கோர்ஜானா நகைகளுக்கான 2026 நகை பேக்கேஜிங் போக்குகள்
2024-11-21
Roughly 23% of all jewelry damage claims in transit trace back to one root cause: the box was the wrong size. That number gets anyone’s attention. But what’s more revealing is what happens next in most operations: packaging decisions get treated as an afterthought, boxes get ordered from supplier catalogs by guesswork, and pieces show up either rattling loose or wedged so tight the finish arrives scratched.
This guide cuts through that cycle. Instead of vague sizing advice, it delivers exact internal dimensions by jewelry type, real measurement methods that account for inserts and board material, and a decision framework grounded in how packaging actually performs in the supply chain. Whether you’re spec’ing boxes for one product launch or sourcing packaging for an entire collection, every section here translates directly into fit, cost, and brand presentation.
What this guide covers:
Three things happen when box dimensions miss the mark. Damage rates climb. Brand perception takes a hit. Shipping bills inflate. None of these is an abstract problem. For a brand shipping 500+ units a month, even a 5% spike in transit damage claims can absorb the margin on an entire product line.
Returns are the obvious cost. Each one involves replacement shipping, customer service time, and a moment of damage in the customer’s experience with the brand. But there’s a second cost that gets overlooked: carriers charge by volume, not just weight. An oversized box full of air costs the same to ship as one packed efficiently. At scale, that gap compounds fast.
Dimensional weight is a carrier pricing formula that accounts for package volume. Carriers compare actual weight against calculated volume and charge whichever is greater. The calculation: length × width × height in inches, then divided by a factor that varies by carrier. USPS uses 139. UPS and FedEx use 166. What this means practically: a 6 × 4 × 2 inch box with 2 ounces of jewelry inside might be billed as if it weighs a full pound, because the cubic space it occupies is what the carrier actually sells.
For brands managing high-volume fulfillment, safe jewelry shipping practices that factor in dimensional weight can significantly reduce per-unit shipping costs.
Packages get handled roughly. Boxes shift in trucks, drop a few inches onto conveyor belts, and sit in sorting facilities where vibration is constant. A ring that can travel side-to-side inside its cavity is a ring that will scratch its own shank over a few hundred miles. A pendant that contacts the box walls will develop surface marks. Those marks don’t polish out completely, and customers notice.
ISTA, the International Safe Transit Association, developed clearance standards from controlled laboratory testing that simulates real shipping conditions. Their recommendation: minimum 3–5 mm of clearance on all sides of a packaged item. This isn’t a marketing number. It’s derived from shock and vibration data.
Customers don’t just receive jewelry. They unbox it. That moment has become a genuine brand touchpoint. When the lid opens, and the piece sits centered on a velvet insert with no wasted space, the message is “we thought about this.” When the piece rattles in an empty interior, the message shifts. In high-end retail, space inside a box reads as underinvestment, regardless of what’s inside.
The unboxing moment is a trust signal. When the lid lifts and the piece is visibly secure—not rattling, not pressing against walls, not tilting—the customer reads competence into the brand. When the jewelry moves freely in an oversized cavity, the perception flips. Packaging that fits signals operational precision. Packaging that doesn’t signal something else entirely.
If rings come in 2-inch boxes, necklaces in 7-inch boxes, and earrings in 2.5-inch boxes, the retail display reads as accidental. Consistent dimensions across categories create uniform shelving, cleaner visual presence, and an identity that feels deliberate. Customers feel this coherence even when they can’t explain it.
For brands seeking cohesive presentation across their entire line, லோகோவுடன் கூடிய தனிப்பயன் நகை பெட்டிகள் designed to consistent dimension specs create a unified look that stock boxes rarely achieve.
Most sizing mistakes start before ordering even happens: buyers skip the definitions. Length × Width × Height (L × W × H) is the standard sequence, but the terms get used loosely. Here is what each one means on an actual box.
Lay the box flat with the opening facing up. The longest horizontal edge running left to right is the length. That dimension determines whether a necklace chain sits flat without curling, or whether a bracelet fits the cavity lengthwise.
The shorter horizontal edge running front to back is the width. That dimension controls whether a bangle or watch case presses against the cavity walls or fits with breathing room.
The vertical distance from the base to the lid when the box is closed is the height. That dimension determines whether a ring’s center stone clears the lid when closed, or whether a drop earring hangs freely without bottoming out against the cavity floor.
Write them as L × W × H. That notation is the industry’s common language.
This is where most buyers get caught. External dimensions include everything: the board thickness, any wrapping or coating material, hinges, magnets, and decorative hardware. Internal dimensions are just the usable cavity where the piece actually sits.
A box listed as 3 × 3 × 1.5 inches at the catalog level might offer only 2.5 × 2.5 × 1.2 inches inside. Material thickness alone can shave 0.25 to 0.5 inches from each dimension. Paperboard boxes lose less interior room than dense chipboard or wood construction.
Always, always, ask the supplier for the internal cavity dimensions. If they can’t provide those, calculate inward by subtracting twice the board thickness. If they don’t know their board thickness, find a different supplier.
Three items cover everything:
For engagement rings and watches, especially, a digital caliper is not optional. Fractions of a millimeter determine whether a piece sits level in the cavity or tilts to one side.
Step 1: Measure the piece at its widest points. For rings: outer diameter and the height from the top of the shank to the highest point of the stone. For necklaces: full chain length plus pendant drop. For bracelets: total length and maximum thickness.
Step 2: Account for clasps and attachments. Clasps, lobster claws, toggle mechanisms, and connector rings all add width. A necklace chain that ends in a chunky toggle clasp needs more cavity width than the chain itself. Measure the attachment, not just the chain.
Step 3: Add clearance for inserts. Every insert takes up space. Cotton fill, foam pads, velvet cushions, and necklace boards all consume volume. Add 3–5 mm on each side beyond the jewelry’s measured dimensions. If your velvet pad is 10 mm thick, that’s 10 mm of cavity height gone before the piece goes in.
Step 4: Match against the box’s internal dimensions. Compare your final numbers against the box’s internal cavity spec, not the external number. Round to the nearest millimeter. If your ring needs a 25 mm width and an 18 mm height internally, find a box that meets or slightly exceeds those interior specs.
Every material has a wall thickness that shrinks the interior. The thicker the material, the more the cavity shrinks. This table shows the impact across the four most common materials.
Board material choice determines how much of the external footprint remains available as usable interior. The table below compares wall thickness and interior space reduction for the four materials most commonly used in jewelry box manufacturing.
| பெட்டி பொருள் | வழக்கமான சுவர் தடிமன் | Interior Loss Per Side | நிகர விளைவு |
| Kraft paperboard | 1/32″–1/16″ (0.8–1.6 mm) | ~1–2 மிமீ | Minimal cavity reduction |
| Standard paperboard | 1/16″–3/32″ (1.6–2.4 mm) | ~2–3 மிமீ | Moderate cavity reduction |
| Rigid board | 1/8″–1/4″ (3–6 mm) | ~3–6 மிமீ | Significant cavity reduction |
| மரம் | 1/4″–1/2″ (6–12 mm) | ~6–12 மிமீ | Largest cavity reduction |
A rigid board box with 1/4 inch (6 mm) walls on all four sides loses 12 mm total from each interior dimension compared to its external spec. That means a 3 × 3 × 1.5-inch rigid box might only be 2.75 × 2.75 × 1.35 inches usable inside. Calculate inward every time.

Three show up over and over. None requires advanced skills to avoid.
Measuring the closed box. Closed box measurements give external dimensions. Open it and measure the inside instead. That is the number that matters.
Leaving the insert thickness out of the calculation. A 1-inch deep cavity becomes 0.5 inches of usable depth after a foam or velvet insert goes in. If this isn’t accounted for during sizing, the piece ends up sitting on top of the cushion instead of inside it.
If insert design is part of your project scope, தனிப்பயன் நகை பெட்டி செருகல்கள் that are spec’d to work with your box dimensions prevent this exact problem.
Measuring only the base footprint. This is fine for flat bands. It fails for engagement rings with cathedral settings, drop earrings, and layered pendants. Always measure to the tallest point on the piece.
This section gives the actual numbers, in three units. Think of these as anchors, not absolute rules. Every piece has its own dimensions, and those should always override generic category recommendations.
The table below lists internal dimensions by jewelry type, with conversions to inches, centimeters, and millimeters. Use it as a starting reference when comparing supplier catalogs, confirming fit for new product lines, or aligning packaging specs with your procurement team before placing orders.
| நகை வகை | Internal (Inches) | சென்டிமீட்டர் | மில்லி மீட்டர் | சிறந்தது |
| ரிங் | 2 × 2- 1.5 | 5.1 × 5.1- 3.8 | 51 × 51- 38 | Solitaire rings, fashion bands |
| காதணி | 2.5 × 2.5- 1 | 6.4 × 6.4- 2.5 | 64 × 64- 25 | Stud earrings, small hoops |
| தொங்கல் | 3.5 × 3.5- 1 | 8.9 × 8.9- 2.5 | 89 × 89- 25 | Delicate pendants, charm necklaces |
| நெக்லெஸ் | 7 × 5- 1 | 17.8 × 12.7- 2.5 | 178 × 127- 25 | Chain necklaces, statement pieces |
| காப்பு | 8 × 2- 1 | 20.3 × 5.1- 2.5 | 203 × 51- 25 | Tennis bracelets, chain bracelets |
| கண்காணிப்பகம் | 4 × 4- 2 | 10.2 × 10.2- 5.1 | 102 × 102- 51 | Dress watches, sport watches |
| கொலுசு | 4 × 4- 1.25 | 10.2 × 10.2- 3.2 | 102 × 102- 32 | Delicate anklets, charm anklets |
| Multi-piece set | 9 × 9- 2 | 22.9 × 22.9- 5.1 | 229 × 229- 51 | Ring + earring + necklace sets |
Standard ring boxes sit between 2 and 2.5 inches wide and deep, with heights of 1.5 to 2 inches. The square shape keeps the ring centered and upright, which frames the stone when the lid opens.
Here are two places where buyers consistently misjudge fit:
Stone setting height is the dimension most buyers ignore. A 1.5-carat solitaire with a 10 mm cathedral setting sits higher than a low-profile band. Measure from the top of the shank to the highest point of the stone. Add 3–5 mm. That is your minimum internal height requirement. Not the band’s height. The stone’s highest point.
Wide bands need width clearance beyond the face diameter. A 6 mm shank needs a cavity wider than 6 mm—not just wide enough for the ring face. If the band presses the cavity walls, the ring tilts, and the presentation suffers.
When choosing between two sizes, go up in height before going up in width. Height clearance is harder to compensate for with inserts.
For brands sourcing at scale, custom ring boxes in bulk can be manufactured to exact internal cavity specs, eliminating the fit variations that come from catalog stock sizing.
Earring boxes keep pieces shallow, so they stay visible and don’t flip inside the cavity. Standard internal dimensions hover around 2.5 × 2.5 × 1 inch.
The fit requirement depends on the earring style:
When packing mixed styles in the same box type, default to the tallest profile and adjust insert depth from there.
Retail display considerations also matter here—transparent earring holders that pair with the right box dimensions make in-store presentation clean and the piece easy for customers to examine.
Pendant boxes fall between ring and necklace dimensions. Most standard sizes measure 3.5 × 3.5 × 1 inch internally, enough to center a small-to-medium pendant on a card or foam pad.
The pendant drop is the dimension that most affects fit. Measure from the chain attachment point to the bottom of the pendant. If the pendant hangs 25 mm below the chain and the insert is 8 mm thick, the cavity needs at least 33 mm of internal height to accommodate the piece with clearance.
Necklace boxes are long and flat. Length spans 7–9 inches, width 4–6 inches, and height 1–1.5 inches. The elongated shape prevents chain tangling and keeps necklaces lying straight.
Chain length drives the length requirement. A 16-inch chain needs less cavity length than a 24-inch chain. When packaging multiple chain lengths, order from the longest. Never fold a chain sharply—that creates kinking risk during transit.
Statement pendants add a height requirement on top of the chain length. If a pendant drops 50 mm below the chain, the cavity needs enough depth for both the chain lying flat and the pendant’s lowest point.
For brands with broad necklace lines, necklace packaging boxes from Chinese manufacturers that specify exact cavity dimensions by chain length eliminate the sizing variation that causes tangling and damage.
Bracelet boxes come in two shapes. Long and slim (8 × 2 × 1 inches) fits tennis bracelets and chain bracelets. Square (4 × 4 × 1.5 inches) works for bangles and styles that can coil or stack.
Bangles need width for the inner diameter. A 65 mm inner diameter bangle needs a cavity wider than 65 mm. Most square bracelet boxes accommodate this, but verify before ordering.
Tennis bracelets need length for the full chain. A 7.5-inch tennis bracelet requires at least 8 inches of internal length. Too short, and the piece curls, scratching the clasp and ruining the presentation.
Multi-tier bracelet display solutions are worth considering for brands that sell bracelets in multiple styles—the tiered inserts often fit better than flat cavity designs.
Watch boxes are the deepest of the standard jewelry categories. Internal dimensions of 4 × 4 × 2 to 5 × 5 × 3 inches are common. The extra depth accommodates the watch pillow, strap thickness, and face profile.
Watch pillows typically need 2 inches width by 3 inches depth minimum to center the watch without the strap hanging over the edges.
Strap thickness drives the height requirement. A 4 mm leather strap plus a 12 mm dial means the cavity needs at least 18–20 mm of height before accounting for the pillow. Add the pillow’s own height (usually 15–20 mm). Watch boxes often need 40–50 mm of internal height total, deeper than any other standard jewelry type.
Luxury watch packaging with custom logo branding often requires custom watch box manufacturing to achieve the dimension precision that protects high-value pieces and maintains brand presentation standards.
Men’s jewelry boxes are a distinct category, not because of aesthetics but because men’s pieces are physically larger. A 44 mm dress watch takes up more width, depth, and height than a delicate women’s ring. Cufflinks and tie bars need shallow, wide drawers rather than tall compartments.
For men’s watches: height and depth come first. The dial, pillow, and strap stack means 40–50 mm of internal height. Width and length serve the pillow: minimum 2 inches wide, 3 inches deep.
For cufflink drawers: go wide and flat. Target 8–10 inches in length with only 1–1.5 inches in depth. Men’s accessories are low-profile—they need a footprint more than height.
Watch out for supplier “men’s” labeling. Sometimes it means taller boxes (for watches). Sometimes it means wider boxes (for cufflinks). These are opposite needs.

Anklet boxes are less standardized than ring or necklace boxes. Most suppliers offer three sizes:
For a detailed guide to matching anklet style to box dimensions, see custom anklet box specifications and brand strategy.
Jewelry sets need boxes in the 9 × 9 × 2-inch range. The extra footprint accommodates coordinated inserts with separate cavities for each piece.
Before locking dimensions, map the insert layout. A ring + earring + necklace set requires three distinct cavities. Measure each piece, add 3–5 mm clearance per piece, and the total footprint quickly grows beyond what a single standard box can provide.

Beyond jewelry type, manufacturers categorize boxes by general size ranges. This gives a second filter for narrowing options, especially when browsing a supplier’s full catalog.
3–4 inches across with 1.5–2.5 inches in depth. Rings, studs, small pendants, and charms fit here. The compact footprint creates a tight, intentional look.
These work when the piece is genuinely small. A 3.5 × 3.5 × 2-inch box and a solitaire engagement ring are a natural pairing. The same box with a bold 3-inch statement pendant looks abandoned.
5–7 inches across with 2–3 inches in depth. Most earrings, bracelets, and small-to-medium necklaces land here. This is where suppliers hold their broadest inventory. One medium base box with type-specific inserts gives you a single SKU that adapts to multiple cavity needs.
Small jewelry gift boxes in this range are often the most cost-effective starting point for new collections, since the same box format can serve multiple product types by swapping inserts.
7–9 inches across with 2.5–4 inches depth. Necklaces, statement bracelets, and watches. Extended length prevents chains from bunching.
Diminishing returns show up fast when the piece is small. A delicate 16-inch necklace in an 8 × 6 × 2-inch box looks lost. Size category should match the piece’s physical footprint, not just its label.
Above 9 inches, you’re in multi-piece gift set territory, artisan pieces with complex profiles, or display-first luxury packaging. A bridal gift set with five coordinated pieces on a velvet bed needs this footprint. Most brands never get here.
A category narrows the range. Type-specific dimension pins the exact fit. Start broad, then refine. A catalog listing “Medium Bracelet Box” without exact specs could mean 6 × 4 × 1.5 inches or 8 × 2 × 1 inches—completely different shapes.
If your necklace box lid is 1.5 inches tall and your ring box lid is 2 inches tall, the retail display looks uneven. Group boxes by lid height (1 inch, 1.25 inches, 1.5 inches), and the display reads as a cohesive system. This matters most when selling across multiple jewelry categories in physical retail.
The dimensions listed on a spec sheet are not the dimensions your jewelry gets. Inserts and board material consume 5–12 mm of interior space before the piece ever goes in. Understanding those trade-offs is what separates accurate ordering from optimistic guessing.
Every insert reshapes the cavity. They are not free space.
Velvet pads typically run 3–8 mm thick and sit at the base of the cavity. They look premium but reduce effective depth. For taller pieces, this height loss is the difference between clearance and contact.
ஈவிஏ ஃபோம் செருகல்கள் range from 5–15 mm and offer the most precise cavity fit. The tradeoff: the foam block itself consumes volume. Order the box with net internal height in mind, not gross internal height.
Necklace boards are thin cardboard panels (1–2 mm) with a groove for the chain. Minimal height impact, but the board needs enough width for the chain to spread without overlapping.
Cotton fill compresses slightly and conforms to the piece’s shape. It reduces effective cavity dimensions but handles irregular geometries better than rigid inserts.

Board material sets the wall thickness. That wall thickness shrinks the cavity. These two effects stack.
Kraft paperboard (1–2 mm walls) preserves nearly the full external dimension as usable interior. This is why Kraft boxes offer the best interior-volume-per-footprint ratio among standard materials.
Standard paperboard (2–3 mm walls) is the middle ground for most commercial jewelry boxes.
Rigid board (3–6 mm walls) feels substantial but costs 6–12 mm from each dimension. Always order rigid boxes by internal spec, never external.
Wood (6–12 mm walls) is the thickest option. A 4 × 4 × 2-inch wooden box might only be 3.5 × 3.5 × 1.5 inches inside. Custom manufacturing is usually required for precise internal dimensions with wood.
The table below shows how each material’s wall thickness translates into usable interior space lost.
Board material choice is the primary driver of usable interior volume loss in custom jewelry boxes. The table below quantifies the net dimension reduction per side for each common jewelry box material, helping you calculate actual cavity space before ordering samples or placing bulk orders.
| பொருள் | சுவர் தடிமன் | Interior Loss Per Side | விளைவு தாக்கம் |
| Kraft paperboard | 1–2 மி.மீ. | ~1–2 மிமீ | Minimal interior reduction |
| காகிதப் | 2–3 மி.மீ. | ~2–3 மிமீ | Moderate interior reduction |
| Rigid board | 3–6 மி.மீ. | ~3–6 மிமீ | Significant interior reduction |
| மரம் | 6–12 மி.மீ. | ~6–12 மிமீ | Largest interior reduction |
When a supplier quotes “3 × 3 × 1.5 inches” without specifying internal or external, assume external and calculate inward by subtracting twice the board thickness.
The International Safe Transit Association recommends 3–5 mm of clearance on all sides of packaged items. This number comes from laboratory testing that simulates the shock and vibration packages encounter in real courier transit. It is not arbitrary. If your ring cavity measures 50 × 50 × 38 mm, the box needs to be at least 56 × 56 × 46 mm internally to meet ISTA guidelines.
The correct sequence: piece dimensions → insert thickness → net internal clearance → box specification. Start with the piece, add insert thickness, and subtract from the box’s cavity. The result tells you whether the fit works.
If you’re ordering 1,000 ring boxes and each ring has a 6 mm foam insert, that insert removes 6 mm of height from every cavity. Spec the box at gross interior dimensions, and you risk lid contact.
Two options when piece plus insert exceeds box interior: find a deeper box, or size up in the dimension that is failing. Size up only in the dimension that creates the problem, not all dimensions. If the height is short but the width and length are comfortable, find a box with extra lid depth rather than a larger overall footprint.
Knowing the numbers is step one. Applying them correctly to your specific pieces is step two. Each jewelry type has its own measurement logic, and one missed detail means the wrong box.
Three measurements determine a ring box: face diameter, setting height, and band width.
Face diameter sets the minimum cavity width. A 20 mm face needs at least 20 mm of width plus insert clearance.
Setting height drives cavity depth and lid clearance. This is the dimension buyers most often skip. A cathedral setting rising 12 mm above the shank needs 12 mm of headroom inside the lid plus 3–5 mm ISTA clearance. That means a 15 mm total height requirement for the stone area. Not the band’s height. The stone’s.
Bandwidth affects the slot or cut-out design in ring inserts. Wider bands (6–8 mm for men’s rings) need wider slots than delicate women’s bands (2–3 mm).
Of all jewelry types, engagement rings have the highest sizing failure rate. Always measure the setting height before choosing the box.
Earrings need three measurements, depending on the style.
Post depth matters for studs. Measure from the front of the post to the back nut. If the post is 10 mm and the foam insert is 6 mm thick, the post protrudes through the insert, and the earring isn’t secured.
Drop length is the vertical distance from the post to the lowest decorative point. For drop earrings, add the post length and the drop length together. That sum is the minimum cavity height. A 15 mm drop plus 8 mm post needs 23 mm of height internally, not 10 mm.
Hoop diameter requires a cavity width greater than the hoop’s diameter. Add 3–5 mm on each side. A 25 mm hoop needs at least 25 mm of cavity width.
Three measurements apply here.
சங்கிலி நீளம் sets the minimum cavity length. A 20-inch chain laid flat needs at least 20 inches internally, ideally 21–22 inches, so the chain lies slack rather than stretched.
Pendant drop is the distance from the chain attachment point to the pendant’s lowest point. If the pendant drops 40 mm below the chain and the chain groove is 5 mm deep, the cavity needs at least 45 mm of height.
Clasp width affects insert design. A toggle clasp 20 mm across needs a wider placement area than a lobster claw 8 mm across. Verify the insert’s chain groove accommodates your specific clasp.
முழு நீளம் sets the box length. An 8-inch tennis bracelet needs at least 8.5 inches of internal length to lay straight without curling at the ends.
தடிமன் at the thickest point on the piece determines cavity depth. A chunky curb chain, 5 mm thick, sits higher in the cavity than a delicate box chain, 1 mm thick. Always measure the thickest point.
Bangle inner diameter sets the minimum cavity width. Measure across the widest opening of the bangle, then add clearance. A 65 mm inner diameter bangle needs a cavity wider than 65 mm.
Watch sizing is the most dimensionally complex.
டயல் விட்டம் (38–44 mm for most dress watches) sets cavity width, but the strap complicates length. A watch on a pillow sits elevated, not flat. The total footprint becomes dial diameter plus strap extension on both sides.
பட்டா தடிமன் sets cavity height. A leather strap 4 mm plus dial 12 mm means the cavity needs at least 18–20 mm of internal height before the pillow. Add the pillow’s own height (typically 15–20 mm). Total requirement: often 40–50 mm, deeper than any other standard jewelry type.
Watch pillow dimensions must be specified independently. Standard pillows are 2 inches wide by 3 inches deep. Confirm before finalizing box dimensions.

Layered pieces always need more space than a single piece of the same type.
For stacked rings: increase cavity depth first. Stacked rings add vertical bulk more than horizontal.
For multiple chains in one box: increase the length to prevent tangling. Consider individual inserts per chain if the box has enough footprint.
Not every dimension matters equally for every piece. One dimension usually constrains the fit. Identify it first.
Match the dominant dimension first. A box that nails the dominant dimension but is slightly off on the others still works. A box that fails the dominant dimension fails the fit entirely.
This table summarizes the dominant dimension, minimum width clearance, and minimum height clearance for each major jewelry type.
| நகை வகை | Dominant Dim. | Min. Width Clearance | Min. Height Clearance |
| Ring (low-profile band) | உயரம் | Bandwidth + 3–5 mm | Setting height + 3–5 mm |
| Stud Earring | உயரம் | Post spread + 3–5 mm | Post depth + 3–5 mm |
| டிராப் காதணி | உயரம் | Drop width + 3–5 mm | Post + drop length + 3–5 mm |
| தொங்கல் | உயரம் | Pendant width + 3–5 mm | Chain groove + pendant drop + 3–5 mm |
| நெக்லெஸ் | நீளம் | Chain width + 3–5 mm | Chain groove + 3–5 mm |
| Bracelet (chain) | நீளம் | Bracelet length + 3–5 mm | Thickness + 3–5 mm |
| வளையல் | அகலம் | Inner diameter + 3–5 mm | Bangle depth + 3–5 mm |
| கண்காணிப்பகம் | உயரம் | Dial + strap on both sides + clearance | Dial + strap + pillow + clearance |
Kraft boxes use thinner walls than rigid board, which means more interior volume per external footprint. For brands that prioritize eco-friendliness or cost efficiency without sacrificing presentation, Kraft dimensions are worth understanding on their own terms.
Rigid board boxes have 3–6 mm walls. Kraft boxes typically use 1–2 mm walls. The gap between external and internal dimensions is therefore smaller for Kraft—usually only 2–4 mm per dimension total.
A 3 × 3 × 1.5-inch external Kraft box might measure 2.9 × 2.9 × 1.4 inches internally. That is noticeably closer to the external spec than a rigid box would be. For brands where precision of fit is the priority, this is a meaningful advantage.
Brands focused on sustainability should review eco-conscious packaging choices மற்றும் sustainable paper packaging solutions that cover Kraft material specs and certification requirements.
Kraft boxes come in three main size tiers:
Kraft jewelry boxes should maintain at least 1/16 inch (approximately 1.6 mm) wall thickness for adequate protection during normal handling and shipping. Thinner material risks crushing in transit. Confirm wall thickness with the supplier before bulk orders.
Kraft wins in three situations: when interior volume per external footprint is the priority, when eco-friendly brand positioning is part of the marketing strategy, and when cost-sensitive bulk orders make per-unit price a key decision factor.
Rigid boxes win on perceived luxury and structural protection. For high-value pieces with complex profiles, the rigid board’s thickness provides more crush resistance—regardless of interior volume.
Minimum order quantities for Kraft jewelry boxes typically range from 100 to 500 units per size, depending on the manufacturer and whether custom printing is involved. Stock (no-print) Kraft boxes often sell in smaller increments, sometimes as low as 50 units. Custom-printed Kraft boxes with logo or brand color usually require higher MOQs due to printing plate setup costs. Always confirm MOQ before finalizing a supplier decision, especially for brands testing new packaging formats with limited initial volume.
These errors show up across brands of every size. None is surprising. All are preventable.
The most common mistake. A box listed as “3 × 3 × 1.5 inches” almost always lists external dimensions. Without subtracting the board thickness and confirming the internal cavity, a ring arrives and doesn’t fit. The cavity is short by 0.25–0.5 inches in each dimension.
Ask for internal dimensions from the supplier. If they can only provide external, calculate inward by subtracting twice the board thickness.

Ring box failures almost always trace back to the setting height. A high-set solitaire with a cathedral profile needs more lid clearance than a low-profile band—even with the same band width.
Measure to the tallest point on the piece. Not just the band. Add 3–5 mm clearance. That is the minimum height spec.
A 1-inch deep cavity becomes 0.5 inches once a foam insert goes in. This is predictable. It gets missed constantly.
Spec the insert first. Then spec the box based on the net interior space after the insert is in place. Never specify a box and insert independently without checking the combined result.
A beautiful box with wrong dimensions damages brand perception more than a plain box with the right fit. Space in a premium-looking box reads as waste. A snug fit in a simpler box reads as intentional design.
Verify dimensions before aesthetics. Right size plus decent appearance beats gorgeous but wrong every time.
Carriers charge whichever is greater: actual weight or dimensional weight. An oversized box full of air costs the same to ship as one packed efficiently. Calculate dimensional weight (L × W × H in inches ÷ 139 for USPS, ÷ 166 for UPS/FedEx) before finalizing dimensions. If the DIM weight exceeds the actual weight by more than 30%, size down.
Run through this before every order:
Standard sizes cover most situations. But custom dimensions earn their higher unit cost when fit, shipping efficiency, or brand presentation justifies the investment.
Standard sizes are the right call when pieces are simple and low-profile (flat bands, stud earrings, standard pendants), order quantities are under 500 units, fast turnaround is required with stock availability, or budget constraints make tooling costs impractical.
For brands evaluating custom packaging versus off-the-shelf solutions, the decision usually comes down to volume, fit precision required, and brand differentiation goals.
Custom dimensions make financial sense when pieces have non-standard profiles (unusually tall settings, oversized pendants, unusually wide bands), annual shipping volume exceeds 10,000 units, where size savings compound into real cost reduction, brand presentation requires a unique box silhouette that stock dimensions cannot achieve, or multi-piece sets need custom insert layouts that standard boxes cannot accommodate.
At 20,000 units per year, a custom box that saves 0.5 inches per dimension reduces dimensional weight by 0.2–0.4 lbs per package. At $5 per package in shipping cost, that is $4,000–8,000 in annual savings.
Custom tooling for jewelry boxes typically runs 300–1,500, depending on complexity. If custom boxes cost 0.05 more per unit than standard, 20,000 units add $1,000 annually. Custom dimensions pay back the tooling investment at volumes above roughly 5,000–10,000 units per year, depending on carrier rates and the size differential.
A dieline is a flat technical blueprint that shows the cut lines, fold lines, and glue areas before the box is assembled. Think of it as the box’s architectural plan. Every dimension on the finished box traces back to this blueprint.
When custom dimensions are ordered, the supplier starts from internal dimension requirements and works outward through the dieline to define the external footprint. The flat layout shows exactly how much material folds into each wall and where the seams land. Dielines are created in design software like Adobe Illustrator, ArtiosCAD, or Esko. Suppliers typically handle dieline creation as part of the custom box service.
Not every supplier can execute custom dimensions. Check four things before committing:
Custom jewelry box projects that start with precise dimension specs and a dieline review before tooling are the ones that arrive with the right fit on the first bulk order.
The most frequently ordered: 2 × 2 × 1.5 inches (rings), 2.5 × 2.5 × 1 inch (earrings), and 7 × 5 × 1 inch (necklaces). These three sizes cover the majority of mainstream packaging needs across single-piece orders and small collections.
Open the box. Measure the interior cavity at the longest, widest, and deepest points. Record length (longest horizontal edge), width (shorter horizontal edge), and height (vertical depth with lid closed). Always measure internal dimensions, never external. Use a ruler or caliper. Measure in millimeters for the most precise specification.
No single average exists. A typical small jewelry box measures around 3 × 3 × 1.5 inches internally, accommodating rings and small earrings. The average shifts upward when necklace and bracelet boxes are included. When planning packaging for a mixed collection, budget for multiple size categories rather than one average.
Sizes are based on piece type and physical dimensions, not gender. But men’s jewelry tends to need larger boxes because watches, thick bracelets, and cufflinks have larger footprints. A men’s watch box needs more width and depth than a women’s ring box. Size to the piece, not to an assumed gender category.
A standard wedding ring (engagement or wedding band) fits a box with internal dimensions of approximately 2 × 2 × 1.5 inches. For rings with tall center stones or wide bands, size up to 2.5 × 2.5 × 1.75 inches or larger.
Add 3–5 mm of clearance on all sides after accounting for insert thickness. If the ring cavity is 50 mm wide and a 6 mm foam insert is planned, the net internal width available for the ring is 50 mm minus the insert’s thickness on each side. Calculate net interior space, not gross cavity dimensions.
One base box size can serve multiple jewelry types by changing the insert design. A 4 × 4 × 2-inch box with a ring insert fits rings. The same box with a velvet pad fits earrings. A necklace board transforms it into a necklace box. This approach simplifies packaging SKU management while maintaining fit flexibility.
Standard gift box sizes range from 2.5 × 2.5 × 1 inch (small pieces) to 9 × 9 × 2 inches (multi-piece gift sets). The most common retail gifting range falls between 3 × 3 × 1.5 inches and 6 × 4 × 2 inches, depending on jewelry type and presentation style.
Standard jewelry box dimensions give you a starting point, not a finish line. The numbers in this guide cover the majority of packaging scenarios. Apply them with the measurement methods described here, account for insert thickness and board material, and the trial-and-error cycle that wastes budget and damages brand presentation disappears.
Three steps to move from standard to precise:
For custom dimension quotes, dieline design, or to discuss your specific piece profiles, connect with the RichPack team. We work with jewelry brands to spec, design, and produce boxes that fit your collection, not the other way around.
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