Part n Parcel

Dim Weight Calculator

Dim Weight Calculator
Dim Weight Calculator

How Much Is Dim Weight Costing You?

Carriers do not bill on what your package weighs. They bill on whichever is bigger, the actual weight or the volume of the box converted to weight. Build the box you ship today on the left. Build a smaller version on the right. See what shrinking the box would save you in a year.

Actual weight of contents 3.0 lbs
Monthly shipping volume 500 parcels
One thing to know. Carriers round every dimension up to the next whole inch before they calculate. A box that measures 14.2 inches gets billed as 15. That is why the rounded number turns orange when you move a slider past a whole number.

Your Box Today

The box you actually ship in.

Length 14.0 in
Width 12.0 in
Height 10.0 in
Billable weight 13 lbs
Dim weight wins. The box is bigger than the contents need.
At list rates, dim weight is adding $24,180 a year at 500 parcels per month.

Smaller Box

The smallest version you could ship in.

Length 12.0 in
Width 10.0 in
Height 8.0 in
Billable weight 7 lbs
Dim weight wins. The box is still bigger than the contents need.
At list rates, dim weight is adding $8,760 a year at 500 parcels per month.
Annual savings at list rates
$15,420
$2.57 less per parcel at 500 parcels per month.
Shrinking the box from 14 by 12 by 10 inches to 12 by 10 by 8 inches cuts your dim weight cost from $24,180 a year to $8,760 a year.
Purolator Ground published list rates. Before account discounts, fuel surcharges, taxes, and other charges on your invoice.
Cube factor 12.4 lb/ft³ Purolator Ground published, equivalent to 139 in³/lb
Shipping lane Same-province delivery Example lane shown for the math
What Most Merchants Miss

Your dim divisor is fixed by your carrier. Your overall shipping cost is not. Part n Parcel works with Canadian merchants to bring down the full bill, dim weight included, by routing volume through pooled carrier agreements and managing the parts of the invoice merchants do not have time to read line by line.

How It Works

How is dim weight calculated?

Take the length, width, and height of your box in inches. Multiply them together to get the volume in cubic inches. Purolator Ground uses a published cube factor of 12.4 pounds per cubic foot, which is the same as dividing your volume by 139 cubic inches per pound. The result is your dim weight in pounds.

Whichever is bigger, your actual weight or your dim weight, is what the carrier bills you on.

Why does the carrier round my box up?

Carriers round every dimension up to the next whole inch (or whole centimetre) before doing the dim weight math. A box that measures 14.2 inches gets billed as if it were 15. Every fraction of an inch on every side adds to your bill. That is why the rounded numbers in this calculator turn orange when they jump.

Where do the prices come from?

Prices use the Purolator Rate Guide, September 2025, Ground service, same-province delivery. We picked one carrier and one lane to keep the math honest. Other carriers price differently, but the gap between your actual weight and your dim weight will look roughly the same across all of them.

Why same-province delivery?

Same-province delivery is the example lane shown for the math. We picked one lane so the numbers are reproducible against the published rate guide. If you ship heavily across provinces or to remote regions, your real dim weight cost is larger than what you see here.

Can I change my cube factor?

Not on a single parcel. The cube factor is set by the carrier and the service you ship on. What you can change is which carrier and service handle your volume, and how that volume gets priced. That is the part of the bill Part n Parcel manages on behalf of Canadian merchants.

Are these the prices I actually pay?

No. The calculator uses Purolator's published list rates as a reference point. Your real cost reflects your account discount, fuel surcharge, taxes, home address fees, and any other charges on your invoice. The dollar amounts here size the dim weight impact of your box, not your total bill. Use this to understand how your box changes your bill, not to predict the bill itself.