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Volumetric weight: why a light parcel can cost more

Bulky-but-light parcels are often charged on volumetric (dimensional) weight, not actual weight. Here’s how it works and how to shrink the bill.

Ever seen a feather-light parcel quoted at a surprising shipping price? That’s volumetric weight at work. Understanding it turns shipping from a mystery into something you can plan.

What volumetric weight is

Carriers calculate a parcel’s volumetric weight from its dimensions — roughly length × width × height ÷ a fixed divisor — and charge on whichever is higher: that or the actual scale weight. A big, airy box therefore costs more than its scale weight suggests.

Why couriers do this

Space on a plane or truck is finite. A bulky, light parcel uses room the carrier could fill with denser cargo, so it’s priced on the space it occupies.

How to shrink it

  • Ask the agent to remove bulky original boxes (if you don’t need them).
  • Compress soft goods like clothing and bedding.
  • Consolidate so one efficient parcel replaces several loose ones.
  • Compare lines — divisors and pricing differ.

Exact volumetric formulas and prices depend on the line — confirm the live quote for your packed parcel on the official Wheebuy site.

Common questions

It’s a size-based weight: length × width × height divided by a set number. Couriers bill on whichever is greater — the actual weight or the volumetric weight.

Because it’s bulky. A big, light box takes up space a courier could sell to heavier cargo, so it’s charged on its volume instead of its scale weight.

Remove unnecessary boxes, compress soft items, consolidate, and pick a line whose pricing suits your parcel’s shape.

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Put this guide into practice

Browse finds on W2CSpreadsheet, then order, check QC and ship through the official Wheebuy site.