Your product has a great display in the store. But the moment a customer picks it up, the display experience ends — and the packaging experience begins. If the box feels cheap, tears easily, or looks like an afterthought, everything the display accomplished is undone.

Display packaging is the box or container that holds your product for retail sale. Unlike standard shipping boxes, display packaging is designed to look good on a shelf, communicate brand quality, and create a positive unboxing experience. It includes cardboard packaging, corrugated boxes, and rigid gift boxes.
I have manufactured packaging alongside displays for over 16 years, and the brands that succeed at retail treat packaging as part of the display strategy — not as an afterthought. Your display gets the customer's attention. Your packaging closes the sale and builds the brand. In this guide, I will cover the key types of display packaging and how to choose the right one.
What Is Display Packaging and Why Does It Matter?
Display packaging is the outer packaging that holds a product for retail presentation. Unlike shipping packaging, which is designed purely for protection during transport, display packaging must look good enough to sit on a retail shelf and convince a shopper to buy.
Display packaging serves three purposes:
- Protection — Keeps the product safe during shipping, handling, and storage
- Presentation — Displays the product attractively on the retail shelf
- Branding — Communicates brand identity through materials, printing, and finishes
When your product sits on a shelf next to competitors, the packaging is the first thing the shopper sees. A well-designed box with quality printing signals a quality product inside. A generic or poorly printed box does the opposite.
Display packaging is particularly important when it complements a retail display strategy. A branded floor display filled with products in matching branded boxes creates a cohesive brand experience from the aisle to the checkout counter.
Types of Display Packaging: Cardboard, Corrugated, and Rigid
| Type | Material | Strength | Best For | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardboard box (paperboard) | Solid bleached or recycled board | Light to moderate | Cosmetics, small retail items, gift sets | Low–Moderate |
| Corrugated box | Fluted corrugated board | Moderate to very strong | Heavy items, ecommerce, multi-packs | Low–Moderate |
| Rigid gift box | Thick paperboard wrapped in paper or fabric | High | Luxury goods, electronics, premium gifts | Higher |
| Collapsible rigid box | Rigid board with folding joints | High | Gift sets, subscription boxes | Moderate–Higher |
| Magnetic closure box | Rigid board with embedded magnets | High | Premium retail, jewelry, wine | Higher |

Cardboard Boxes (Paperboard)
Cardboard boxes — also called paperboard boxes or folding cartons — are made from thin, rigid board. They are the most common type of retail packaging for small products like cosmetics, supplements, toys, and electronics accessories.
Cardboard boxes are lightweight, print beautifully with offset litho, and are cost-effective at scale. They are typically shipped flat and erected at the packing facility.
Corrugated Boxes
Corrugated boxes are made from fluted corrugated board. They are significantly stronger than paperboard boxes and are used for heavier products, multi-pack units, and ecommerce shipping.
For retail display purposes, corrugated boxes can be printed with brand graphics and used as shelf-ready packaging (SRP) or counter-ready packaging (CRP). These boxes are designed to be opened, have the top removed, and placed directly on a shelf as a mini display.
Rigid Gift Boxes
Rigid gift boxes are the premium option. They are made from thick, dense paperboard (typically 1.5–3 mm thick) wrapped in printed paper, fabric, or leatherette. Rigid boxes do not collapse — they maintain their shape permanently.
Rigid boxes are the standard for luxury retail, high-end electronics, jewelry, and premium gift sets. They communicate quality through weight, structure, and tactile feel.
Cardboard Packaging vs Corrugated Packaging: What Is the Difference?
The terms "cardboard packaging" and "corrugated packaging" are often used interchangeably, but they refer to different materials.
| Factor | Cardboard (Paperboard) | Corrugated |
|---|---|---|
| Construction | Single thick layer of paperboard | Fluted layer sandwiched between two liner boards |
| Thickness | 0.3–1.0 mm | 1.5–8.0 mm depending on flute grade |
| Strength | Light to moderate | Moderate to very strong |
| Print surface | Excellent, smooth | Good to excellent depends on flute |
| Best for | Small, lightweight retail items | Heavy items, shipping, multi-packs |
| Typical uses | Cosmetics, gift sets, electronics | Ecommerce boxes, retail SRP, heavy products |
For retail display, both have their place. Cardboard boxes are better for products that need high-quality print and a clean appearance on the shelf. Corrugated boxes are better for products that need strength, protection, or bulk handling.
If you are selling through a counter display and the product is small and lightweight, a cardboard box is the right choice. If you are shipping to a club store on a pallet display, corrugated packaging is required for the strength needed during shipping and stacking.
Rigid Gift Boxes for Premium Branding
Rigid gift boxes are in a category of their own. They are the packaging choice for brands that want to make a premium statement.
Why Brands Choose Rigid Gift Boxes
| Benefit | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Perceived value | A heavy, solid box signals quality before the customer opens it |
| Unboxing experience | The weight, texture, and opening mechanism create a memorable moment |
| Reusability | Customers keep rigid boxes for storage, extending brand exposure |
| Premium finishes | Foil stamping, embossing, and soft-touch coatings are standard options |
| Protection | The thick walls protect products better than paperboard or corrugated |
Common Rigid Gift Box Styles
| Style | Description | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Two-piece (lid and base) | Separate lid fits over the base | Most common, versatile |
| Magnetic closure | Lid has magnets that align with base magnets | Premium electronics, jewelry |
| Book-style | Opens like a book, often with ribbon lift | Watches, small electronics |
| Drawer box | Inner tray slides out of an outer sleeve | Cosmetics, spirits |
| Hinged lid | Lid attached to the base with a fabric hinge | Premium gift sets |
| Collapsible rigid | Rigid box with folding joints, ships flat | High-volume premium, subscription |
Rigid gift boxes are the most expensive packaging option, but for premium products, they deliver a return through higher perceived value, stronger brand positioning, and customer retention.
Printing and Finishing Options for Packaging
Packaging print quality directly affects brand perception. The print on your box is often the first detailed brand communication a customer experiences.
| Printing Method | Quality | MOQ | Cost | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Offset litho | Excellent, CMYK + Pantone | 500+ | Moderate | Standard retail boxes, gift sets |
| Digital | Very good, CMYK | 50+ | Moderate–Higher | Small runs, test launches |
| Flexographic | Good, 1–4 spot colors | 1,000+ | Low | Corrugated boxes, simple designs |
| Screen print | Good, bold colors | 200+ | Moderate | Rigid boxes, specialty finishes |
Finishing Options
| Finish | Effect | Premium Level |
|---|---|---|
| Gloss lamination | Shiny, color enhancement | Standard |
| Matte lamination | Soft, non-reflective | Standard |
| Soft-touch coating | Velvety feel | Premium |
| Foil stamping | Metallic logo or text | Premium |
| Embossing / Debossing | Raised or recessed design | Premium |
| Spot UV | Glossy highlight on specific areas | Premium |
| Deboss with foil | Combined texture and metallic effect | Luxury |
For most retail packaging, offset litho with matte or gloss lamination provides the best balance of quality and cost. For premium products, add foil stamping or soft-touch coating to elevate the perceived value.
How to Choose the Right Packaging for Your Product
| If Your Product Is... | And Your Brand Position Is... | Choose... |
|---|---|---|
| Small, lightweight, under $30 | Mass retail, drugstore | Cardboard box, offset litho |
| Medium weight, $30–$100 | Mid-range retail, department store | Corrugated box with litho laminate |
| Heavy or fragile, any price | Any retail or ecommerce | Corrugated with custom inserts |
| Premium, over $100 | Luxury, boutique, gift | Rigid gift box with foil stamping |
| Gift set, multiple items | Premium gifting | Rigid box with magnetic closure |
| Subscription, monthly ship | DTC, ecommerce | Collapsible rigid box |
Key Considerations
- Budget per unit — Cardboard boxes can cost $0.30–$1.50. Corrugated boxes cost $0.50–$3.00. Rigid boxes start at $2.00 and go up to $15+.
- Order quantity — Rigid boxes have higher MOQs (500–1,000+) than cardboard boxes (500+) or digital-printed runs (50+).
- Shelf environment — A box that looks premium in a boutique may look out of place in a club store, and vice versa.
- Unboxing video potential — Rigid boxes with good finishes generate more social media content than standard boxes.
How Much Does Custom Display Packaging Cost?
| Packaging Type | 500 Units | 1,000 Units | 2,500 Units | 5,000 Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard cardboard box, offset | $0.40–$0.80 | $0.30–$0.55 | $0.22–$0.40 | $0.18–$0.30 |
| Full-color cardboard box, offset | $0.60–$1.20 | $0.45–$0.85 | $0.35–$0.65 | $0.25–$0.50 |
| Corrugated box, 1-color flexo | $0.50–$1.00 | $0.35–$0.70 | $0.25–$0.50 | $0.20–$0.38 |
| Corrugated box, litho laminate | $1.20–$2.00 | $0.85–$1.50 | $0.65–$1.10 | $0.50–$0.85 |
| Rigid gift box, magnetic closure | $3.50–$6.00 | $2.80–$4.50 | $2.20–$3.50 | $1.80–$2.80 |
| Collapsible rigid box | $2.50–$4.50 | $1.80–$3.50 | $1.40–$2.50 | $1.10–$2.00 |
Additional Costs
| Cost Item | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Die/tooling (one-time) | $80–$250 |
| Custom inserts (foam, cardboard) | +$0.50–$3.00 per unit |
| Foil stamping | +$0.30–$0.80 per unit |
| Soft-touch coating | +$0.20–$0.50 per unit |
| Magnet insertion | +$0.15–$0.40 per set |
Display Packaging and Sustainability
Packaging sustainability is no longer optional for retail brands. Consumers and retailers both expect eco-friendly packaging options.
| Sustainable Feature | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Recycled content | Board made from post-consumer recycled fiber |
| FSC certification | Fiber sourced from responsibly managed forests |
| Water-based inks | No harmful solvents in printing |
| Biodegradable coatings | Compostable lamination alternatives |
| Minimal design | Reduced material usage without compromising strength |
| Recyclable construction | Single-material design (no plastic windows or lamination) |
If sustainability is a priority for your brand, choose cardboard or corrugated packaging made from recycled content with FSC certification. Avoid plastic lamination and specify water-based inks. Rigid boxes are less eco-friendly because they use more material and often include non-recyclable components like magnets and fabric wraps.
FAQ
What is the difference between cardboard and corrugated packaging?
Cardboard packaging (paperboard) is a single thick layer of paper material used for small retail boxes. Corrugated packaging has a fluted middle layer between two liner boards, making it stronger and better suited for heavy items and shipping.
What is display packaging?
Display packaging is packaging designed to present products attractively on retail shelves. Unlike plain shipping boxes, display packaging features brand printing, quality materials, and a design that enhances the product's appearance.
What type of packaging is best for luxury products?
Rigid gift boxes with premium finishes like foil stamping, embossing, and soft-touch coating are the standard for luxury products. They communicate quality through weight, structure, and tactile feel.
Can I use corrugated boxes for retail display?
Yes. Corrugated boxes with litho laminate printing offer retail-quality appearance with the strength needed for heavy products or multi-pack units. They are commonly used as shelf-ready packaging in club stores and supermarkets.
What is a rigid gift box?
A rigid gift box is a non-collapsible box made from thick paperboard wrapped in printed paper, fabric, or leatherette. It is used for premium product packaging and gift presentation.
How much does custom packaging cost?
Costs range from $0.18 per unit for simple cardboard boxes at high volume to $15+ per unit for premium rigid gift boxes with custom finishes at low volume.
What is the MOQ for custom packaging?
MOQs range from 50–100 units for digital-printed cardboard boxes to 1,000+ units for rigid gift boxes. The MOQ depends on the packaging type and printing method.
Is custom packaging eco-friendly?
Cardboard and corrugated packaging are highly eco-friendly when made from recycled content and printed with water-based inks. Rigid boxes are less eco-friendly due to material density and mixed-material construction.
What is shelf-ready packaging?
Shelf-ready packaging (SRP) is a corrugated box designed to go directly from the shipping pallet to the retail shelf. The top is perforated or removable, and the box is pre-printed with brand graphics.
What printing method is best for packaging?
Offset litho is the standard for retail packaging boxes. It offers the best balance of print quality and cost at scale. Digital printing is best for small runs and test launches.



