BCT Calculator — Box Compression Test
Calculate corrugated box stacking strength using the McKee Formula. Find safe stacking load, max layers & warehouse safety instantly.
What is BCT — Box Compression Test?
BCT (Box Compression Test) is the standard measurement that determines how much vertical load a corrugated box can withstand before it crushes. In simple terms — it tells you whether your box will survive warehouse stacking without collapsing.
Packaging factories, e-commerce companies, FMCG brands and export houses all rely on BCT values. If a box's BCT is too low and you stack too much weight on top, the bottom boxes crush — causing product damage and customer complaints.
How to Calculate BCT — The McKee Formula
The McKee Formula is the most widely used method to calculate BCT. It requires three inputs — ECT value, box perimeter, and board thickness.
BCT (kgf) = BCT (N) ÷ 9.807
Safe Stack Load (kgf) = BCT (kgf) ÷ Safety Factor
Max Safe Layers = Safe Stack Load ÷ Box Weight (kg)
Understanding Each Variable:
| Variable | Full Name | Unit | How to Get It |
|---|---|---|---|
| ECT | Edge Crush Test | kN/m | From paper mill certificate or lab test |
| Perimeter | Box Perimeter | meters | 2 × (Length + Width) ÷ 1000 |
| Thickness | Board Thickness | meters | Measure with micrometer or vernier caliper |
| SF | Safety Factor | — | Dry: 3 / Normal: 4 / Humid: 5 / Export: 6 |
| BCT | Box Compression Test | N or kgf | Calculated by formula (1 kgf = 9.807 N) |
Typical ECT & BCT Values by Ply Type:
| Box Type | GSM Config | Typical ECT (kN/m) | Typical BCT (kgf) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 Ply — Light | 120/120/120 | 3.5 – 5.0 | 150 – 250 |
| 3 Ply — Medium | 150/150/150 | 5.0 – 7.0 | 250 – 380 |
| 5 Ply — Standard | 150/120/150/120/150 | 7.0 – 10.0 | 380 – 600 |
| 5 Ply — Heavy | 175/150/175/150/175 | 9.0 – 13.0 | 550 – 800 |
| 7 Ply — Industrial | 200/175/200/175/200 | 12.0 – 18.0 | 750 – 1200 |
BCT Calculator — Free Online Tool
Enter your box details to instantly calculate BCT value, safe stacking load, maximum layers and warehouse stacking height using the McKee Formula.
Open BCT Calculator
McKee Formula • Direct BCT Input • Stacking Height Calculator
3 calculation modes — results in seconds — 100% free
Safety Factor (SF) — Which One to Use?
BCT is measured under ideal lab conditions. Real warehouse environments — humidity, rough handling, vibration — reduce the actual strength of boxes. The Safety Factor accounts for this real-world difference.
| Safety Factor | Condition | Where to Use | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Dry, AC controlled | Temperature-controlled warehouse, pharma, electronics | Low Risk |
| 4 | Normal conditions | Standard FMCG, general goods — recommended for most | Medium |
| 5 | Humid / monsoon | Coastal areas, monsoon season, outdoor storage | High |
| 6+ | Very high risk | Export, sea freight, rough handling environments | Critical |
Step-by-Step Guide — How to Use This Calculator
- Click "Open BCT Calculator" button in the calculator section above.
- Select the Right Tab: Use "McKee Formula" tab when you have ECT value from paper mill. Use "Direct BCT Input" tab when you have a lab test result. Use "Stacking Calculator" tab when you only need stacking height.
- Enter ECT Value: Get this from your paper mill's test certificate or from a BIS-accredited lab. If unknown, refer to the reference table above to estimate.
- Enter Box Dimensions: Length, Width, and Height in millimeters (mm).
- Enter Board Thickness: Measure with a micrometer or vernier caliper. Typical values: 3 Ply ≈ 3–4 mm, 5 Ply ≈ 4–6 mm, 7 Ply ≈ 6–8 mm.
- Select Safety Factor: Choose 3, 4, 5, or 6 based on your warehouse conditions.
- Press "Calculate BCT" — Results appear instantly inside the calculator popup.
- Interpret the Result: Green = Safe, Yellow = Warning, Red = Unsafe. Check stacking layers and height values.

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