Warehousing Cost Estimator
This warehouse cost estimator helps shippers, importers, e-commerce brands, Amazon sellers, and operations teams estimate monthly warehousing costs before requesting quotes from 3PLs, fulfillment centers, and warehouse providers. Enter your pallet volume, services needed, and location to see a cost range broken down by storage, receiving, fulfillment, labeling, returns, and handling.
Warehouse pricing varies significantly by region, warehouse type, order volume, and the specific services required. A general dry storage account in a lower-cost market may pay $14–$22 per pallet per month for storage alone. An e-commerce fulfillment account with pick/pack, labeling, returns handling, and WMS access in a high-cost port market will pay considerably more. This tool surfaces those differences so you can build a realistic cost model before entering an RFQ process.
Enter your warehousing requirements below to estimate monthly storage and 3PL costs.
Warehousing Cost Estimator
Estimate monthly warehouse costs for pallet storage, receiving, fulfillment, labeling, returns, and 3PL services. Use this estimate to understand likely cost ranges before requesting quotes from warehouse providers and 3PLs.
Location & Market
Storage Volume
Order Volume
Fulfillment & Value-Added Services
Select all services you require. Each service adds estimated cost to the monthly total.
Operating Assumptions
Rate Range Display
Cost Breakdown
| Cost category | Est. monthly (likely) | % of total | Visual |
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Questions to Ask Warehouse Providers
Ready to compare real warehouse pricing?
Use this estimate to guide your RFQ conversations. Final pricing depends on your actual volume, contract minimums, storage type, handling needs, and the provider’s operational structure.
This estimate is for informational and planning purposes only. Actual warehouse rates vary by provider, market, services required, inventory profile, monthly minimums, contract terms, and handling complexity. Always confirm pricing directly with warehouse and 3PL providers before making operational or budgeting decisions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does warehouse storage cost per pallet per month?
Warehouse storage typically costs between $12 and $35 or more per pallet position per month depending on the region, warehouse type, and market conditions. In lower-cost inland markets, rates can run $12–$18 per pallet. In high-cost markets like New Jersey, New York, Southern California, and the greater Chicago area, rates of $25–$40 or more per pallet are common. Cold storage adds a significant premium — usually 2–3 times dry storage rates — due to refrigeration infrastructure and operating costs. These benchmarks are for planning purposes. Actual rates depend on your volume, the specific provider, contract terms, and what services are included.
What is included in a warehouse or 3PL monthly fee?
There is no universal standard for what is included in a warehouse or 3PL monthly fee. Storage is almost always a separate line item charged per pallet position or per square foot. Receiving is typically charged per pallet or per carton on inbound. Outbound fees depend on how shipments move — per pallet for full pallet moves, per carton for B2B or retail distribution, or per order for e-commerce fulfillment. Value-added services including pick and pack, labeling, kitting, returns handling, and WMS access are usually charged separately. A monthly minimum charge is common, particularly at smaller 3PLs and full-service fulfillment centers. Always request an itemized rate sheet and confirm what is and is not included in any quoted fee.
What is the difference between a 3PL and a warehouse?
A warehouse stores inventory. A third-party logistics provider (3PL) typically offers storage plus additional services — inbound and outbound transportation management, order fulfillment, pick and pack, value-added services, and often a WMS or client portal. Some providers use the terms interchangeably. For practical purposes, if you need basic storage and pallet-level receiving and shipping, a standard public warehouse may be sufficient. If you need order-level fulfillment, returns handling, labeling, kitting, or carrier management, a 3PL is typically a better fit. Use National Freight Hub to compare warehousing companies and 3PL providers by service type, location, and capability.
How do I estimate warehouse costs for e-commerce fulfillment?
E-commerce warehouse costs include storage per pallet position, inbound receiving per pallet or carton, a per-order pick fee (covering first pick and basic packing materials), additional pick fees per order line beyond the first, outbound carton handling, and in some cases a monthly WMS or account management fee. Returns handling is a significant variable cost for many e-commerce businesses. To estimate total monthly cost, multiply each rate by the corresponding volume — pallets stored, orders per month, average picks per order, cartons shipped — and sum the result. This tool does that math automatically and surfaces the key cost drivers based on your inputs.
What is a 3PL monthly minimum charge?
A monthly minimum is a floor amount a 3PL charges regardless of actual activity. If your storage, receiving, pick, and other activity in a given month adds up to less than the minimum, you are billed the minimum instead. Monthly minimums are common at 3PLs and fulfillment centers that need to ensure a baseline revenue per account to justify the operational overhead of managing client inventory. Minimums typically range from $300 to $2,000 or more per month depending on the provider and service level. If your volume is low or variable, negotiate the minimum carefully and confirm whether it applies to all months or only months where activity falls below the threshold.
How does warehouse location affect cost?
Location is one of the most significant factors in warehouse pricing. Labor costs, real estate costs, and market demand vary considerably across the country. Port markets like Los Angeles/Long Beach, Newark/New York, and Seattle typically carry the highest rates. Secondary markets in the inland Southeast, Midwest, and Plains states are generally lower cost. Positioning inventory in a lower-cost inland distribution hub can reduce warehouse costs significantly, but may increase inbound freight costs if most inventory arrives at a coastal port. For e-commerce businesses, proximity to the customer base affects outbound shipping costs, so a purely cost-based decision on warehouse location is not always optimal.
What questions should I ask a warehouse or 3PL before signing a contract?
Before signing a warehousing contract, confirm the per-pallet storage rate and how positions are counted, the inbound receiving fee and whether it includes unloading or put-away only, the monthly minimum and what triggers it, per-order and per-pick fees if applicable, how value-added services like labeling, kitting, and returns are priced, what the WMS or portal access includes and whether there is a setup fee, contract length and any volume commitments or early termination penalties, billing cycle and how invoices are structured, and insurance and liability terms for stored inventory. The tool surfaces a customized list of questions based on your specific inputs in the results step.
Need real warehouse pricing after the estimate?
A warehouse cost estimate can help you understand the likely range, but final pricing depends on pallet volume, order activity, handling requirements, storage type, minimums, and contract terms. Use National Freight Hub to compare warehousing companies, 3PL providers, fulfillment centers, and logistics partners before requesting quotes.
Disclaimer: The estimates produced by this tool are for informational and planning purposes only. Actual warehouse and 3PL rates vary by provider, geographic market, service requirements, inventory profile, monthly minimum charges, contract terms, and handling complexity. Rate benchmarks used in this calculator are based on general market observations and are not guaranteed to reflect current or future pricing. Always confirm rates, fees, and contract terms directly with warehouse providers and 3PLs before making operational or financial decisions.