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Calculate your ROI →The formula, with a worked example.
Dimensional weight takes three measurements and a divisor and turns them into a billable weight. Here is exactly how to run it.
Multiply length × width × height in inches, then divide by your carrier's DIM divisor. Round the result up to the next whole pound. That is your dimensional weight.
A 20 × 16 × 12 inch box is 3,840 cubic inches. Divided by a 139 divisor, that is 27.6, which rounds up to 28 lbs of dimensional weight. If the box actually weighs 6 lbs, you are billed on 28.
You always pay on the greater of actual weight and dimensional weight, then on the destination zone. So light, bulky packages are almost always billed on DIM.
← Back to the Dimensional Weight guideInches for the dimensions and your carrier's divisor (commonly 139 for domestic ground). The result is in pounds, rounded up to the next whole pound.
Whichever is greater. Carriers bill on the higher of actual and dimensional weight.
We audit dimensional charges on your real shipments.
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