringers and deck boards are arranged, you end up with wasted overhang or gaps.
Stringers and deck boards — those are the structural parts of the pallet?
A standard wooden pallet has top deck boards that the cargo sits on, bottom deck boards that touch the ground, and stringers or blocks that separate them and create the fork openings. The placement of those structural elements affects what you can stack and how. A pallet isn't just a flat rectangle — it's a three-dimensional object with load-bearing characteristics and specific fork entry points.
Even when the math works on paper, the physical construction can break the nesting.
Which brings us to a critical distinction in freight: cubing out versus weighing out. Cubing out means you run out of volume before you hit the weight limit. Weighing out means you hit the weight limit before you fill the volume. Pallet selection affects both. A EUR-pallet is slightly smaller than a US pallet, which means in a volume-constrained shipment, you can fit more EUR-pallets in the same container — but each one carries less surface area, so you might need more pallets total. Meanwhile, the weight of the pallet itself — the tare weight — counts against your payload. A standard wooden pallet weighs between twenty-five and thirty-five kilograms. In a forty-foot container with a max payload of around twenty-six thousand kilograms, twenty-six wooden pallets at thirty kilos each is seven hundred eighty kilos of dead weight before you've loaded a single product.
Nearly eight hundred kilos of just pallet. That's like carrying an extra grand piano in every container.
A grand piano that you don't get paid to ship. And that's why pallet weight becomes a significant economic factor, especially in air freight, where every kilogram costs dramatically more. But we'll get to air freight in a minute. Let's talk about how these pallets actually fit inside the bigger boxes — the trucks, the ships, the containers.
We've got our pallet loaded and wrapped. Now we need to put it in something that moves. What fits where?
Let's start with trucks, since that's where most freight moves for at least part of its journey. In the United States, the standard dry van trailer is fifty-three feet long with an internal width of about a hundred inches. You can fit twenty-six US pallets — that's forty-eight by forty inches — in a two-by-thirteen grid. Two pallets side by side, thirteen rows deep. In Europe, the standard trailer is thirteen point six meters long, and you can fit thirty-four EUR-pallets in a two-by-seventeen grid. More pallets, but each one is smaller.
The European truck carries more pallets but less total surface area per pallet.
And the internal width of a European trailer is about two point four four meters, which is exactly the width needed for two twelve-hundred-millimeter pallets side by side with a few millimeters of clearance. It's a much tighter fit than the American setup. Now, ocean containers — this is where the geometry gets really interesting. A standard twenty-foot shipping container has internal dimensions of roughly five thousand eight hundred sixty by two thousand three hundred forty millimeters. With EUR-pallets, you can fit ten — two rows of five. With US pallets, you can theoretically fit eleven — two rows of five and a half — but that half-row creates a stability nightmare.
What does half a row even mean? You can't have half a pallet.
You turn the eleventh pallet sideways and squeeze it in, but it doesn't sit flush against the others, and you end up with a three-to-four-inch gap along the container wall. Shippers fill that gap with dunnage — air bags, foam blocks, scrap wood — anything to prevent shifting during transit. But it's not ideal. In a forty-foot container, you can fit twenty-five EUR-pallets or twenty-six US pallets. The forty-foot container is the workhorse of ocean freight — about two-thirds of all containerized cargo moves in forty-foot boxes.
The container itself isn't one standard size either, right? There are different flavors.
This is one of the big misconceptions. People think a shipping container is a shipping container. In reality, you've got twenty-foot, forty-foot, forty-five-foot, high-cube containers that are an extra foot tall, open-top containers for oversized cargo, flat-rack containers that are basically a floor with end walls, and reefer containers that are refrigerated. Each one has slightly different internal dimensions, and those differences matter for pallet fit. A high-cube forty-foot container gives you about three hundred millimeters of extra height, which can mean an extra layer of cartons on each pallet. Over thousands of containers, that adds up to real money.
We've got trucks and ships covered. Now the wild card — airplanes. The prompt specifically asks whether air freight requires its own pallets or if a common set can work across all modes.
The answer is: air freight is a completely different animal. It doesn't use standard wooden pallets. It uses something called Unit Load Devices, or ULDs, and they're purpose-built for specific aircraft. The most common ULD is the LD-three, which is contoured to fit the lower deck of a Boeing seven forty-seven. Its base dimensions are fifteen thirty-four by fifteen sixty-two millimeters — and here's the critical part — no standard ISO or EUR-pallet fits cleanly on an LD-three base. The footprint is completely different.
The EUR-pallet and the US pallet are both useless on a seven forty-seven.
Not just useless — they're actively problematic. A standard wooden pallet weighs twenty-five to thirty-five kilograms. An air freight pallet weighs twelve to eighteen kilograms because it's made from aluminum or composite materials. For a ten-tonne shipment, the weight difference between wooden pallets and air freight pallets can be a hundred thirty to two hundred thirty kilograms of extra dead weight. At air freight rates, that's thousands of dollars in wasted fuel and capacity per shipment. And weight isn't the only issue — the wooden pallet physically doesn't fit the ULD contour. The LD-three has a contoured shape that follows the curve of the aircraft fuselage. A flat rectangular pallet wastes the curved space.
You can't just forklift a EUR-pallet into a seven forty-seven. What actually happens when a shipment needs to go from a truck to a plane?
It gets depalletized and repalletized. The cargo comes off the wooden pallet and gets rebuilt onto an air freight pallet that's integrated into a ULD. This is a handling event that costs time and money. There's a case study that illustrates this perfectly: a shipment of electronics from Shenzhen to Chicago. It might start on a twelve hundred by one thousand millimeter ISO pallet in China. At the port, it gets depalletized for container loading because the container optimization software says loose-loading will give better cube utilization. It arrives in Los Angeles, gets repalletized onto a US forty-eight-by-forty pallet for rail transport to Chicago. At the Chicago rail yard, it might get depalletized again for final truck delivery to a distribution center. That's three or four touches, each one eating into margins and increasing the chance of damage.
Each touch is a chance for someone to drop the box labeled fragile.
The thing is, fragile labels are aspirational, not binding. Nobody's reading them at the pace these facilities operate. So every repalletization event is a risk point. This is why the concept of intermodal compatibility is the holy grail of logistics — the idea that a single unit load could move seamlessly from truck to rail to ship to plane without being broken down. And we're not there. Physics and economics fight against it.
Walk me through the physics and economics. Why can't we just pick one pallet size and mandate it?
Because each mode of transport has fundamentally different constraints. Ocean freight is dominated by volume optimization — you want to maximize cube utilization in a container, and the container dimensions were set in the nineteen sixties based on truck widths and port crane capabilities. Truck freight is constrained by road regulations — maximum vehicle width, axle weight limits, bridge height clearances. Rail freight is constrained by loading gauges that were set in the nineteenth century — tunnels, bridges, platform edges. And air freight is constrained by the most unforgiving geometry of all: the curved fuselage of an aircraft, where every cubic centimeter is fought over because the marginal cost of carrying it is so high.
Each mode optimized for its own constraints, and now the interfaces between modes are where the friction lives.
And there have been attempts to solve this. One of the most interesting is the four sixty-three-L master pallet, which is the standard air cargo pallet used by the US military. It measures one hundred eight by eighty-eight inches — that's about two thousand seven hundred forty-three by two thousand two hundred thirty-five millimeters — and it's designed to fit the cargo holds of military transport aircraft like the C-one-thirty, C-seventeen, and C-five. It's an aluminum pallet with a honeycomb core, and it's integrated into a cargo handling system that lets a single loadmaster move massive pallets around the aircraft with minimal equipment.
The military solving its own logistics problem with its own standard, because it controls the entire supply chain from end to end.
Right, and that's the key. The military can mandate a standard because it owns the planes, the trucks, the warehouses, and the cargo. In commercial freight, nobody owns the whole chain. A shipment from Shanghai to Munich might touch four different carriers, three different port operators, two rail companies, and a last-mile trucking firm. Each one has its own preferred pallet size, its own equipment, its own optimization algorithms. Mandating one standard across all of them would require someone to bear the transition costs — retrofitting warehouses, replacing forklifts, redesigning racking systems — and nobody wants to be the one to pay.
It's the classic collective action problem. Everyone benefits from standardization, but nobody benefits enough to pay for it unilaterally.
Yet standardization keeps creeping forward, just not through mandates. The pallet pooling model has been one of the most successful market-driven approaches. Companies like CHEP — that's the Commonwealth Handling Equipment Pool — and PECO Pallet own massive fleets of standardized pallets and rent them to shippers. CHEP alone has over three hundred million pallets in circulation globally. A single CHEP pallet gets reused an average of twenty to thirty times before being recycled, compared to a white wood pallet, which is often used once and then discarded.
The white wood pallet is the disposable coffee cup of global trade.
It's a huge source of waste. Something like two billion pallets are in circulation in the United States alone at any given time, and a significant fraction of those are single-use. They end up as mulch, or in landfills, or — if you're a college student building questionable furniture — as bookshelves.
I've seen those bookshelves. They have a certain aesthetic. Utilitarian post-apocalyptic chic.
The prompt mentioned working in a picture frame factory, and that's exactly the kind of place where you'd encounter this firsthand. Raw wood coming in on pallets, and the pallets themselves become part of the workflow. You stack finished frames back onto empty pallets, you move pallets around with pallet jacks, you build up a collection of pallets behind the loading dock that someone eventually hauls away. The pallet is simultaneously infrastructure and waste product.
It's the scaffolding that becomes part of the building. So let's talk about air freight in more detail, because this is where the pallet problem gets most extreme. The ULD system is basically a parallel universe of pallet standards that don't talk to the ground-freight world at all.
The ULD world is fascinating. The LD-three, as I mentioned, is contoured for the seven forty-seven lower deck. But there's also the LD-seven, which is a larger ULD for wide-body aircraft, with a base of about three thousand one hundred seventy-eight by two thousand two hundred thirty-five millimeters. There's the LD-two for the seven sixty-seven. There are pallet-and-net combinations — basically a flat aluminum pallet with cargo stacked on it and held down by a net — that come in standard sizes like eighty-eight by one hundred twenty-five inches for the seven seventy-seven freighter. None of these align cleanly with any ISO or EUR-pallet dimension.
If you're shipping by air, you're almost certainly repalletizing at the airport.
And the repalletization is built into the cost structure. Air freight forwarders have facilities at major airports specifically for this — they receive ground freight on standard pallets, break it down, and rebuild it onto ULD-compatible pallets. The forwarder charges for this service, and it's just accepted as a cost of doing business. But there are some attempts to bridge the gap. The twelve hundred by one thousand millimeter ISO pallet can fit on certain larger ULD pallet bases, like the ninety-six by one hundred twenty-five inch pallet used in seven seventy-seven freighters. The problem is the weight penalty. If you bring a wooden ISO pallet onto an aircraft, you're paying to fly twenty-five kilograms of wood across the ocean for every pallet position.
At air freight rates, that's like buying a first-class ticket for a block of pine.
Which is why there's been a push toward air-friendly pallets made from lighter materials. Corrugated cardboard pallets weigh as little as five kilograms. Honeycomb plastic pallets weigh about eight to twelve kilograms. They're strong enough for a single trip, and they can be recycled or disposed of at the destination, eliminating the return logistics. Amazon has been experimenting with these for certain air freight lanes. The downside is they're not as durable as wood, and they don't work well in humid environments.
They're basically single-use pallets optimized for the weight-to-strength ratio needed for one flight.
And that's a microcosm of the broader tension in logistics: standardization versus specialization. The EUR-pallet is standardized for European ground transport and it's incredibly durable — some of those pallets have been in circulation for decades. But it's terrible for air freight. The cardboard pallet is specialized for air freight and it's weight-optimized, but it's useless for ocean freight where humidity and long transit times would destroy it. There is no one-size-fits-all solution.
Which brings us to the practical question. If you're actually shipping something — if you're a small-to-medium business trying to get product from point A to point B — what do you do with all this information?
Three concrete takeaways. First, if you're shipping internationally and you want maximum intermodal flexibility, standardize on the twelve hundred by one thousand millimeter ISO pallet. It fits in ocean containers — you can get ten in a twenty-foot container with minimal wasted space. It fits in most truck trailers globally. It can work on some larger air freight pallet positions if you absolutely need to fly it. It's not perfect for any single mode, but it's compatible with the most modes. Avoid custom pallet sizes unless you have a specific, well-understood reason. Custom pallets are a tax on every downstream handler.
The ISO twelve hundred by one thousand is the least-bad option for multi-modal shipping.
It's the Switzerland of pallets. Neutral, compatible, not optimized for anyone but not hostile to anyone either. Second takeaway: for air freight, always check the ULD compatibility chart before you build your pallet load. A twelve hundred by eight hundred millimeter EUR-pallet will not fit in an LD-three or LD-seven without significant rework, and you will pay for repalletization at the airport. That cost can erase whatever savings you thought you were getting on the manufacturing side. The major cargo airlines publish ULD dimension charts — use them.
If you don't check, the forwarder will check for you, and they'll charge you for the privilege.
They'll charge you either way, but if you plan for it, you can build the repalletization into your cost model upfront rather than getting surprised by it. Third takeaway: consider pallet pooling services like CHEP or PECO for domestic or regional shipping. They enforce standard sizes, which eliminates a whole category of compatibility problems, and they handle the reverse logistics of getting pallets back. You're not buying pallets — you're renting access to a pool. For international shipping, factor in that your pallet is probably not coming back. The cost of returning empty pallets across an ocean almost never pencils out.
The pallet becomes part of the cost of goods sold, not a reusable asset.
And that's a mental shift that a lot of smaller shippers don't make. They think of pallets as equipment. In international freight, pallets are packaging. They're consumed in the process.
Like the box your television comes in. You don't ship the empty box back to the factory.
That's actually where one of the most interesting trends is heading — eliminating the pallet entirely. Amazon's Frustration-Free Packaging program is essentially an attempt to make the product packaging robust enough that it can ship on its own, without a pallet, for last-mile delivery. If every box is rigid enough and standardized enough, the pallet becomes redundant for certain parts of the supply chain.
The box becomes the pallet. Or the pallet becomes the box.
This connects to the broader automation trend. Amazon's robotic fulfillment centers already use specific pallet footprints because the robots are designed to pick up those sizes. The Kiva robots — now Amazon Robotics — move entire shelving units, but the pallets those shelves are built around conform to Amazon's internal standard. As more warehouses automate, the pallet sizes that work with robots will become de facto standards, regardless of what ISO or EPAL says.
The robots might succeed where the standards committees failed. Not through consensus, but through market dominance.
It's the most likely path to de facto standardization. When a single buyer controls enough freight volume, its internal standard becomes the industry standard. Walmart did this with barcodes and RFID. Amazon is doing it with fulfillment center design and packaging requirements. The pallet standard of the future might not be written by a committee in Geneva — it might be dictated by the robot picking arms in an Amazon fulfillment center.
Which is a little unnerving but also completely consistent with how standards actually emerge. They're not designed, they're selected for.
Path dependence strikes again. The QWERTY keyboard of physical commerce.
Where does this leave us? We've got four hundred pallet sizes, three major standards that don't talk to each other, air freight operating in a parallel universe, and the possibility that automation will just pick a winner by fiat.
It leaves us in a world where understanding the pallet is genuinely valuable. Most people in business never think about the pallet until it becomes a problem — until their shipment gets rejected at a warehouse because the pallet size doesn't match the racking system, or until they get a surprise repalletization bill from their freight forwarder. Knowing the landscape — knowing which pallets fit where and why — is a genuine competitive advantage.
It's also just satisfying to understand. There's something deeply pleasing about the geometry of it. The way a container ship is just a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle where all the pieces are rectangles.
It's the world's largest, slowest game of Tetris. And the pallet is the piece size that the game is calibrated around. Change the piece size, and you change the entire optimization problem.
The next time I see a pallet behind a grocery store, I'm going to feel a strange respect for it. This unassuming wooden rectangle is carrying the weight of the global economy.
Literally and figuratively. The global pallet market at eighty-five billion dollars — that's larger than the GDP of many countries. And yet most people walk past pallets every day without ever thinking about them. They're infrastructure that hides in plain sight.
The glockenspiel of global commerce. Essential, omnipresent, and completely taken for granted.
I'm not sure the glockenspiel is essential or omnipresent, but I take your point.
It's essential to the specific genre of sixties easy-listening records that use it.
Which is a much smaller genre than global freight.
With its own dedicated fanbase. So here's the open question I'm left with: if autonomous trucks and drone delivery actually happen at scale, will that force a new pallet standard? The current standards were built around human forklift operators and manual loading docks. If the forklift driver is replaced by a robot, does the optimal pallet shape change?
Amazon's robotic palletizers already prefer specific pallet footprints that are optimized for machine vision and robotic arm reach. A robot doesn't care about the same things a human forklift operator cares about. It doesn't need fork entry points on all four sides. It might prefer a pallet with embedded RFID tags and machine-readable fiducial markers. It might want a pallet that's lighter because the robot has a lower weight capacity than a forklift. The constraints shift.
The pallet of the future might look less like a wooden rectangle and more like a smart, lightweight platform that's designed to be read by machines rather than handled by people.
The logical endpoint of that is the pallet disappearing into software entirely. Instead of a physical pallet, you have a virtual pallet — a set of dimensions and weight distributions that a computer uses to optimize container loading in real time. The boxes themselves become the unit loads, and robots handle the nesting optimization on the fly. No physical pallet at all.
The pallet becomes an abstraction. A data structure.
Which is either beautiful or dystopian depending on your perspective. But it's probably where we're headed. The history of logistics is the history of abstracting away physical handling. The shipping container abstracted away stevedores loading individual crates. The pallet abstracted away workers stacking individual boxes. The next step is abstracting away the pallet itself.
Somewhere, a wooden EUR-pallet that's been in circulation since nineteen sixty-one is going to outlast all of us, quietly doing its job while the robots debate optimal nesting algorithms.
Those pallets are indestructible. They'll be here after the singularity.
The cockroaches and the EUR-pallets. That's the post-apocalyptic world we're building toward.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: In the nineteen-thirties, marine biologists studying nudibranchs in the tidal pools of the Outer Hebrides discovered that certain sea slugs produce a chemical compound that, when released into seawater, generates a faint but measurable acoustic signature — essentially a subaquatic crackling sound — as a deterrent to predators. The frequency peaks at around twelve kilohertz, which is within the hearing range of cod and other common slug predators.
Sea slugs have a built-in alarm system that makes underwater popping sounds. That's surprisingly tactical for a creature with no brain to speak of.
That's right in the range where cod are most sensitive. Evolution is just engineering with a longer timeline.
This has been My Weird Prompts. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop. If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review — it helps other weirdos find us. I'm Herman Poppleberry.
I'm Corn. We'll be back next week.