Estimate dry ice mass
Use payload weight, box size, route time, seasonal ambient temperature, and carrier limits before the first lane test.
Frozen pizza needs a flat, dry, frozen route. The packout must protect crust shape, topping position, paperboard cartons, and stacked-case pressure while keeping dry ice or frozen coolant away from direct paperboard contact.
The dry ice amounts below are starting ranges for planning. Final packout should be validated with the exact payload, box size, carrier lane, season, and dry ice limit.
| Route condition | Temperature intent | Tempk packaging setup | Coolant planning range | Coolant position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Local delivery, 8-18 h | Frozen arrival | Flat EPP box or insulated carton, carton sleeve, moisture barrier, light top bracing. | 1.0-1.8 kg dry ice for 1-5 kg payload, or validated frozen PCM/frozen gel for controlled local routes. | Above or side chamber with divider; keep pizzas flat and dry. |
| Overnight parcel, 18-36 h | -18 C route intent | Thicker insulation, dry ice pouch or chamber, vapor gap, flat stack support. | 2.0-4.0 kg dry ice for 1-5 kg payload. | Top dry ice separated from cartons; avoid edge crushing and carton wet-out. |
| Hot lane or 36-48 h | Validated frozen lane | Higher insulation, reduced headspace, strong outer carton, route risk check. | 4.0-6.5 kg dry ice for 1-5 kg payload, subject to carrier limit. | If cartons soften, improve moisture barrier before adding more dry ice. |
For a tighter estimate, start with the Dry Ice Calculator and review insulation choices in the Insulation Material Reference.
Frozen food returns often come from a small layout failure: direct dry ice contact, too much headspace, a wet carton, or a product stack that shifts during handling.
Use bracing or a snug product chamber so cartons do not bend when the parcel is tilted or stacked.
Use a dry ice pouch, divider, or chamber so vapor and extreme cold do not attack the retail carton.
Large air gaps increase sublimation and allow cartons to move; fit the shipper to the pizza stack height.
Check product temperature, dry ice remaining, carton wet-out, crust breakage, and signs of thaw-refreeze.
Use these receiving checks when adjusting dry ice mass, insulation thickness, or internal separation.

Use the product page for the handling logic, then size the first trial with tools and validate the real route.
Use payload weight, box size, route time, seasonal ambient temperature, and carrier limits before the first lane test.
Compare dry ice, frozen gel packs, and frozen PCM when choosing the first frozen packout.
Review pickup dwell, last-mile delay, receiving window, and summer routing before launch.
Share the frozen product type, payload weight, box size, route duration, ambient profile, carrier limits, and receiving checks. Tempk can help choose insulation, dry ice or frozen coolant placement, and validation steps.