One of the first decisions you make when you start sending parcels is whether to use a mailing bag or a cardboard box. Get it right and your items arrive safely, your postage costs stay manageable, and the whole packing process takes seconds. Get it wrong and you're either paying for protection you don't need or sending something fragile in packaging that was never going to keep it safe.
This guide breaks down when to use each option, how to decide for borderline cases, and what to think about if you're running an e-commerce operation and need to standardise your packaging choices.
The core difference between a mailing bag and a cardboard box
A mailing bag is a self-seal polythene bag. It provides waterproofing, keeps the contents contained, and offers a degree of abrasion resistance during postal handling. What it does not provide is any meaningful structural protection. The contents are only as rigid as what's inside them.
A cardboard box is a rigid container. It maintains its shape during transit, distributes impact forces across its walls, and can be packed with void fill to cushion the contents from shock. It protects items that would be damaged by being bent, crushed or dropped.
That distinction, rigid protection versus containment and waterproofing, is the key to almost every mailing bag or box decision you'll make.
When to use a mailing bag
Mailing bags are the right choice whenever the item being shipped is flexible, non-fragile, and not at risk from being compressed or bent during transit. They are also the better choice when weight matters, because polythene adds almost nothing to the parcel weight compared to a cardboard box.
Items that travel well in a mailing bag:
- Clothing of all types, from t-shirts and jeans to hoodies, dresses and coats
- Soft accessories such as scarves, hats, belts and fabric bags
- Flat, flexible items like posters, prints and fabric wall art in a protective sleeve
- Books and magazines, provided the recipient won't be upset by minor corner compression
- Documents, certificates and flat paperwork in a stiffened envelope or board-backed sleeve inside the bag
- Soft toys and plush items
- Folded fabric goods like tea towels, bedding samples and cloth pouches
Mailing bags are also significantly cheaper per unit than boxes, take up far less storage space, and are faster to pack. For a clothing seller dispatching twenty or thirty orders a day, the time and cost saving of a mailing bag over a box is substantial.
If you're sending clothing, our mailing bags range covers everything from small bags for a single t-shirt through to large options for coats and bulky outerwear, with a full size guide available if you're unsure which dimensions to use.
When to use a cardboard box
A cardboard box is necessary whenever the item could be damaged by compression, impact or bending during normal postal handling. Postal and courier systems subject parcels to significant mechanical stress: items are stacked, sorted at speed, dropped from conveyor heights, and pushed through automated processing. A mailing bag offers no defence against any of this. A well-chosen cardboard box does.
Items that need a cardboard box:
- Ceramics, glassware, crockery and any breakable item
- Electronics, including phones, tablets, small appliances and accessories with screens
- Candles, particularly pillar or jar candles that chip or crack on impact
- Bottles and jars, including cosmetics, oils, sauces and similar liquids
- Framed artwork, mirrors and items with glass
- Rigid toys and games with components that can break
- Anything in a retail box that you want to arrive undamaged, such as shoes or boxed gift sets
- Multi-item orders where the combined weight or bulk makes a bag impractical
For rigid items, the box grade matters as much as using a box at all. Single wall corrugated board handles lighter, non-fragile goods well. Strong single wall is a better choice for medium-weight products or anything with a degree of fragility. Double wall is for heavy goods or items that genuinely cannot arrive damaged. Our cardboard boxes range covers all three grades across a wide range of sizes.
The borderline cases
Most items fall clearly into one camp or the other. A few sit in the middle and are worth thinking through.
Books
A paperback sent in a mailing bag will almost always arrive fine. The cover may have minor corner wear, which most buyers accept for a used book but may be less acceptable for a new one. If the book is new, high-value, or if the buyer's expectation is a pristine copy, a board-backed envelope or a small cardboard box is the more reliable choice. Hardbacks and coffee table books are better in a box, particularly if the dust jacket matters.
Shoes
Shoes in their original box should go inside a cardboard shipping box, with the shoebox acting as inner packaging. The shoebox alone is not designed for postal handling and will arrive crushed or dented if sent unprotected. Shoes without a box can go in a large mailing bag if they're robust footwear like trainers, but anything with a structured upper, heel or toe that could lose its shape should go in a box with tissue or void fill to hold the shape.
Jewellery and small accessories
A ring in a presentation box needs a cardboard outer to protect the box. Loose jewellery in a padded envelope or a small padded mailing bag is usually fine for transit. The deciding factor is whether the item or its packaging would be damaged by compression. If the answer is yes, use a box.
Artwork and prints
Unframed prints and posters travel well in a stiff board-backed envelope or a mailing bag with a piece of board inserted to keep them flat. Framed artwork, anything with glass, or any piece where even a small bend or crease would be unacceptable needs a rigid box sized closely to the item with appropriate padding.
Cosmetics and beauty products
Lip balms, solid soaps, bath bombs and similar solid products without glass packaging can usually go in a mailing bag if they're well-wrapped. Anything in a glass jar, pump bottle or spritz container needs a box with void fill. Even partially full liquid bottles can leak under pressure changes or rough handling, so rigid containment and absorbent void fill is worth using for anything with a liquid component.
Postage bag or box for clothes: the definitive answer
Use a mailing bag. Clothing is exactly what mailing bags are designed for. There is no scenario where a cardboard box is a better choice for shipping clothes unless you're sending something like a structured hat or a pair of shoes where the shape needs to be maintained. For everything else, jeans, tops, knitwear, dresses, coats, every type of garment shipped by every clothing seller in the UK goes out in a polythene mailing bag.
The only time this changes is if you're using packaging as part of your brand presentation and have chosen to box clothing for a premium unboxing experience. That's a deliberate commercial choice, not a transit requirement. The mailing bag will protect the clothing just as well and costs significantly less.
Is it better to use a box or bag for posting to Royal Mail size limits?
Royal Mail pricing is based on format and weight, not whether you used a bag or a box. A small parcel is a small parcel regardless of the outer. That said, a mailing bag is easier to keep within size brackets because it conforms to the shape of the contents. A box has fixed dimensions and may push a light item into a larger format bracket simply because of the box size rather than the item size.
If you're sending light clothing items and trying to hit Royal Mail's large letter or small parcel pricing, a mailing bag gives you more flexibility. A t-shirt in a mailing bag may well qualify as a large letter if it's thin enough. The same t-shirt in the smallest available cardboard box almost certainly qualifies as a small parcel. The difference in postage cost on a regular volume of shipments adds up.
Can you use a padded envelope instead?
A padded mailing bag, sometimes called a padded envelope or bubble mailer, sits between a standard mailing bag and a full cardboard box. It's a polythene or kraft outer with a layer of bubble wrap lining inside. This makes it suitable for items that need a little cushioning but don't need full rigid containment.
Good uses for a padded mailing bag include jewellery, small electronics accessories like cables and earbuds, glasses in a soft case, greeting cards, small gifts and similar items. It's not a substitute for a box for anything genuinely fragile, but it adds meaningful protection over a standard bag for things that might otherwise be bent or scratched.
The practical decision framework
If you're unsure which to use, work through these questions in order:
- Could the item be damaged by being compressed, bent or dropped from a low height? If yes, use a box.
- Is the item in glass, a ceramic, or any other brittle material? If yes, use a box.
- Is the item in retail packaging that needs to arrive undamaged? If yes, use a box.
- Is the item soft, flexible and non-fragile? If yes, use a mailing bag.
- Does the item need a little cushioning but not full rigid containment? Consider a padded mailing bag.
Most e-commerce operations end up using both. Clothing, accessories and soft goods go in mailing bags. Anything fragile, rigid or boxed goes in a cardboard outer. Keeping a stock of both means you're never compromising on either front.
You can browse our full range of mailing bags and cardboard boxes to find the right sizes for what you ship. If you're not sure which option is right for a specific product, get in touch and we can help you work it out.
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