Custom packaging is the fastest-growing segment in the printing industry, and most print shops are watching the revenue go to someone else.
Packlane, Arka, Packola, and a dozen other online packaging platforms have figured out what local print shops haven’t: DTC brands want to order custom boxes the same way they order everything else. Upload a logo, pick a size, see a 3D preview, get an instant quote, and check out. No phone call, no email chain, no waiting three days for a PDF proof.
These online platforms are capturing billions in packaging revenue, and they don’t own a single press. They’re brokers with a good frontend. The print shop down the road that actually manufactures boxes, labels, and cartons is losing work to a website that subcontracts the job to a shop just like theirs.
The print shops fighting back aren’t buying new equipment. They’re adding web-to-pack functionality to their existing WooCommerce stores. And they’re winning on something the platforms can’t match: speed, flexibility, and a local relationship.
Why Dtc Brands Are Driving This Shift
The custom packaging market is expanding at a pace the printing industry hasn’t seen in decades. The driver isn’t large CPG companies placing 50,000-unit runs through procurement departments. It’s the explosion of direct-to-consumer brands that need 250 to 2,000 custom boxes at a time, often with seasonal designs that change quarterly.
A skincare brand launching a holiday gift set needs 500 custom mailer boxes in three weeks. A craft coffee roaster wants branded bags with a QR code linking to their origin story. A pet food startup needs retail-ready shelf cartons that comply with FDA labeling requirements. These are real orders that real print shops could fulfill, but these buyers are going to online platforms because those platforms make ordering easy.
Research consistently shows that roughly 40% of consumers share branded unboxing experiences on social media. DTC brands know this. They treat packaging as marketing, not logistics. And they’re willing to pay a premium for custom packaging that photographs well, ships safely, and reinforces their brand at the moment of highest customer attention: the unbox.
For print shops, this creates an opportunity with a specific condition attached. The demand exists. The margins are healthy. But capturing it requires letting these buyers configure, preview, and order packaging online. Not through an email exchange. Not through a quote request form. Through a self-service storefront.
What Online Packaging Platforms Figured Out (And What They Lack)

Packlane lets a customer pick a box type, enter dimensions, upload artwork, and see an instant price. Arka integrates with Shopify so brands can order branded mailers directly from their ecommerce dashboard. These platforms solved the buyer experience problem. But they created a new one for themselves: they don’t control production.
Most online packaging platforms are middlemen. They receive the order, route it to a contract manufacturer, mark up the price, and ship. The customer pays more, the turnaround is longer, and quality control is one step removed. The print shop doing the actual production gets a fraction of the margin.
Local print shops selling packaging directly through WooCommerce eliminate that entire layer. The buyer gets a better price. The turnaround is faster. The print shop keeps the full margin. And the relationship is direct, meaning the buyer can walk into the shop to check a proof or discuss a structural modification.
The missing piece has always been the frontend experience. Print shops couldn’t compete with Packlane’s 3D preview or Arka’s instant quoting because their WooCommerce stores had flat product pages with a “Request a Quote” button. That gap is closing fast.
How Woocommerce Handles Packaging (And Where It Doesn’t)
WooCommerce is built for standard ecommerce: add to cart, select a variant, check out. Custom packaging doesn’t work that way. A folding carton isn’t a t-shirt with three sizes. It’s a product defined by custom dimensions, board type, print method, coating, number of printed sides, and quantity, with the price calculated dynamically from all of those variables.
Out of the box, WooCommerce can’t do this. But its open architecture means it doesn’t have to. The shops successfully selling packaging online are using web-to-pack integrations that sit on top of WooCommerce and handle everything the core platform can’t.
- Custom dimension input: The customer enters height, width, and depth. The system generates a dieline automatically, complete with fold lines, glue tabs, bleed areas, and die-cut marks. No manual CAD work. No back-and-forth with a structural designer for standard box styles.
- 3D preview: The customer sees their artwork wrapped around a realistic 3D model of the box, rotating it to check every panel before ordering. This isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the feature that converted packaging from a quote-driven product to an online-orderable product. When a buyer can see exactly what they’re getting, they order with confidence. Without it, they hesitate, request samples, and often abandon the process entirely.
- Dynamic pricing: The system calculates price based on the specific combination of dimensions, material, quantity, coating, and printing method. Not a flat price per box. Not a “request quote” dead end. A real number that updates in real time as the customer changes specifications. This is what Packlane does well, and it’s what print shops need to replicate.
- Print-ready output: When the order lands, it includes a production-ready file with correct dielines, proper bleed, CMYK color, and imposition marks. The press operator doesn’t need to rebuild the file. The order goes straight from the website to the production queue.
One packaging printer running WooCommerce web to print with DesignNBuy’s web-to-pack plugin reported that 40% of their new packaging customers in the first quarter came through the website, and the average order required zero prepress intervention. The files were production-ready at checkout.
The Product Categories That Work Best Online
Not every packaging product needs to go on the WooCommerce storefront immediately. The shops growing fastest start with the products that are most standardized and have the highest reorder frequency.
- Mailer boxes: The simplest entry point. Corrugated mailers in standard or custom sizes, with full-color exterior print and optional interior printing. DTC brands reorder these constantly. Once the first order is configured and the artwork is saved, reorders take 30 seconds.
- Folding cartons: Product boxes for retail shelves. Skincare, supplements, food products, candles, and cosmetics. These require precise dimensions and often involve regulatory elements like ingredient lists and barcodes. Letting the customer handle initial layout through a guided template reduces the back-and-forth dramatically.
- Labels and stickers: Lower barriers to entry than boxes. Customers choose a shape, size, material (vinyl, paper, clear), and upload artwork. Die-cut labels for bottles, jars, and pouches are a high-margin, high-volume product category that many print shops already produce but don’t sell online.
- Rigid and gift boxes: Higher price point, longer lead times, but also higher margins. Luxury brands ordering seasonal gift packaging for cosmetics, spirits, or electronics. These often require 3D configurators showing magnetic closures, ribbon pulls, or custom inserts.
The packaging products that don’t work well online, at least initially, are truly bespoke structural designs that require custom engineering. Those still need a conversation. But they represent a small percentage of total packaging volume. The 80% that follows standard structural formats, standard ECMA and FEFCO box styles, can be configured and ordered entirely through a WooCommerce storefront.
Why WooCommerce specifically
Print shops selling packaging online could use Shopify, Magento, or a custom platform. But WooCommerce has three advantages that matter specifically for packaging businesses.
- Most packaging companies already have WordPress: The website is there. The domain authority is there. The blog content about packaging materials, sustainability certifications, and structural design is there. WooCommerce layers on top without a migration.
- SEO compounds on the same domain: A packaging company that publishes a guide on “sustainable packaging materials for food brands” on their WordPress blog and sells sustainable food packaging through their WooCommerce store builds topical authority that no marketplace can replicate. The blog drives organic traffic. The store converts it. Same domain, same SEO benefit.
- No per-transaction platform fees: Packaging orders are high-value. A 1,000-unit custom box order might be $3,000 to $8,000. On Shopify, that’s $18 to $160 in platform transaction fees per order, depending on the plan and gateway. WooCommerce charges nothing beyond payment processing. For a packaging business running $50K or more per month through the website, the savings are material.
The Window Is Closing
Right now, the print shops adding web-to-pack to their WooCommerce stores are early movers. The DTC brands ordering from Packlane and Arka would rather work with a local printer who can turn orders faster, offer personalized service, and produce samples on demand. They just need the ordering experience to be comparable.
The packaging platforms know this. They’re investing heavily in their buyer experience, building brand loyalty, and locking in repeat orders with saved templates and automated reorder reminders. Every month a print shop waits to add online packaging ordering is a month where another cohort of DTC brands forms a habit of ordering from a platform instead of a local shop.
The equipment isn’t the bottleneck. The production capability isn’t the bottleneck. The bottleneck is a website that says “Request a Quote” when the buyer wants to see a price, preview their box in 3D, and place an order before their next meeting starts.
The print shops removing that bottleneck are the ones capturing the fastest-growing segment in the industry.
Source: Cosmo Politian





