Regarding Export Packaging Methods for Glass Bottles
Whether export Glass Bottles require a "grid + carton + pallet" packaging combination depends primarily on the bottle's characteristics (material, shape, value), transportation method, target market regulations, and general logistics industry standards. The following scenarios and criteria clearly define the applicable scope:
Core Application Scenario: Meeting the "fragile + bulk + long-distance transport" requirements

When a glass bottle meets one or more of the following conditions, a multi-layer packaging combination of "grid (or internal cushioning) + carton + pallet" is likely necessary. The core objectives are to prevent breakage, facilitate loading and unloading, and reduce transportation losses:
Glass Bottle Type: Highly fragile, high-value, or for special purposes
These types of glass bottles have poor impact resistance or significant damage if broken, requiring enhanced protection through multi-layer packaging:
1. Pharmaceutical glass bottles: such as vaccine bottles, infusion bottles, and oral solution bottles (mostly made of borosilicate glass, which is hard but brittle and comes into direct contact with pharmaceuticals, requiring absolute protection against contamination and breakage);
2. Cosmetics / Skincare glass bottles: such as serum bottles and perfume bottles (mostly thin-walled, custom-shaped, and may feature printing or electroplating, which can affect their appearance if broken);
3. High-end food and beverage glass bottles: such as wine bottles (especially those with embossed, elongated necks), imported jam bottles, and baby food bottles (focusing on sealing and appearance integrity, as they are prone to cracking due to impact during bulk transport);
Industrial specialty glass bottles: such as laboratory reagent bottles and instrument glass tubes (mostly customized, with small quantities but high unit value, and requiring protection against deformation or breakage during transport).

"Grid + carton + pallet" is the mainstream packaging solution for glass bottle exports in the **high-risk (fragile/high-value) + long-distance (sea/air) + high-volume** scenario. Essentially, it balances protection needs, regulatory compliance, and logistics efficiency. In practice, it is recommended to consider the type of glass bottle, target market regulations, and logistics provider recommendations before finalizing the packaging solution.








