Package Sizing

Maximum Box Size Without Oversize Fees

The exact dimensions to stay under carrier surcharge thresholds in 2026.

Calculate Box Dimensions

The Short Answer

To avoid FedEx and UPS Large Package Surcharges ($95-110), your box must meet both criteria: longest side under 96 inches AND length plus girth under 130 inches. The practical maximum for a standard cube-shaped box is approximately 26×26×26 inches (L+G = 130). For elongated boxes, try 48×18×18 inches (L+G = 120). Exceeding either threshold triggers a surcharge per oversize package.

Understanding Oversize Rules

Carriers classify packages into size categories to account for handling costs. Large packages require special equipment, cannot be sorted on standard conveyors, and consume more trailer space. The Large Package Surcharge (also called Additional Handling - Dimensions) recovers these costs. In 2026, FedEx charges $110 per large package; UPS charges $98.

Two triggers activate the surcharge. First, longest dimension exceeding 96 inches - this is straightforward to measure. Second, length plus girth exceeding 130 inches - this requires calculation. Girth is the perimeter around the package at its widest point: (2 × width) + (2 × height). Length plus girth adds the longest side to this perimeter measurement.

These rules apply per package, not per shipment. If you ship five boxes and three exceed thresholds, you pay the surcharge three times. This creates strong incentive to either stay under limits or consolidate oversized items into fewer packages when possible.

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Calculating Length Plus Girth

The formula is: L + G = Length + (2 × Width) + (2 × Height). Length is always the longest dimension. Width and height are the remaining two sides. The calculation is the same regardless of package orientation - what matters is the actual dimensions.

Box DimensionsL + G CalculationResultStatus
24×18×1824 + (2×18) + (2×18)96 inches✓ Safe
36×24×2436 + (2×24) + (2×24)132 inches✗ Oversize
48×18×1848 + (2×18) + (2×18)120 inches✓ Safe
48×24×2048 + (2×24) + (2×20)136 inches✗ Oversize

Notice that a 48-inch long box can stay under the 130-inch limit, but only if width and height are kept small. Once you exceed approximately 20 inches on both secondary dimensions with a 48-inch length, you cross into oversize territory. This creates interesting optimization challenges for packaging teams.

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Carrier-Specific Limits (2026)

FedEx Ground / Home Delivery

  • Large Package: Length > 96" OR L+G > 130" → $110 surcharge
  • Additional Handling: Length > 48" OR Width/Height > 30" → $18 surcharge
  • Maximum: 150 lbs, 119" length, 165" L+G

UPS Ground

  • Large Package: Length > 96" OR L+G > 130" → $98 surcharge
  • Additional Handling: Length > 48" OR Width/Height > 30" → $18.50 surcharge
  • Maximum: 150 lbs, 108" length, 165" L+G

USPS Ground Advantage

  • Oversize: L+G > 108" → Nonstandard pricing (varies)
  • Dimensional Weight: Applies to packages > 1 cubic foot
  • Maximum: 70 lbs, 130" L+G total limit

Note that carriers also apply Additional Handling surcharges for packages that exceed 48 inches on any side or 30 inches on width/height. This is separate from (and stacks with) the Large Package Surcharge. A 50×32×32 inch box could trigger both Additional Handling ($18) and Large Package ($98-110), adding $116-128 in surcharges.

Strategies to Avoid Oversize Charges

  1. Optimize Box Shape: Elongated boxes (longer but narrower) often stay under L+G limits better than cube shapes. A 48×18×18 box has L+G of 120; a 30×30×30 cube has L+G of 150.
  2. Use Multiple Smaller Boxes: Sometimes splitting one large shipment into two standard-size boxes costs less than one oversize surcharge. Compare total cost before packing.
  3. Right-Size Products: Can the product be partially disassembled? Removing legs from a table or folding a frame can transform an oversize package into a standard one.
  4. Negotiate Oversize Waivers: High-volume shippers can negotiate reduced or waived oversize surcharges as part of carrier contracts. Worth pursuing if you regularly ship large items.
  5. Use LTL Freight: For truly large items, LTL freight pricing may be more economical than parcel with multiple surcharges. Compare rates for packages near the threshold.
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Real-World Examples

Example 1: Outdoor Furniture Cushions - A seller ships patio cushion sets in 36×30×24 boxes. L+G = 36 + 60 + 48 = 144 inches. Every shipment triggers $98-110 surcharge. Solution: Vacuum-compress cushions into 36×24×18 boxes. New L+G = 36 + 48 + 36 = 120 inches. Annual savings: $12,000 on 120 monthly shipments.

Example 2: Kayaks - An outdoor retailer ships 10-foot kayaks (120 inches long). This exceeds the 96-inch length limit AND the 165-inch absolute maximum. Solution: The retailer switched to LTL freight for kayak shipments, reducing per-unit shipping cost by 40% compared to parcel with Large Package Surcharge.

Example 3: Wall Art - A gallery ships framed artwork in 42×36×6 boxes. L+G = 42 + 72 + 12 = 126 inches (safe). However, width exceeds 30 inches, triggering Additional Handling ($18). Solution: Rotate packaging to ship frames at 36×42×6. L+G is now 126 + 0 = still 126. Both dimensions are under 30 inches sideways... but the 36-inch dimension still exceeds 30. The $18 surcharge is unavoidable for this product size.

Expert Insight

Pro Tip: Build a box dimension lookup table for your top products. For each SKU, calculate L+G and identify the threshold status. Flag any product with L+G between 125-135 inches as "marginal" - small box sourcing changes could push it under the limit. This analysis often reveals 5-10% of products where packaging optimization delivers immediate ROI.

DIM weight compounds the problem: Oversize packages almost always have high dimensional weight too. A 48×24×24 box has DIM weight of approximately 62 lbs (at 139 divisor). You pay for this weight AND the oversize surcharge. This double penalty makes large package optimization doubly valuable.

2026 trend: Carriers continue tightening oversize thresholds and increasing surcharges annually. In 2015, Large Package Surcharge was approximately $40. Today it exceeds $100. Expect this trend to continue. Investing in packaging optimization now protects margins against future surcharge increases.

Check Before You Ship

Calculate length plus girth and verify your box won't trigger oversize fees.

DIM Calculator

Glossary of Terms

Length Plus Girth (L+G)

Longest side + (2 × width) + (2 × height). Used to determine oversize classification.

Large Package Surcharge

Fee applied to packages exceeding 96" length or 130" L+G. $98-110 per package in 2026.

Additional Handling

Separate surcharge for packages exceeding 48" length or 30" width/height. $18-18.50 in 2026.

Girth

The perimeter around the package at its widest point: (2 × width) + (2 × height).

Frequently Asked Questions

For FedEx and UPS Ground, packages become 'Large Package' when any single dimension exceeds 96 inches OR length plus girth exceeds 130 inches. The Large Package Surcharge is $95-110. For USPS, packages exceeding 108 inches (length + girth) incur oversized rates.
Length plus girth = Longest side + (2 × Width) + (2 × Height). For example, a 40×20×20 inch box: 40 + (2×20) + (2×20) = 40 + 40 + 40 = 120 inches. This is under the 130-inch threshold, so no oversize surcharge applies.
To avoid oversize surcharges with FedEx/UPS: keep length under 96 inches AND length plus girth under 130 inches. A 48×24×24 box (L+G = 144 inches) is oversized. A 40×24×24 box (L+G = 136 inches) is also oversized. Try 36×24×24 (L+G = 132 inches) - still oversized! Maximum is approximately 34×24×24 or 48×18×18.
Oversize surcharges apply per package. If you ship 3 boxes and 2 are classified as Large Package, you pay the surcharge twice. This is why splitting one large shipment into multiple smaller boxes often saves money.
Yes! The same cubic volume in different dimensions can avoid surcharges. A 48×28×28 box (L+G = 160 inches) is oversized. But a 60×20×20 box has the same volume (67,200 cubic inches) and L+G of only 140 inches - still oversized. Try 56×22×22 (L+G = 144 inches) - also oversized. The math is unforgiving for large boxes.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only.

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