Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Storage Height | Equipment Limit | Safety Clearance | Pallet Height | Carton Height | Interlayer | Cartons / Layer | Weight / Carton | Pallet Weight | Max Gross Weight | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 180 cm | 170 cm | 5 cm | 14 cm | 22 cm | 0.5 cm | 12 | 4.2 kg | 18 kg | 450 kg | 6 layers, 72 cartons, 149.5 cm loaded height |
This example is height-limited because the usable clearance is tighter than the weight allowance.
Formula Used
1) Effective height limit
Effective height limit = smaller of the storage limit and equipment limit.
2) Usable product height
Usable product height = Effective height limit − Safety clearance − Pallet height − Top cap thickness.
3) Layers allowed by height
Layers by height = floor((Usable product height + Interlayer thickness) ÷ (Carton height + Interlayer thickness)).
4) Layers allowed by weight
Layers by weight = floor((Maximum gross weight − Pallet tare weight) ÷ (Cartons per layer × Weight per carton)).
5) Final stackable layers
Final layers = smallest of height limit, weight limit, and manual layer cap.
6) Loaded pallet height
Loaded height = Pallet height + Top cap thickness + (Layers × Carton height) + ((Layers − 1) × Interlayer thickness).
How to Use This Calculator
Step 1
Choose the length and weight units you want to use. Keep every value in the same selected unit system.
Step 2
Enter the maximum stack height allowed by storage, shipping, rack, trailer, or handling equipment.
Step 3
Add pallet base height, carton height, optional interlayer thickness, and any top cap or cover sheet thickness.
Step 4
Enter cartons per layer, carton weight, pallet tare weight, and the maximum gross pallet weight allowed.
Step 5
Set a manual layer cap only if your operation restricts stacking below the physical maximum. Use 0 for no cap.
Step 6
Press calculate. Review final layers, total cartons, loaded height, gross weight, utilization, and extra capacity needed for one more layer.
FAQs
1) What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates the highest practical pallet stack based on height limits, safety clearance, pallet dimensions, carton size, and weight restrictions.
2) Why is safety clearance important?
Safety clearance protects against contact with doors, sprinklers, beams, trailer roofs, and handling equipment. It also reduces damage risk during movement.
3) Does the tool check weight as well as height?
Yes. It calculates one layer limit from height and another from gross weight. The smaller value becomes the final layer count.
4) Are interlayers counted above every layer?
No. Interlayers are counted only between product layers. The calculator does not place one above the top layer unless you enter it as top cap thickness.
5) Which height limit should I enter?
Enter the strictest operational limit you face. Common limits include rack beam space, trailer opening height, machine clearance, and warehouse handling restrictions.
6) What if the result shows zero layers?
That means the inputs leave no safe room for a full product layer. Reduce clearances, shorten cartons, lower the pallet, or raise the permitted limit.
7) Can I use inches and pounds?
Yes. Select inches for length and pounds for weight. The calculator converts values internally and reports results back in your chosen units.
8) Is this enough for final shipping compliance?
Use it for planning and checking. Always confirm customer rules, pallet ratings, carrier requirements, site procedures, and product stability before shipment.