Pallet guide

The The UK Pallet Guide: Grades, Sizes & ISPM15

Everything a buyer needs in plain English — pallet grades A, B and C, standard sizes, used versus new, ISPM15 export rules, how much weight a pallet holds, and a full glossary.

Whether you are distributing across Britain or shipping to the other side of the world, the pallet under your load matters. This national guide compares the world's main pallet standards, explains when UK exporters need ISPM15, and covers load ratings and loading in plain English. UK Pallets supplies graded used pallets and new pallets in bulk from a nationwide hub network; the facts below apply to timber pallets anywhere.

Pallet grades explained: A, B and C

Most used pallets are sold by condition grade, so you can match quality to the job and the budget. There's no single national standard for grades, but the industry — and we — use a simple A/B/C scale:

GradeConditionBest forRelative cost
Grade ANear-new, lightly used, minimal wear, no significant repairsExport, food, retail, presentation££ (best used)
Grade BGood, serviceable, may have minor repairsGeneral distribution, everyday movement£ (best value)
Grade CHeavily used, functional, visible wear and repairsInternal, one-way, non-critical loads£ (lowest)
NewBrand new, clean and uniformHygiene, presentation, guaranteed spec£££

In short: Grade A is basically new but devalued; Grade B is the everyday workhorse; and Grade C is heavily used but still does the job. See each grade on our pallet range page.

Used or new pallets: which should you buy?

For most loads a sound used pallet does the same job as new at a lower price — which is why used and reclaimed pallets make up the bulk of the market and around 80% of what we supply. A Grade A or B used pallet carries a similar load to new and is far kinder to your budget and your carbon footprint. Choose new when you specifically need a clean, uniform pallet: hygiene-critical food or pharmaceutical loads, retail presentation, or where a guaranteed specification is written into a contract. One thing worth knowing — there's no general-supply "new Euro" pallet: new EPAL pallets can only be made by EPAL-licensed manufacturers, so any Euro pallets we supply are quality used stock.

What are the standard pallet sizes?

There is no single "standard" pallet worldwide, but two sizes dominate in the UK: the 1200 × 1000 mm UK pallet and the 1200 × 800 mm Euro (EPAL) pallet. Here are the common sizes you'll encounter:

Pallet typeDimensions (mm)Dimensions (in)Common use
UK standard1200 × 100047.2 × 39.4General UK distribution, FMCG
Euro / EPAL (EUR 1)1200 × 80047.2 × 31.5Pooled & European supply
Euro half (EUR 6)800 × 60031.5 × 23.6Retail display, smaller loads
Industrial ("Asia")1100 × 110043.3 × 43.3Drums, some shipping sectors
North American (GMA)1219 × 101648 × 40US import/export

We supply the first two as standard, used and new (used only for Euro). Need another size for a specific route? Ask us.

What is an ISPM15 pallet, and do I need one?

An ISPM15 pallet is a wooden pallet that has been heat-treated to a core temperature of 56°C for at least 30 minutes and stamped with the IPPC mark. ISPM15 (International Standard for Phytosanitary Measures No. 15) exists to stop timber pests spreading between countries. If you export goods outside the UK on solid-wood packaging, that packaging almost always has to be ISPM15-compliant, or your shipment can be held or refused at the border. Good news for used-pallet buyers: a used pallet that already carries a clear, valid IPPC stamp — and hasn't been repaired with untreated wood — can be reused for export.

The IPPC stamp tells inspectors the pallet is compliant. It shows four things:

  • IPPC symbol — the wheat/globe logo that identifies the scheme.
  • Country code — e.g. GB for the United Kingdom.
  • Producer number — the registered facility that treated the wood.
  • Treatment codeHT for heat treatment (the method we use).

How much weight can a pallet hold?

Capacity depends on how the load sits. The three ratings buyers ask about are static, dynamic and racking load. A sound used pallet carries a similar load to new — grade reflects wear and appearance more than rated strength. As a general guide for a standard timber pallet:

Load typeWhat it meansTypical capacity
StaticResting on a solid floorup to ~4,000 kg
DynamicBeing moved by forklift or pallet truckup to ~1,000–1,500 kg
RackingSupported only at the edges in beam racking~1,000–1,250 kg

Figures are typical industry guidance — the exact rating depends on timber, board thickness and construction. Tell us your load and we'll spec the right grade.

How many pallets fit in a lorry or container?

A useful planning rule for single-stacked, floor-loaded pallets:

TransportUK standard (1200×1000)Euro (1200×800)
20ft container~10–11~11
40ft container~20–21~23–24
13.6 m curtain-side trailer~26~33

Double-stacking increases these numbers wherever the load and its fragility allow.

UK vs Euro vs the world's pallet standards

There is no single global pallet, which is exactly why the choice matters for international trade. Britain's most common pallet is the 1200 x 1000 mm UK standard; mainland Europe runs on the 1200 x 800 mm Euro (EPAL) pallet; North America uses the 48 x 40 in (1219 x 1016 mm) GMA pallet; and much of Asia uses an 1100 x 1100 mm square pallet. When you ship into a region it pays to match the local standard so your load fits their racking and handling. Whatever the size, any wooden pallet leaving the UK must be ISPM15 heat-treated and IPPC-stamped. For domestic distribution and European trade, the UK standard and Euro (EPAL) pallets cover almost everything.

What are pallets made from?

Most transport pallets are softwood (typically pine or spruce), which is strong, light and cost-effective; hardwood is used where extra durability is needed. Timber is the material of choice because it's repairable, recyclable and easy to treat for export — which is exactly what makes a healthy used-pallet market possible. Board thickness, the number of bearers and the moisture content of the wood all affect strength and weight.

How are used pallets graded and reconditioned?

Every pallet that comes back to us is inspected and sorted. Sound pallets are graded A, B or C on condition; those needing work are reconditioned — reboarded, re-nailed or blocks replaced — and re-graded; and any beyond repair are dismantled for parts or chipped for reuse, so very little goes to landfill. We also run a buy-back and collection service, paying cash or credit for your surplus and damaged pallets and keeping timber in circulation.

How do I order used pallets in bulk?

Ordering with us takes five steps:

1

Choose your grade

Grade A, B or C — or new — or tell us the job.

2

Confirm volume

From around 50 pallets up.

3

Give a postcode

Your delivery point in the UK.

4

Get a quote

Firm trade price, usually same day.

Pallet glossary

Grade A palletNear-new used pallet, minimal wear, close to new.
Grade B palletGood, serviceable used pallet, may have minor repairs.
Grade C palletEconomy, heavily used but fully functional pallet.
ReconditionedA used pallet repaired and re-graded to a usable standard.
ISPM15Standard requiring export wood packaging to be heat-treated and IPPC-stamped.
IPPC markThe stamp proving ISPM15 compliance.
EPAL / EURThe Euro pallet standard (1200 × 800 mm); new EPAL is licensed-only.
Heat treatment (HT)Heating timber to 56°C core for 30+ minutes to meet ISPM15.
Dynamic / static loadWeight a pallet carries while moved / at rest on the floor.

Quick answers

Which pallet standard should I use for exporting abroad?

Match the destination where you can: Europe uses the 1200 x 800 mm Euro pallet, North America the 48 x 40 in GMA pallet, and much of Asia an 1100 x 1100 mm pallet. Whatever the size, it must be ISPM15 heat-treated and IPPC-stamped to leave the UK.

Do you deliver pallets nationwide?

Yes. We supply pallets in bulk across the UK from a network of regional hubs, with fast delivery to England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and scheduled contract supply for national accounts.

What is the difference between the UK and Euro pallet?

The UK standard pallet is 1200 x 1000 mm and dominates British distribution; the Euro (EPAL) pallet is 1200 x 800 mm and is standard for trade with mainland Europe. Many UK businesses hold both.

Ready to Order Used or New Pallets?

Tell us the grade, volume and delivery postcode and we'll send a firm trade quote — usually the same working day.