If you've ordered anything online in the last few years, chances are it arrived in a mailer box — that sturdy, fold-flat box with a tuck-in lid that's replaced the flimsy poly bags and oversized cartons of the past. For Australian e-commerce brands, mailer boxes have quietly become the default shipping solution, and it's not just a trend. It's a packaging shift driven by cost, branding, and customer experience all at once.
Whether you're shipping skincare, apparel, electronics, or subscription boxes, the humble mailer box does more heavy lifting than most businesses realise. Here's why it's taking over — and how to choose the right one for your brand.
A mailer boxes is a self-locking, corrugated cardboard box designed specifically for shipping. Unlike a regular cardboard carton that needs tape on every seam, mailer boxes fold flat for storage and snap into shape with built-in tuck or lock flaps — no tape required for the lid in most designs.
They typically come in two main styles:
Most are made from corrugated kraft board in single-wall or double-wall thickness, depending on what's being shipped.
Mailer boxes ship flat, which means more units per pallet and lower freight costs compared to pre-formed boxes. For high-volume sellers, this adds up fast across a year of shipping.
Unboxing matters. A clean, branded mailer box signals quality before the customer even opens it — something a plain satchel or generic carton can't do.
Corrugated board protects products far better than mailer bags while staying lighter and more compact than double-walled shipping cartons.
Self-locking tabs speed up packing on the warehouse floor, which matters when you're fulfilling dozens — or thousands — of orders a day.
From size to print to finish, mailer boxes are one of the most customisable packaging formats on the market (more on this below).
Most mailer boxes are made from recycled kraft material and are fully recyclable, which matters to a growing share of environmentally conscious Australian shoppers.
Beauty, fashion, food, electronics, books, and subscription services all use mailer boxes — the format flexes to fit the product.
While kraft brown is the classic mailer box look, white mailer boxes have become the go-to for brands chasing a clean, premium aesthetic. The bright white surface gives logos, typography, and colour prints far more contrast and pop than kraft board allows — which is why beauty, skincare, and fashion brands lean toward white so heavily.
White mailer boxes also photograph better for social media unboxing content, a small but real factor for brands relying on organic reach. They take CMYK and Pantone-matched printing exceptionally well, so if brand colour accuracy is non-negotiable for you, white stock is usually the better base than kraft.
The trade-off is mostly visual rather than structural — white mailer boxes use the same corrugated strength as kraft versions, just with a coated or bleached outer liner. If your brand identity leans modern, minimalist, or beauty-adjacent, white is typically the stronger pick.
Generic mailer boxes do the job, but custom boxes are where packaging starts working for your business instead of just protecting what's inside it. Customisation on mailer boxes generally covers:
Custom mailer boxes are typically ordered in bulk runs, and unit cost drops significantly as order volume increases — which is why most brands move to custom packaging once they hit consistent monthly order volumes rather than starting there on day one.
The real value of custom boxes isn't just looks — it's brand recall. A distinctive unboxing experience is one of the few touchpoints where a brand has a customer's full, undivided attention.
What is a mailer box used for?
A mailer box is used to ship products directly to customers without an outer shipping carton. It's commonly used for e-commerce orders across fashion, beauty, food, and subscription box businesses.
Are mailer boxes recyclable?
Yes, most mailer boxes are made from corrugated kraft board, which is widely recyclable through standard cardboard recycling streams in Australia.
What's the difference between a mailer box and a shipping carton?
Mailer boxes are typically lighter, fold flat, and use self-locking tabs instead of tape, while shipping cartons are heavier-duty and built for stacking or palletising larger items.
Can mailer boxes be custom printed?
Yes — mailer boxes can be custom printed with logos, brand colours, and finishes like matte or gloss, and can be ordered in kraft or white stock.
What size mailer box should I use?
Choose a size that fits your product with minimal extra space — generally no more than 1–2cm of clearance on each side — to reduce shifting in transit and cut down on void fill material.
At DODO Packaging AU, we design and supply custom mailer boxes built for Australian e-commerce brands — from everyday kraft mailers to premium white mailer boxes with full-colour branding. Whether you're shipping fifty orders a month or fifty thousand, our team helps you get the right size, stock, and finish without the guesswork.
Ready to upgrade your shipping packaging? Get a custom mailer box quote from DODO Packaging AU today and see how the right box can do more than just protect your product — it can sell your brand.