Restriction Guide

UPS Size Limits & Penalties

The definitive guide to the 165-inch rule, the 108-inch ceiling, and the fees that can bankrupt a shipment.

Check L+G Compliance

The Short Answer

UPS has strict hard limits.
Max Length: 108 inches.
Max Weight: 150 lbs.
Max Size (L + Girth): 165 inches.
Exceeding ANY of these triggers the "Over Maximum Limits" fee, which is punitive (starts around $1,250). Large packages under these limits but over 130" L+G incur a "Large Package Surcharge."

The Three Hard Limits

You must comply with ALL three of these rules. Failing just one disqualifies the package from the Small Package network.

Limit 1

150 lbs

Max Actual Weight

Limit 2

108"

Max Length (Longest Side)

Limit 3

165"

Length + Girth

How to Calculate Length + Girth

This metric (L+G) confuses most shippers. Here is the formula:

L + [(2 × W) + (2 × H)]

Example: A box is 48" x 20" x 20".
1. Identify Longest Side: 48" (Length).
2. Calculate Girth: (2 × 20) + (2 × 20) = 40 + 40 = 80".
3. Add L + G: 48 + 80 = 128".

Status:
• Under the 165" Hard Limit? YES (Safe).
• Under the 130" Large Package Limit? YES (No Surcharge).
• Safe to ship via UPS Ground.

The Fee Hierarchy

Understanding the tiers helps you avoid sudden price spikes.

TierThresholdFee Estimate (2026)
Standard< 105" L+GBase Rate Only
Additional HandlingLongest Side > 48"
OR Weight > 50 lbs
$35 - $45
Large PackageL+G > 130"
OR Side > 96"
$140 - $200
OVER MAXL+G > 165"
OR Side > 108"
$1,250+

Why the $1,250 Penalty?

Why is the Over Maximum fee so incredibly high ($1,250+)?

UPS hubs utilize high-speed conveyor belts and automated sorters. A package longer than 108 inches or larger than 165 inches L+G cannot physically turn the corners on these belts.

When an over-max package enters the system, it often jams the belt, forcing a system shutdown. Employees must manually climb onto the belts to clear the blockage. This stops the processing of thousands of other packages. The $1,250 fee is not just a penalty; it is "damages" for disrupting the network flow. It is designed to be effectively prohibitive—UPS does not want this package.

The Alternative: UPS Freight / LTL

If your package exceeds 150 lbs or 165 inches L+G, it is no longer a "Parcel." It is "Freight."

You must build it on a pallet and ship it via UPS Freight (TForce Freight) or another LTL carrier. While the base rate for LTL might be higher than a ground parcel, it avoids the $1,250 penalty fee, making it significantly cheaper for oversize items.

Pro Tip: If you are shipping a 140 lb treadmill that is 160" L+G, you are in the "Danger Zone." One inch of bulge or one pound of scale discrepancy could trigger the Over Max fee. It is often safer and cheaper to just ship it LTL to avoid the risk.

Are You Over Limits?

Check L+G instantly before you print the label.

Check Size Limits

Glossary

Girth

2x Width + 2x Height. The distance around the package.

Length + Girth (L+G)

The combined metric used for size limits. (L + 2W + 2H).

Large Package Surcharge

Fee applied when L+G > 130" but < 165".

Over Maximum Limit

punitive fee ($1000+) for exceeding 165" L+G or 150 lbs.

Frequently Asked Questions

UPS packages cannot exceed 108 inches in length (longest side) or 165 inches in total size (Length + Girth). Girth is calculated as 2 × Width + 2 × Height.
The maximum actual weight for a single UPS package is 150 lbs (68 kg). Packages between 70 lbs and 150 lbs require a 'Heavy Package' warning sticker. Anything over 150 lbs must go via Freight services.
A package is considered 'Large' (and gets a surcharge) if Length + Girth exceeds 130 inches, OR if the longest side exceeds 96 inches. The surcharge amount depends on whether the address is residential or commercial.
Girth = (2 × Width) + (2 × Height). It represents the circumference of the package around its thickest part, perpendicular to the length.
If you ship a package exceeding 165 inches L+G or 150 lbs, UPS charges an 'Over Maximum Limits' fee (often >$1,250). They also reserve the right to refuse the package, return it to you at your cost, or hold it for pickup.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only. UPS Service Guide fees and limits change annually. Always verify size limits with the official UPS Tariff.

Related Topics & Tools

Amazon Advertising ROAS Benchmarks for 2026

Amazon advertising ROAS averages between 3x and 5x across most product categories in 2026, meaning sellers earn $3 to $5 in revenue for every $1 spent on ads. Break-even ROAS depends entirely on your margin — a product with 30% net margin needs at least a 3.33x ROAS just to avoid losing money. High-competition categories like Electronics and Supplements often see ROAS dip below 3x, while niche categories with strong brand presence regularly achieve 6x to 8x. Your specific target should be calculated from your contribution margin, not a generic industry number.

Read More

Prospecting vs Retargeting: The Right Budget Split in 2026

The standard best-practice budget split for most ecommerce and DTC brands in 2026 is 70-85% of paid social budget allocated to prospecting (new audience acquisition) and 15-30% to retargeting (re-engaging past visitors and customers). However, this ratio is not fixed — it must be calibrated to your retargeting audience size, funnel velocity, and platform. Allocating more than 35-40% to retargeting starves prospecting, shrinks your top-of-funnel audience, and causes retargeting performance to collapse within 60-90 days. Use the Ad Spend Optimizer at metricrig.com/marketing/adscale to model the revenue impact of different budget allocations at your current ROAS.

Read More

10 Free Social Media Scheduling Tools for 2026

The best free social media scheduling tools in 2026 allow you to plan, queue, and publish content across Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Facebook, Pinterest, and X without paying a monthly fee. The strongest free tiers—Buffer, Later, and Metricool—support 3 to 5 social profiles, allow 10 to 30 scheduled posts per month, and include basic analytics. None of the free tiers on any major scheduling platform in 2026 include team collaboration, bulk scheduling above 30 posts, or advanced reporting, which are the primary upgrade triggers to paid plans. If you are managing under 5 profiles and publishing fewer than 30 posts per month, a free tier will cover 90% of your scheduling needs.

Read More

AI-Generated Content SEO Performance 2026

AI-generated content can and does rank on Google in 2026, but raw output from large language models consistently underperforms human-edited or human-directed content by 20–40% on key engagement metrics like time-on-page and pages-per-session. Google's Helpful Content system evaluates content quality signals — not authorship — meaning AI content that demonstrates first-hand expertise, satisfies search intent, and earns backlinks ranks comparably to human-written content. The gap closes dramatically when AI is used as a drafting tool with human editorial review, topical authority building, and proper E-E-A-T signals baked in. Brands publishing purely unedited AI output at scale face increased risk of HCU (Helpful Content Update) penalties and declining organic traffic.

Read More

Perplexity AI Brand Visibility: The 2026 Strategy Guide

Perplexity AI selects citation sources by retrieving web content in real time and prioritizing pages that contain specific, verifiable claims, clear source attributions, and high topical authority on a narrow subject. Brands that publish original benchmark data, deploy structured FAQ and Article schema, and earn editorial mentions in niche-relevant publications consistently outperform high-DA generalist sites in Perplexity citation rates. As of early 2026, Perplexity processes over 100 million queries per month, with particularly high usage among B2B research buyers, making citation in its answers a high-value brand touchpoint. Brands can realistically expect their first Perplexity citations within three to six weeks of publishing well-optimized, data-rich content on a specific topic.

Read More

UTM Parameter Tracking Setup Guide 2026

UTM parameters are five standardized URL tags — source, medium, campaign, term, and content — appended to destination URLs to tell Google Analytics exactly which campaign, channel, and creative drove each session. Without UTMs, GA4 lumps untagged traffic into &quot;Direct&quot; or &quot;Unassigned,&quot; making it impossible to measure true channel ROI. A properly structured UTM taxonomy, applied consistently across all paid, email, and social campaigns, typically recovers 15–30% of traffic that GA4 would otherwise misattribute to Direct.

Read More