Shipping & logistics

Dimensional weight,
without the spreadsheets.

Carriers charge by whichever is greater — actual weight or dimensional weight. Pick a carrier, enter your dimensions, see your true chargeable weight and estimated cost, with the Aug 2025 ceiling rounding rule applied by default.

Heads up USPS DIM rules change July 12, 2026. The Postal Service divisor drops from 166 to 139, plus ceiling rounding adopted — making USPS pricing match FedEx/UPS. This calculator will switch over automatically on the effective date. More on the change →
View mode
Box dimensions
Actual weight (for chargeable comparison)
⚙ Advanced options

Leave blank to use the carrier's standard divisor. High-volume shippers often negotiate divisors of 166 or 194.

Optional — your average shipping cost per kg. Used to estimate the cost for this package.

Carrier preset
Formula in use:
Result summary
Chargeable weight
max(actual, dimensional)
Dimensional weight
kg
computed from volume
Actual weight
what you entered
Volume
l × w × h
Length + girth
L + 2(W + H)
From our network

Deeper DIM weight calculations.

Need carrier rate sheets, historical divisor changes, or batch DIM weight processing for a spreadsheet of packages? Our sister site dimweightcalc.com goes deeper on carrier-by-carrier nuance — useful when you're modeling shipping costs for a whole catalog.

Visit dimweightcalc.com →
What is dimensional weight?

Carriers bill the bigger number.

Dimensional weight — also called "DIM weight" or "volumetric weight" — is how shippers price low-density packages. A box full of pillows weighs almost nothing, but it takes up the same trailer space as a heavy box. So carriers compute a weight from the volume, and charge you whichever is greater: actual or dimensional.

The formula is simple: DIM weight = (L × W × H) ÷ divisor. Each carrier publishes its own divisor — and different ones for domestic vs international, air vs ground. This calculator uses the current published values:

Standard divisors
FedEx / UPS (US) 139 in³/lb
FedEx / UPS / DHL (intl) 5,000 cm³/kg
USPS Priority 166 in³/lb
Royal Mail 6,000 cm³/kg
Air freight (IATA) 6,000 cm³/kg
Always verify with the carrier — divisors are reviewed periodically.
Related reading

From the blog.

Article
Dimensional Weight Explained →
Article
UPS vs FedEx Dimensional Weight →
Article
How to Avoid Oversize Shipping Fees →
Article
Negotiating DIM Divisors with Your 3PL →