Mục lục
- Quick summary
- Structure of a nestable plastic pallet: why nine feet beat three in many cases
- Stacking advantage: why nestable pallets are common in distribution
- The key limit of nestable pallets: what suppliers often leave unsaid
- Technical specifications of ICD Viet Nam nestable plastic pallets
- When to choose a nestable pallet, and when not to
- Used nestable pallets: when they are a good buy and when to be careful
- Related articles
- Frequently asked questions
- Contact and nestable pallet quote from ICD
A nestable plastic pallet is a single-face pallet with nine cup-shaped feet laid out in a 3×3 grid. Its defining benefit is that empty pallets nest into one another, saving 60-70% of storage space compared with pallets that cannot nest. It carries 3,000-6,000 kg static load and 1,000-1,500 kg dynamic load, and stays more stable under stacked goods than a three-runner pallet because the nine contact points spread the load evenly. The one hard limit: it does not fit selective racking. This guide covers its structure, stacking advantage, load specs, and exactly when to choose it or avoid it.
Quick summary
| Point | Detail |
|---|---|
| Design | Single-face pallet with nine cup-shaped feet in a 3×3 grid; nests when empty to save 60-70% of storage space |
| Static load | 3,000-6,000 kg; dynamic load 1,000-1,500 kg depending on the model - suited to medium and heavy goods |
| Key strength | More stable under multi-layer stacked goods than a three-runner pallet, with less sway thanks to nine evenly loaded contact points |
| Main limit | Not suitable for selective racking - a single-face nestable pallet cannot rest on rack beams; use a three-runner or solid-deck pallet with stringers instead |
| Most common in | FMCG warehouses, electronics warehouses, and domestic distribution centres that do not use high racking |
In 15 years of supplying pallets to B2B businesses, I have seen the nestable pallet wrongly chosen and wrongly rejected in equal measure: some pick it for high-rack warehouses and then find it will not fit, while others refuse it believing it is weaker than a three-runner pallet. This article clears up both points.
Structure of a nestable plastic pallet: why nine feet beat three in many cases
A standard nestable pallet has nine cylindrical feet about 80-100 mm in diameter, laid out evenly in a 3×3 matrix. Each foot is 100-150 mm tall depending on the model. This is the fundamental difference from a three-runner pallet (only three lengthwise runners) and a conventional nine-leg pallet (square or cup feet).
Why do nine feet give a better result than three in many contexts? When goods sit on the pallet, the load transfers to the floor through the feet. With a three-runner pallet, each runner bears the full load along its length. With nine cup feet, the load spreads evenly across nine points, reducing concentrated pressure and limiting sag between feet under heavy load. That is why a nestable pallet is usually more stable under multi-layer stacked goods - the block leans less than it would on a three-runner pallet.
The deck of a nestable pallet is typically a mesh open deck or a closed deck depending on the model. The mesh version is lighter and ventilated, suited to ordinary dry warehouses. The closed-deck version is heavier but carries a higher static load, used for heavy goods or warehouses that need easy cleaning.
Stacking advantage: why nestable pallets are common in distribution
This is the real competitive edge of the nestable pallet over most other pallet types. When empty, nestable pallets stack into one another thanks to the matching feet - the upper pallet sits into the feet of the lower one, so the whole column is only as tall as one pallet plus n times the foot height (around 100-130 mm). In practice, 10 nestable pallets nested are only about 1.3-1.5 m tall, whereas 10 ordinary pallets stacked vertically reach 1.5-2 m and are unstable.
This advantage matters most in two situations. First, a distribution warehouse with fast goods turnover - pallets are constantly unloaded and waiting for new stock, and empty-pallet storage takes up significant space if it cannot nest. Second, transporting empty pallets on the return leg - a truck carrying empty pallets back to the warehouse typically holds more than twice as many nestable pallets as ordinary pallets, saving notable transport cost.
| Criterion | Nestable (9 feet) | Three-runner | Solid-deck |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nesting when empty | Best | No | No |
| Works on selective racking | No | Yes | Yes |
| Stability under multi-layer goods | High | Medium | High |
| Own weight | Light (8-14 kg) | Medium (10-18 kg) | Heavy (12-22 kg) |
| Static load | 3,000-6,000 kg | 3,000-8,000 kg | 4,000-9,000 kg |
| Reference price | Lowest | Medium | Highest |
The key limit of nestable pallets: what suppliers often leave unsaid
A single-face nestable pallet cannot be used with selective racking, drive-in racking or push-back racking. This is the most important technical difference. A racking system supports the pallet on two horizontal beams - the pallet needs lengthwise or crosswise stringers to rest on the beams. A nestable pallet has only nine separate feet and no stringers, so on rack beams it drops through the middle or sways dangerously.
If your warehouse uses, or plans to install, selective racking, choose a three-runner pallet or a solid-deck pallet with stringers rather than a nestable pallet. Conversely, if the warehouse only floor-stacks or uses block stacking that does not need pallets to rest on beams, the nestable pallet is the most economical and flexible choice.
Another limit rarely mentioned: a single-face nestable pallet can only use one face - the flat top holds goods, while the footed underside cannot. This is not a problem in most ordinary warehouse applications, but note it when goods need to sit on the pallet either way up or in an automated process that requires a double-face pallet.
Technical specifications of ICD Viet Nam nestable plastic pallets
ICD Viet Nam supplies nestable plastic pallets in the three sizes most common in the northern market. The loads below are for virgin-resin pallets - recycled pallets carry 20-30% less:
| Size (mm) | Static load | Dynamic load | Pallet weight | Typical application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1100 x 1100 x 145 | 4,000-5,000 kg | 1,000-1,200 kg | ~12 kg | FMCG, domestic consumer goods |
| 1200 x 1000 x 145 | 4,000-6,000 kg | 1,000-1,500 kg | ~13 kg | Distribution, logistics, e-commerce |
| 1000 x 1000 x 145 | 3,000-4,000 kg | 800-1,000 kg | ~10 kg | Small warehouses, light goods, retail |
When to choose a nestable pallet, and when not to
Based on real data from warehouses across the Hanoi - Bac Ninh - Hung Yen area using ICD pallets, the decision can be summed up as follows.
Choose a nestable pallet when
- The warehouse floor-stacks or block-stacks and does not use selective racking
- You handle FMCG, electronics or fast-turnover consumer goods and need to nest empty pallets to save space
- You ship many empty pallets on the return leg - nesting lets you carry more and cut logistics cost
- The budget is limited - a nestable pallet is usually 10-20% cheaper than a three-runner or solid-deck pallet of the same size
- Goods have a dynamic load not exceeding 1,000-1,500 kg per pallet
Do not choose a nestable pallet when
- The warehouse uses selective, drive-in, push-back or pallet-flow racking
- Export goods need the pallet to sit on racking at the receiving end
- Dynamic load exceeds 1,500 kg per pallet - you need a reinforced three-runner or solid-deck pallet
- A cold store requires a double-face pallet or a pallet that rests on cold-store rack beams
Used nestable pallets: when they are a good buy and when to be careful
Used nestable plastic pallets are a segment many distribution and FMCG warehouses look at, since they cost 40-60% less than new. They do, however, need more careful inspection than used three-runner pallets, because cup feet are prone to hidden cracking - especially at the base of the foot where it meets the warehouse floor. A hidden crack is invisible to the naked eye but cuts the load capacity sharply.
When buying used nestable pallets, check four things. One, colour - a used nestable pallet still in good shape keeps an even colour and is not patchily faded. Two, the surface of the feet - flip the pallet over and check each foot for cracks or deformation. Three, drop it gently from 20-30 cm onto the floor - a sound pallet rings sharp, a brittle one thuds or cracks. Four, confirm the source - nestable pallets from FMCG warehouses (drinks, consumer goods) are usually in better condition than those from chemical or outdoor storage.
Related articles
| Plastic pallet articles |
Frequently asked questions
Are a nestable plastic pallet and a nine-leg plastic pallet the same thing?
In essence yes - both have nine feet in a 3×3 layout. The names vary by manufacturer and region. “Nestable” or “cup-foot” pallet stresses the round cup-shaped feet, while “nine-leg” stresses the number of feet. Some makers distinguish further between square nine-leg feet and round cup feet - round feet generally resist compression better by spreading force around an even perimeter, while square feet are stiffer at the edges. In the Vietnamese market, the two names are used interchangeably.
Can a nestable pallet be used with a hand pallet jack?
Yes, but mind the gap between the feet. A standard hand pallet jack has forks about 150-200 mm wide and needs at least 160 mm of clearance between feet to insert them. Nestable pallets sized 1100 x 1100 mm and 1200 x 1000 mm usually have 250-350 mm between foot columns, so a two-way hand jack works fine. For a four-way hand jack or an AGV, confirm the exact dimensions with the supplier before buying.
Is a nestable pallet really weaker than a three-runner pallet?
Not necessarily - it depends on the load condition. The static load (fixed stacked goods) of a nestable pallet matches a three-runner pallet of the same size and material. Its rack load (on rack beams) is zero because it cannot be used on racking. Its dynamic load (forklift in motion) is usually 10-20% lower than a three-runner pallet because the feet are dispersed rather than continuous runners. Bottom line: if your warehouse does not use racking and the dynamic load stays within 1,000-1,500 kg, a nestable pallet is entirely sufficient.
How do virgin-resin and recycled nestable pallets differ?
Beyond the load difference (virgin resin is 20-30% higher), the more important point is foot durability. The cup feet of a recycled pallet are more prone to brittle cracking under repeated load, especially if struck by forklift forks. For high-turnover warehouses (daily inbound and outbound), investing in virgin HDPE nestable pallets gives a lower total cost of ownership than recycled after 2-3 years thanks to fewer failures.
Where can I buy nestable pallets in Hanoi and northern Vietnam?
ICD Viet Nam supplies both new and used nestable plastic pallets in Hanoi, in stock for immediate delivery, with quotes by quantity. Sizes 1100 x 1100 mm, 1200 x 1000 mm and 1000 x 1000 mm are stocked in both virgin resin and grade-A recycled, delivered across the north: Hanoi, Bac Ninh, Hung Yen, Hai Phong, Hai Duong and Vinh Phuc.
Contact and nestable pallet quote from ICD
ICD Viet Nam Industrial Production Company Limited
For free advice on choosing the right pallet for your warehouse and racking system, visit the contact page or reach us directly.
North: Floor 3, Thang Long A1 Building, Bau Hamlet, Thien Loc Commune, Hanoi - 0983 797 186 / 090 345 9186 / 090 5859 186
South: 551/212 Le Van Khuong, Tan Thoi Hiep, District 12, Ho Chi Minh City - 098 6784 186
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