Batch Picking
Batch picking is a warehouse order fulfillment strategy in which a picker collects items for multiple orders simultaneously in a single trip through the warehouse, rather than completing one order at a time. By grouping orders and picking common items in one pass, batch picking dramatically reduces total travel distance and improves picker productivity.
How Batch Picking Works
The warehouse management system (WMS) groups orders into batches — typically 5 to 20 orders at once — based on shared SKUs, similar pick locations, or order priority. The picker receives a consolidated pick list sorted by warehouse location (optimized pick path) and collects all required items into a multi-compartment cart or tote system.
After collection, the items are sorted by order at a sorting or packing station before shipment. This sorting step is the tradeoff: batch picking creates work at the sort station that single-order picking doesn't, but the savings in travel time usually outweigh this cost significantly.
Batch Size Optimization
The optimal batch size depends on:
- Order density: How many orders share the same SKUs (higher overlap = larger batches make sense)
- Pick cart capacity: Physical constraint on how many totes or containers fit on the cart
- Sort station capacity: Downstream sorting throughput
- Order cycle time requirements: Batching too many orders together delays the earliest orders in the batch
Typical B2C e-commerce operations batch 6–12 orders; B2B wholesale operations with larger, predictable orders often use smaller batches.
Batch Picking vs. Other Methods
| Method | Best For | Travel Efficiency | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single-order picking | Low volume, large orders | Low | Low |
| Batch picking | High volume, small orders | High | Medium |
| Zone picking | Very high volume, many SKUs | Very high | Medium |
| Wave picking | Time-critical fulfillment windows | High | High |
| Cluster picking | High SKU variety, medium volume | High | Medium |
When Batch Picking Pays Off
Batch picking is most effective in operations with:
- High order volume (1,000+ orders per shift)
- Small orders with 1–5 lines each (common in DTC e-commerce)
- Concentrated SKU popularity (20% of SKUs driving 80% of volume)
Amazon, Chewy, and most large e-commerce fulfillment centers use batch picking as the default strategy for single-unit order fulfillment. The gains are significant: batch picking typically improves picks-per-hour by 50–200% compared to single-order picking.
A WMS is essential for effective batch picking — manual batch grouping is too slow and error-prone for production environments.
References
1 ParcelDetect Logistics Database, 2026.
2 Universal Postal Union (UPU) Standards.