Dim Weight for a 10x12x15 Box

Direct answer: a 10x12x15 box has 1,800 cubic inches. At a 139 dimensional-weight divisor, it rounds up to 13 lb. At a 166 divisor, it rounds up to 11 lb. Use the result as a planning check, then compare the actual packed weight, carton fit, and carrier rules for the shipment.

Dimensional Weight Calculation

Step Calculation Planning result
Cube 10 x 12 x 15 1,800 cubic inches
139 divisor 1,800 / 139 = 12.95 Rounds up to 13 lb
166 divisor 1,800 / 166 = 10.84 Rounds up to 11 lb
Billable-weight check Compare actual packed weight with dimensional weight The higher value is usually the planning value to watch

When 10x12x15 Makes Sense

  • Use this size when the product needs a 10 by 12 inch footprint with roughly a 15 inch side after cushioning.
  • Rotate to 15x12x10 or 15x10x12 when loading, label placement, shelf fit, or pack stability improves.
  • Compare 10x12x16 when one more inch prevents panel pressure.
  • Compare 12x12x15 when the item needs a wider square footprint.
  • Compare multi-depth options when one footprint needs to cover several packed heights.

Primary Packrift Planning Paths

Use these links as planning and inspection paths, not as price or availability claims. Open the destination page to confirm current product details before ordering.

Path Best fit Buying path
10x12x15 boxes Start here when the buyer needs the core 10 x 12 x 15 size family and wants route-level fit guidance. Reorder | Bulk quote
10x12x15 ECT-32 boxes Use when the strength rating is the main filter for a routine single-wall corrugated route. Reorder | Bulk quote
10x12x15 kraft boxes Compare when brown corrugated material is the main procurement preference. Reorder | Bulk quote
10x12x15 white boxes Compare when presentation, storage, or cleaner label surfaces matter. Reorder | Bulk quote
10x12x15 bulk boxes Use when the same carton is becoming a repeat replenishment route. Reorder | Bulk quote
10x12x16 boxes Compare when the packed item needs one more inch and the added cube is acceptable. Reorder | Bulk quote

Representative Product Routes

These product paths can help with inspection after the dimensional-weight check is done. Confirm the current product page for wall type, quantity, and route details.

Before Standardizing The Carton

  • Measure the finished packed item after inserts, cushioning, documents, labels, and tape allowance are included.
  • Run the dimensional-weight check before buying a repeated carton size.
  • Compare the dimensional weight against the actual packed weight.
  • Use the smallest protective carton that does not create panel pressure or damage risk.
  • Use the bulk quote path for recurring replenishment, mixed carton sizes, or multi-location buying.

Related Packrift Paths

FAQ

What is the dimensional weight of a 10x12x15 box?

A 10 x 12 x 15 box has 1,800 cubic inches. With a 139 divisor, dimensional weight rounds up to 13 lb; with a 166 divisor, it rounds up to 11 lb.

Does rotating the box to 15x12x10 change dimensional weight?

No. Rotating the same 1,800 cubic inches does not change dimensional weight, but it can change packing stability, label placement, shelf fit, and product loading.

Should I choose 10x12x15 or a nearby size?

Choose the smallest carton that protects the item without panel pressure. Compare 10x12x14, 10x12x16, 12x12x15, or multi-depth routes when the 10x12x15 cube creates too much empty space.