How Millwood Configures Pallets

Why Effective Pallet Design Depends on the Application

Discover why pallet design that optimizes durability, efficiency and supply chain performance goes beyond questions of pallet size and dimensions.

June 16th, 2026

7 Minute Read

Table of Contents

A photo of Josh Stipanovich.

Josh Stipanovich

Josh serves as Communications Manager at Millwood, overseeing internal and external communications to ensure the company’s mission and message are delivered clearly and consistently. He leads initiatives ranging from company-wide communications and website content to PR, trade show promotions, and sales support materials. Since joining Millwood in 2014, he has played a key role in major projects including the company rebrand, website redevelopment, and HubSpot launch.

Stay Up To Date

Click the button below to recieve a collection of the latest case studies, articles and resources in Millwood’s newsletter in your inbox each month. 

“The product helps determine the size of the pallet. The application determines how that pallet should be built.”

“The question is no longer: What size pallet do we need? Instead, it becomes: How will this pallet function in our supply chain?”

Table of Contents

Millwood engineer reviewing custom pallet design and pallet configuration requirements with a customer in a warehouse environment.

When pallet purchasing decisions are made, the purchasing team often begins by requesting quotes on the pallet they are currently using. Sometimes that’s exactly what’s needed. Other times, however, the pallet being used today may not be the best fit for the application.

One manufacturer Millwood serves learned this firsthand. The pallet design they were using was the correct size, fit the product and moved through the operation, yet truckloads of damaged pallets were being discarded every week. 

Eventually, the tens of thousands of dollars the company was spending each month in disposal costs became too much to justify. The expense demanded answers. 

That’s why, when the customer reached out to Millwood for help, the conversation didn’t begin with pallet dimensions or pricing; it began with understanding the problem.

Millwood’s Team visited the operation and looked at how the pallets were being handled. They examined the waste: dumpsters upon dumpsters full of pallets.

These pallets were the right size. They just weren’t configured or designed correctly. The lumber being used wasn’t right for the application. The construction didn’t fit either. These subtle flaws meant their pallets were breaking long before they should have been.

Once Millwood understood the customer’s specific application and what they were trying to accomplish, the solution became clear. By matching the pallet design to the realities of their operation, the customer dramatically reduced waste, lowered disposal costs and improved overall pallet performance.

Stories like this reveal why it can be dangerous to view pallets as interchangeable commodities:

Two pallets can have the same dimensions and perform very differently. The right pallet depends on far more than measurements alone.

The product being shipped matters. The handling environment matters. Storage requirements matter. Transportation requirements matter. Material selection matters. Deck configuration matters.

Determining how a pallet should be configured and taking all of these factors into account is where the real work starts.

Whether a company is evaluating an existing pallet specification or developing a new pallet program, the goal remains the same: identify the right pallet for the application.

Millwood Starts With the Application, Not the Pallet

One of the biggest misconceptions in pallet procurement is the belief that pallet design starts with the pallet itself. In reality, it starts with the application.

At Millwood, pallet configuration begins by understanding what the customer is trying to accomplish.

  • What product is being shipped?
  • How much does it weigh?
  • How is it handled?
  • Where is it going?
  • Will it be stored in racks?
  • Will it move through an automated system?
  • Will it be used once or reused multiple times?

The answers to these questions influence nearly every aspect of pallet design.

Some customers come to Millwood with a detailed specification they’ve used for years. Others are launching a new product, entering a new market or trying to solve an operational problem. In either case, understanding the application provides the foundation for making informed pallet engineering decisions.

A pallet carrying lightweight consumer goods may place significantly different demands on a pallet than a load of industrial components, even if both eventually use the same basic dimensions. Likewise, a pallet moving through an automated distribution center may require different design considerations than a pallet used in a traditional warehouse environment.

This is why Millwood approaches pallet design as part of a larger system rather than an isolated product. Our goal isn’t simply to identify a standard pallet size. It is to understand the application, determine the demands that will be placed on the pallet and configure a solution that delivers the performance those demands require.

Comparison of two pallets with the same dimensions but different pallet configurations and performance characteristics.
Two pallets may share the same footprint, but differences in pallet engineering, lumber selection and deck configuration can dramatically affect durability, load support and overall performance.

How Product Requirements Influence Pallet Footprint

When discussing pallet design, many people immediately focus on dimensions.

That’s understandable. Dimensions are visible. They’re easy to measure. They’re often the first specification listed on a pallet drawing or purchase order.

But dimensions don’t exist in a vacuum.

As Millwood President Chip Trebilcock explains:

“Most of the time the footprint is determined by the customer’s product.”

That’s an important distinction because it shifts the conversation away from the pallet and back to the load it is designed to support.

Different products require different pallet dimensions. Roofing materials, beverages, industrial components and consumer packaged goods all place unique demands on the pallet and often require different footprints to support the load safely and efficiently.

That’s because dimensions only answer one question:

How much space is needed to support the load?

Dimensions don’t answer questions about load weight, handling methods, storage requirements, durability expectations or reuse cycles.

Those answers influence the pallet’s configuration, and they have led Millwood to a consistent approach customers can rely on:

  1. The product helps determine the size of the pallet.
  2. The application determines how that pallet should be built.

How Handling Environments Affect Pallet Configuration

Once the product helps determine a pallet’s basic dimensions, the next question becomes: “How will the pallet be used?”

A pallet that moves through a highly automated distribution center faces different demands than a pallet used in a traditional warehouse. A pallet stored in rack systems experiences different stresses than one that moves directly from production to transportation.

Forklifts matter. Pallet jacks matter. Conveyor systems matter. Automation matters. Storage methods matter.

The handling environment influences everything from pallet style to deck configuration to lumber selection. Depending on the application, anything from a stringer pallet to a block pallet may provide the best solution. The right choice depends on handling requirements, storage conditions and performance expectations.

Millwood regularly sees examples where two companies use the same pallet footprint but require very different pallet constructions. One operation may require additional deck support. Another may require increased durability. A third may need a pallet designed to perform reliably within an automated environment.

Each requirement influences how the pallet is ultimately built.

The question is no longer: What size pallet do we need?

Instead, it becomes: How will this pallet function in our supply chain?

How Deck Configuration Impacts Pallet Performance

Deck configuration is one of the most important factors influencing pallet performance. This term refers to how the deck boards are arranged across the pallet, including the number of boards used, its width, spacing and placement. Those decisions affect how the load is supported, how the pallet performs and how well it protects the product throughout the supply chain.

A load of bagged materials may require different support than a load of packaged consumer goods. Products with smaller footprints may require additional deck coverage. Loads that are sensitive to movement or deflection may require a different board layout than products that can tolerate more flexibility.

These pallet engineering decisions can have a significant impact on pallet performance, durability and overall cost. And those considerations mean the goal isn’t simply to add more lumber – it is to place support where the application requires it.

When pallet design begins with the application, deck configuration becomes another tool for matching the pallet to the demands of the load.

Why Packaging Science Looks Beyond the Pallet

While pallet configuration plays a critical role in unit load performance, the pallet is only one part of the system. A load’s performance is also influenced by packaging materials, stretch film, corner protection, product stacking patterns and handling practices.

This is where Millwood’s Packaging Science approach adds real-world value to the configuration process. Effective pallet optimization often requires evaluating the entire unit load rather than focusing on a single component.

In many cases, custom pallet design begins by understanding how the complete unit load performs throughout the supply chain. That shifts the focus from simply building the strongest pallet possible to building the most effective unit load possible.

A stronger pallet can solve a problem. A different stretch film can also solve the same problem. Additional corner protection could solve it as well. The best packaging solution depends on understanding how the entire load performs as a system.

That system perspective goes beyond testing a single point in the distribution chain, as can be the case with pallets used only in one-way shipments. ISTA-certified Packaging Science helps determine whether different designs are needed for reusable pallets too. In other words, every wood pallet design decision affects how the pallet and unit load perform in the field, in diverse and repeatable real-world scenarios.

Whether designing custom pallets for re-use or improving an existing one-way specification, the goal remains the same: improve unit load performance while balancing cost, durability and operational requirements.

When pallet configuration is approached this way, the conversation shifts from buying pallets to solving operational problems.

Choosing the Right Pallet Design for Your Application

The manufacturer in the opening story didn’t have a pallet size problem. Their pallets were the correct dimensions. The problem was that the pallet wasn’t aligned with the realities of their operation.

Once Millwood understood how the product was being handled, stored and moved throughout their supply chain, the path forward became much clearer.

That’s why pallet configuration is about much more than dimensions. It’s about understanding the demands being placed on the pallet. It’s about understanding the complete unit load. And it’s about designing a solution that delivers the right balance of performance, durability and cost.

The best pallet is not necessarily the cheapest pallet. The best pallet is not necessarily the strongest pallet. The best pallet is the one that fits the application.

Broken pallets awaiting disposal after failing in a manufacturing operation due to improper pallet design and configuration.
When pallet engineering doesn’t align with the application, the result can be increased damage, disposal costs and operational inefficiencies.

Custom Pallet Design and Configuration for Your Application

Companies often begin the pallet purchasing process with a specification, a drawing or a pallet they have been buying for years. There is nothing wrong with that – but dimensions alone don’t tell the entire story.

Product requirements, handling environments and unit load performance all influence how a pallet should be configured and how it will perform once it enters the supply chain.

That’s why Millwood starts with the application. Because when the application is understood, pallet configuration becomes a process of solving problems rather than simply quoting lumber.

As Millwood President Chip Trebilcock puts it:

“There is no such thing as a standard pallet.”

The more closely a pallet is aligned with the realities of the application, the more likely it is to deliver the performance, efficiency and long-term value your operation requires.

Ready to Evaluate Your Pallet Configuration?

Whether you’re working from an existing pallet specification or looking to improve pallet performance across your operation, Millwood can help evaluate your application and identify opportunities to improve unit load performance, reduce waste and support long-term operational goals.

Connect with Millwood to discuss the right pallet configuration for your application.

Share:

LinkedIn
Facebook
Share on X
Millwood Logo spec

CONFIGURE THE RIGHT PALLET FOR YOUR OPERATION

Millwood is more than a pallet supplier. We help businesses reduce product damage, avoid downtime and improve operational performance through smarter pallet selection strategies. Whatever pallet configuration your operation requires, our team works with you to evaluate risk, performance and total cost to identify the right-fit solution for your supply chain.

Frequently Asked Questions

Pallet configuration is the process of designing a pallet to match the specific requirements of a product, handling environment, storage method and transportation system.

At Millwood, pallet configuration involves evaluating the entire application before determining pallet construction. Factors such as product weight, load dimensions, storage requirements, transportation methods, automation systems, forklifts, pallet jacks and reuse expectations all influence pallet design. Two pallets with identical dimensions can perform very differently depending on lumber selection, deck board arrangement, support structure and intended use.

The way a pallet is handled has a major impact on how it should be built.

Forklifts, pallet jacks, conveyor systems, automated distribution centers, rack storage systems and transportation conditions all create different stresses on pallets. A pallet designed for an automated warehouse may require different support structures than one used in a traditional warehouse. Handling requirements influence pallet style, lumber selection, deck board layout and durability specifications.

Deck configuration refers to how deck boards are arranged across a pallet.

Deck configuration includes the number of deck boards, board widths, spacing and placement. These decisions affect load support, product protection, pallet durability and overall cost. Different products require different levels of support, and proper deck configuration helps prevent product damage while optimizing pallet performance throughout the supply chain.

Companies should evaluate pallet redesign when they experience pallet failures, product damage, excessive disposal costs or operational inefficiencies.

A pallet redesign may be appropriate when existing pallets are breaking prematurely, generating high replacement or disposal costs, causing product damage or failing to perform effectively in changing supply chain environments. Millwood often begins by evaluating the application to identify opportunities for improved durability, reduced waste and better overall unit load performance.

Not in a practical engineering sense.

While common pallet sizes exist throughout the industry, Millwood’s approach recognizes that every application has unique requirements. As Millwood President Chip Trebilcock explains, “There is no such thing as a standard pallet.” Effective pallet design depends on the product, handling environment, storage requirements, transportation conditions and performance expectations. The best pallet is the one that aligns with the specific application.

Related Articles

Millwood’s National Accounts Sourcing Manager Chad McConnell was named to the board of the Western Pallet Association (WPA), signifying Millwood’s active leadership and influence in advancing the pallet industry’s future.

Wood pallets supporting sustainable supply chain operations in a modern distribution environment.

The journey of a pallet doesn't end after delivery. Recovery, repair and recycling programs help transform wood pallets into a renewable resource that supports both operational efficiency and sustainability.

New and recycled pallets supporting product movement in a warehouse operation.

Reduce waste and lower costs with recycled pallets that deliver dependable performance and sustainability benefits. Learn how Millwood’s recycled pallet solutions support efficient supply chains through quality grading, repair programs and eco-friendly reuse practices.

Pallets in use within a warehouse operation supporting product movement and supply chain performance.

Wondering how to choose between new and used pallets for your business needs? From cost savings to supply chain efficiency and safety standards, a variety of factors should go into this decision.

Download The Strategic Sourcing Report