Dimensional Weight

From Parcel Detect Wiki, the free logistics encyclopedia

Dimensional weight (also called DIM weight, volumetric weight, or cubed weight) is a pricing method used by parcel and air freight carriers that calculates a theoretical weight based on a package's physical dimensions — length × width × height — and charges the greater of this calculated weight versus the actual scale weight.

The concept addresses a fundamental economic problem: carriers have both weight capacity and volume capacity on their vehicles and aircraft. A large, light package (a pillow, a foam toy, a lamp shade) consumes the same space as a heavy package but produces far less revenue at weight-based pricing. Dimensional weight pricing corrects this imbalance.

The DIM Factor

The dimensional weight formula is:

Dimensional Weight = (L × W × H) ÷ DIM Factor

Where dimensions are in inches and the DIM factor is set by each carrier:

  • UPS and FedEx domestic: DIM factor of 139 (previously 166 before 2015)
  • UPS and FedEx international: DIM factor of 139
  • DHL Express international: DIM factor of 139 or 5,000 (cm³/kg) depending on service
  • USPS: Uses a factor of 166 for Priority Mail; Ground Advantage uses actual weight only

Example: A 24" × 18" × 12" box with actual weight of 10 lbs:

  • Dimensional weight = (24 × 18 × 12) ÷ 139 = 5,184 ÷ 139 = 37.3 lbs
  • Chargeable weight = max(10, 37.3) = 37.3 lbs — nearly 4× the actual weight

The 2015 DIM Weight Shift

Before January 2015, UPS and FedEx applied dimensional weight only to packages over 3 cubic feet. In 2015, both carriers eliminated this threshold and began applying DIM weight to all packages regardless of size. This change had a dramatic impact on e-commerce businesses shipping lightweight goods in oversized boxes — overnight, their shipping costs increased 20–40% for many SKUs.

Implications for E-Commerce

Dimensional weight profoundly affects e-commerce profitability:

  • Packaging optimization is now a financial imperative — right-sizing boxes to the product reduces both DIM weight and void fill material costs
  • Packaging automation systems (like PackSize, Neopost Optipack, and Packsize X5) create custom-sized boxes per order, eliminating void fill and minimizing DIM charges
  • Multi-item order packing must consider how combining items affects total package dimensions

A brand that reduces its average package DIM from 20" × 16" × 12" to 16" × 12" × 8" across 100,000 annual shipments can save $500,000+ in annual shipping costs depending on carrier rates.

Dimensional Weight in Air Freight

Air cargo has used volumetric pricing far longer than parcel carriers — airlines have charged on chargeable weight (greater of actual or volumetric) for decades, using a DIM factor of 6,000 cm³/kg or 166 in³/lb. This is why air freight economics for large, light products are dramatically worse than for dense goods.

References

1 ParcelDetect Logistics Database, 2026.

2 Universal Postal Union (UPU) Standards.

Categories:Shipping Terms|Fees
This page was last edited in April 2026.