Types of Food Packaging: A Complete Guide for Food Brands

Types of Food Packaging: A Complete Guide for Food Brands

The main types of food packaging are: stand-up pouches, flat pouches, glass jars, metal cans, clamshell containers, and folding cartons (primary formats that hold the food directly), plus corrugated boxes, kraft mailers, padded mailers, poly mailers, retail bags, and void fill (shipping formats that protect without touching the food). All fall within four material families: paper, plastic, glass, and metal.

Food packaging breaks down into four material families (paper, plastic, glass, and metal) and roughly a dozen core formats, from stand-up pouches to corrugated boxes. Every format serves one of two distinct roles: holding the food (primary packaging) or carrying the food through retail and shipping (secondary and shipping packaging). Confusing the two creates real risk. A poly mailer cannot legally hold cereal, and a folding carton built for a shelf will collapse in courier transit.

Per the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, containers and packaging are the largest share of US municipal solid waste by weight, with paper recycled at roughly 68% versus under 10% for plastic. That nearly seven-to-one gap means choosing a paper-based format dramatically raises the odds that a brand's packaging actually completes the recycling loop in practice, not just on the label.

Key Takeaways
  • Every packaging decision starts with role: primary (touches the food) versus secondary or shipping (carries the food).
  • A handful of formats cover nearly every commercial use case, from flexible pouches to rigid gift boxes.
  • Match format to three factors: product protection needs, shipping path, and end-of-life disposal.
  • Paper formats offer the most accessible curbside recyclability; compostable film needs industrial composting access.
  • FSC, BPI, GRS, and How2Recycle convert sustainability claims into third-party verifiable statements.
  • FDA 21 CFR Parts 174 to 179 govern every US food-contact material, regardless of format.
  • Recycling aluminum uses roughly 95% less energy than primary production, making it the rare food packaging format where the recycled-content version delivers a clear, measurable environmental advantage.
Compostable stand-up food pouch containing dry goods, representing primary food packaging

What Is Food Packaging?

Food packaging is any material used to contain, protect, present, or ship food products. Throughout this guide, every format is tagged by role: primary (touches the food), secondary (groups primary units for retail or gifting), or shipping (carries the food through transit).

That distinction matters for two reasons. First, only primary packaging needs FDA food-contact compliance. Second, using shipping packaging as primary packaging is a regulatory and safety risk. A poly mailer is not a snack bag. A corrugated shipper is not a sandwich wrap.

Material Category Share of US MSW (by weight) Recycling Rate
Containers & Packaging (all) Largest single category Varies by material (see below)
Paper & Paperboard packaging ~23% of total MSW ~68%
Plastic packaging ~12% of total MSW <10%
Glass containers ~4% of total MSW ~31%
Metal cans & packaging ~3% of total MSW ~34% (aluminum ~50%)

Source: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency: Containers and Packaging Product-Specific Data. Paper packaging is recycled at roughly 68% versus under 10% for plastic, a nearly seven-to-one gap.

Why Food Packaging Matters

Food packaging does four jobs at once: protect from contamination, extend shelf life, communicate regulator-required information, and build brand recognition at the shelf or unboxing moment.

Material choice now carries financial weight. California, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Oregon, and Washington have passed Extended Producer Responsibility laws that shift disposal costs onto brands. Focus on what is measurable: certified materials, accessible end-of-life pathways, and documented food safety compliance.

The 3 Levels of Food Packaging

  1. Primary Packaging (Touches the Food)

    The container that touches the food directly: a stand-up pouch of coffee, a sandwich wrap, a sauce jar, a sealed tea sachet. This is where FDA food-contact compliance applies. If a supplier cannot confirm the material, adhesives, and inks meet 21 CFR Parts 174 to 179, the format does not belong here.

  2. Secondary Packaging (Holds Primary Units for Retail)

    Groups primary packages for retail display or gifting: a folding carton holding a tea pouch, or a rigid gift box containing multiple confectionery units. May or may not have direct food contact depending on construction.

  3. Shipping (Tertiary) Packaging (Carries the Food in Transit)

    Handles bulk transport and last-mile shipping. Corrugated boxes, padded mailers, kraft mailers, poly mailers, and void fill solve for multiple handling events between warehouse and doorstep. Never touches the food.

Types of Food Packaging by Material

The four main food packaging materials are paper, plastic, glass, and metal. Within these families, the certified sustainable options are: compostable packaging (BPI/ASTM D6400), recycled plastic packaging (GRS-certified), recycled paper packaging (FSC-certified), and plastic-free honeycomb paper cushioning.

Primary & Shipping

Compostable Packaging

Breaks down to biomass, water, and CO2 under defined conditions. Films are typically plant-based. Look for BPI certification in North America and the underlying ASTM D6400 and D6868 standards. EcoPackables compostable pouches can be both industrial and home compostable. Used as primary packaging for food and as shipping packaging in compostable poly mailers. Always verify food-contact certification before using compostable film as primary packaging.

Primary & Shipping

Recycled Plastic Packaging

Post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastic uses collected waste processed into flake or pellet. PCR pouches deliver virgin-plastic barrier protection while reducing fossil-resin demand and serve as primary packaging when food-grade certified. PCR poly mailers serve as shipping packaging only. The Global Recycled Standard (GRS) verifies recycled content and chain of custody. Without GRS or equivalent, recycled-content claims cannot be independently substantiated.

All Roles

Recycled Paper Packaging

Uses post-consumer recycled fiber, often blended with virgin fiber for strength. FSC certification verifies that any virgin component came from responsibly managed forests. The material behind food-grade kraft pouches (primary), folding cartons (secondary), and kraft mailers and takeout bags (shipping). Biodegradable and curbside recyclable in nearly every US municipality.

Shipping Only

Honeycomb Paper

A plastic-free cushioning material made from 100% recycled paper in a hexagonal structure that absorbs shipping impact. Used inside padded mailers and as void fill for fragile food items like glass-bottled sauces and jarred preserves. Fully curbside recyclable and a direct replacement for plastic bubble wrap. Honeycomb paper protects food in transit but never holds it.

Assortment of food packaging formats including stand-up pouches, corrugated boxes, and kraft mailers

Types of Food Packaging by Format

Food packaging formats split into two groups by role. Primary formats (touch the food directly) include stand-up pouches, flat pouches, glass jars, metal cans, clamshell containers, and folding cartons. Shipping formats (protect without touching the food) include corrugated boxes, kraft mailers, padded mailers, poly mailers, retail bags, and void fill. Each is covered in detail below.

Primary Packaging (Food Contact)

Primary

Stand-Up Pouches

The most widely used flexible food-contact format. Holds shape on shelf, often resealable, available in compostable, recycled plastic, and kraft. Best for coffee, snacks, protein powder, and dry goods. Specify food-grade and BPI- or GRS-certified film.

Primary

Flat Pouches and Food-Grade Poly Bags

Lightweight food-contact bags for inner packaging, single-serve items, or inserts. Compostable (BPI) and recycled plastic (GRS) versions are widely available. Best for candy, tea sachets, and multipack inserts. Must be explicitly food-grade. Standard poly mailers, even unprinted ones, are not food-grade.

Primary

Glass Jars

The retail standard for sauces, preserves, and premium food products. Soda-lime glass is curbside recyclable indefinitely without quality loss. Pair with a tamper-evident seal and an inert lid liner.

Primary

Metal Cans and Tins

Best for shelf-stable, preserved, and pressurized products. Aluminum, steel, and tin-plated steel options are all curbside recyclable. Recycled-content aluminum is the cleanest metal-format option environmentally because of the 95% energy savings over virgin production.

Primary

Clamshell Containers

Best for produce, bakery display, and ready-to-eat fresh items. PET, rPET (GRS), and PLA (BPI) options are widely available. Choose rPET for curbside recyclability or PLA for industrial composting.

Primary or Secondary

Folding Cartons

Retail-shelved packaging for cereals, crackers, and frozen meals. Made from coated or uncoated paperboard; FSC-certified options are widely available. Add an inner liner or food-grade coating if direct food contact is required.

Shipping and Protective Packaging (Does Not Touch the Food)

Shipping

Shipping Boxes (Corrugated)

The structural backbone of DTC food shipping. Single-wall corrugated handles most shipments; double-wall adds rigidity for fragile or heavy orders. 100% recycled and FSC-certified options are widely available.

Shipping

Paper and Kraft Mailers

Ship lightweight food shipments DTC. Recycled kraft mailers are durable, printable, and curbside recyclable. Best for teas, coffee bags, and shelf-stable snacks. Always pair with a sealed primary container; the mailer never touches the food.

Shipping

Padded Mailers

Protect fragile food during shipping. Honeycomb paper mailers, compostable padded mailers, and PCR bubble mailers replace virgin plastic padding. Best for artisan chocolate, glass-bottled sauces, and delicate baked goods.

Shipping

Poly Mailers

Lightweight plastic shipping bags. Recycled (GRS) and compostable (BPI) versions available. Suitable for moisture-resistant DTC shipments where weight matters. Not food-contact under any circumstance.

Secondary / Carry

Retail and Takeout Bags

Carry sealed primary packages out of cafes, bakeries, and restaurants. Recycled kraft balances durability with cost and is fully curbside recyclable.

Shipping

Void Fill and Cushioning

Keeps shipped products stable during transit. Honeycomb paper rolls, recycled kraft, and recycled tissue replace plastic bubble wrap. Essential for any brand shipping breakable items.

Best Food Packaging for Different Products

Each card below splits packaging into two questions: what holds the food, and what ships or carries it.

Coffee and Tea
Holds the food Food-grade stand-up pouches with a resealable zipper for whole bean and ground coffee. Flat pouches or sachets for single-serve tea. Specify BPI or GRS film.
Ships the food Recycled kraft mailers for single-bag DTC orders; corrugated boxes for multi-pack or wholesale shipments.
Snacks and Dry Goods
Holds the food Food-grade stand-up pouches for retail (granola, nuts, dried fruit, pet treats). Food-grade flat pouches or poly bags for inner multipack packaging.
Ships the food Recycled kraft mailers for shelf-stable shipments; corrugated boxes when bundling multiple SKUs.
Baked Goods
Holds the food Food-grade paper bags, kraft pouches, and compostable wrapping paper. Short shelf life favors light protection plus grease resistance, not multi-layer barrier.
Ships the food Padded mailers with honeycomb paper for delicate items; double-wall corrugated boxes with kraft void fill for bundled orders.
Sauces and Liquids
Holds the food Glass jars dominate retail. Food-grade stand-up pouches with spouts serve squeeze and refill formats.
Ships the food Honeycomb padded mailers for single-jar DTC orders; corrugated boxes with honeycomb or kraft void fill for multi-jar shipments.
Fragile Food Items
Holds the food Format depends on the product, typically glass, rigid plastic, or coated paperboard.
Ships the food Padded mailers or double-wall corrugated with honeycomb or kraft void fill. Double-wall corrugated plus honeycomb is a reliable DTC baseline.
Fresh Foods
Holds the food Food-grade clamshells (rPET or PLA), kraft trays, and compostable fiber containers. Moisture control and safe food contact are the top constraints.
Ships the food Insulated corrugated with appropriate cold-chain components for refrigerated DTC. Retail moves typically use returnable totes rather than shipping packaging.
Frozen Foods
Holds the food Food-grade gusseted poly bags, multi-layer barrier pouches, and coated folding cartons. Must withstand low temperatures and prevent freezer burn.
Ships the food Insulated corrugated with refrigerants for DTC; standard corrugated for frozen-stable products in retail logistics.
Sustainable packaging certifications including FSC, BPI compostable, GRS, and How2Recycle labels

Sustainability Certifications for Food Packaging

Four certifications cover nearly every sustainability claim, each verifying something specific.

Sourcing

FSC (Forest Stewardship Council)

Applies to paper and kraft packaging: corrugated boxes, folding cartons, paper bags, kraft pouches. Verifies fiber came from responsibly managed forests with documented chain of custody. Confirms sourcing, not compostability or recyclability.

Compostability

BPI (Biodegradable Products Institute)

Applies to compostable formats: compostable pouches, poly mailers, wrapping paper, PLA clamshells. Verifies breakdown to biomass, water, and CO2 under industrial composting conditions using ASTM D6400 or D6868.

Recycled Content

GRS (Global Recycled Standard)

Applies to recycled-content packaging: rPET clamshells, recycled poly mailers, recycled flexible films. Verifies recycled content percentage and tracks material through the supply chain. Without GRS or equivalent, recycled claims cannot be independently verified.

Disposal

How2Recycle

Provides consumer-facing disposal instructions on packaging, telling the customer whether a container goes curbside, needs drop-off, or should be composted. Reduces contamination and builds disposal trust.

How to Choose the Right Food Packaging

Work through these questions before contacting a supplier. Each narrows format and material options.

  1. Define the Role First

    Decide whether the format will touch the food (primary), group primary units for retail (secondary), or carry the order through transit (shipping). Mixing the three is the most common source of food-safety and shipping failures in DTC packaging.

  2. Start With Your Product's Needs

    Is the product dry or wet? Does it need an oxygen (coffee) or moisture (sauces) barrier? Does a resealable zipper help? Is it temperature-sensitive or fragile in shipping? Every primary-packaging decision flows from these answers.

  3. Think About Shelf Life

    Short shelf-life items (baked goods, fresh food) need light protection only. Long shelf-life items (coffee, protein powder, dry snacks) need multi-layer barrier films that block oxygen and moisture.

  4. Consider How It Gets to the Customer

    Retail, DTC, farmers market, and foodservice each have different shipping requirements. A folding carton built for a shelf will crush in courier transit without a corrugated outer box. Map the full fulfillment path first.

  5. Make Sure It Meets Food Safety Standards

    FDA 21 CFR Parts 174 to 179 govern every food-contact material sold in the US. "Food grade" means the material, adhesives, and inks comply. Sustainability certifications do not replace food safety compliance, and shipping packaging cannot be reused as primary packaging.

  6. Factor in Sustainability

    Recyclable, compostable, and biodegradable are not interchangeable. Decide which commitment your brand is making, specify certified formats that deliver it, and match to what the customer can realistically do at end-of-life.

Compostable vs. Recyclable vs. Biodegradable Packaging for Food

These three terms are often used interchangeably and are not equivalent. Use the table below to keep claims accurate.

Claim What It Means Required Conditions Regulation / Standard
Compostable Breaks down to biomass, water, and CO2 under defined conditions and timeframe Industrial composting facility; home compost when specified BPI; ASTM D6400 and D6868
Recyclable Can be collected, processed, and made into new material Accepted in curbside or drop-off programs in the customer's area FTC Green Guides; How2Recycle labeling
Biodegradable Breaks down over an undefined timeframe None required Unregulated in the US; least defensible claim without certification

If a supplier claims "biodegradable" without an attached certified standard, treat it as unsubstantiated.

Food Packaging for E-commerce: What's Different

Standard retail packaging often fails in courier transit. E-commerce food packaging solves for five pressures at once: durability across multiple handling events between warehouse and doorstep; moisture resistance for humidity, rain, or condensation; cushioning for fragile items like glass jars; dimensional weight optimization to control per-order shipping cost; and unboxing experience, since the package is the first physical brand touchpoint.

Recycled corrugated boxes, padded mailers with honeycomb paper, and recycled kraft mailers solve most DTC food shipping problems. None of these formats touch the food directly; they protect a sealed primary container.

Quick Reference: Food Packaging Types at a Glance

Format Packaging Role Best For Material Options Eco-Friendly Version?
Stand-Up Pouches Primary Coffee, snacks, powders Multi-layer film, kraft, compostable Yes (BPI compostable, GRS recycled)
Flat Pouches / Food-Grade Poly Bags Primary Candy, tea, inner packaging Compostable film, food-grade PCR plastic Yes (BPI, GRS)
Glass Jars Primary Sauces, preserves, premium Soda-lime glass Yes (curbside recyclable, indefinitely)
Metal Cans and Tins Primary Shelf-stable, preserved foods Steel, aluminum, tin-plated steel Yes (aluminum uses ~95% less energy to recycle)
Clamshell Containers Primary Produce, bakery display PET, rPET, PLA Yes (GRS rPET, BPI PLA)
Folding Cartons Primary or Secondary Retail-shelved food products Coated or uncoated paperboard Yes (FSC)
Retail / Takeout Bags Secondary / Carry Cafes, bakeries, restaurants Recycled kraft Yes (FSC, recycled)
Shipping Boxes (Corrugated) Shipping Multi-item and fragile DTC Recycled paperboard Yes (FSC, 100% recycled)
Paper Mailers and Kraft Mailers Shipping Lightweight DTC food shipments Recycled kraft paper Yes (FSC, recycled content)
Padded Mailers Shipping Fragile food DTC shipments Honeycomb paper, PCR bubble Yes (recycled, plastic-free options)
Poly Mailers Shipping Moisture-resistant DTC (not food contact) PCR plastic, compostable film Yes (GRS, BPI)
Void Fill / Cushioning Shipping All fragile shipments Honeycomb paper, kraft paper, tissue Yes (100% recycled)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most eco-friendly food packaging?

The most eco-friendly food packaging depends on your customer's access to end-of-life infrastructure. FSC-certified paper and kraft are the best default for most US brands because they are curbside recyclable in nearly every municipality. BPI-certified compostable packaging is the right choice when industrial composting is accessible. GRS-certified recycled plastic is best for products requiring multi-layer barrier performance.

No single material wins in every situation. The most defensible sustainability claim combines a certified material, an accessible end-of-life pathway for your specific customer base, and third-party verification from FSC, BPI, or GRS, not just a supplier's unsubstantiated label claim.

What does food grade packaging mean?

Food grade packaging is any material tested and approved for direct contact with food under FDA 21 CFR Parts 174 to 179, covering the base material, all adhesives, inks, and coatings. It applies only to primary packaging, specifically the container that physically touches the product. Secondary and shipping packaging do not require food grade certification.

If any single component (material, adhesive, or ink) fails to meet compliance standards, the entire package is non-compliant, even if the substrate itself is approved. When sourcing primary packaging, always request a food safety compliance statement from your supplier confirming all components meet 21 CFR requirements.

Can a poly mailer be used to hold food directly?

No. A standard poly mailer cannot be used as primary food packaging under any circumstance. Poly mailers are shipping envelopes manufactured with inks, adhesives, and polymer additives that do not meet FDA 21 CFR food-contact standards; using one to hold food directly is a food safety violation regardless of whether it is made from virgin plastic, recycled content, or compostable film.

Food-grade poly bags are an entirely separate product category with FDA-compliant materials and explicit food-contact certification. Always specify food-grade when ordering any bag that will touch the product. Poly mailers belong strictly on the outside of a sealed primary container.

What packaging is best for shipping food?

The best shipping packaging for food: recycled kraft mailers for lightweight shelf-stable orders (coffee, tea, snacks); corrugated boxes for multi-item or heavy shipments; padded mailers with honeycomb paper for fragile items like glass-bottled sauces or artisan chocolate; and insulated corrugated with cold-chain components for refrigerated or temperature-sensitive products. None of these formats touch the food; they protect a sealed primary container.

The right choice depends on three variables: product weight, fragility, and whether the primary container is rigid or flexible. Mapping the full fulfillment path before selecting a format prevents both product damage and over-packaging spend.

What is the difference between compostable and biodegradable packaging?

Compostable packaging is a regulated, certifiable claim: it must meet ASTM D6400 or D6868 and carry BPI certification in North America, confirming breakdown to biomass, water, and CO2 within a defined timeframe under industrial composting conditions. Biodegradable is an unregulated term in the US with no required timeline, no testing standard, and no mandated certification, making it effectively meaningless without an attached certified standard.

The FTC Green Guides caution against unqualified biodegradable claims. If a supplier cannot name the specific ASTM or equivalent standard backing a biodegradable claim, treat it as unsubstantiated marketing language, not a verified environmental benefit.

What types of food packaging are recyclable?

Food packaging types that are curbside recyclable in most US municipalities include: corrugated boxes, uncoated paperboard folding cartons, paper bags, glass containers, aluminum cans, steel cans, and #1 PET plastic clamshells. Flexible packaging (multi-layer pouches, poly mailers, most films), compostable film, and PLA clamshells are not curbside recyclable.

Recyclability depends on both material and local collection infrastructure. Formats should carry How2Recycle labeling to confirm program acceptance in your customer's area. The FTC Green Guides require that a substantial majority of consumers have access to the relevant collection program before a recyclability claim can be made on packaging.

Find the Right Packaging for Your Product

EcoPackables supplies certified sustainable pouches, mailers, boxes, and cushioning across every category in this guide.

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