How USP compares to Buckhorn for North Carolina pallet buyers.
Get a Price →Returnable plastic pallet manufacturer. United States Pallets serves North Carolina with 50-pallet minimums (most national networks require 1,000+), sub-2-hour quote response, multi-grade inventory, and audit-ready documentation.
Response under 2 business hours.
All pallets stamped IPPC HT for ISPM-15 export compliance to 180+ countries; documentation includes treatment temperature logs and the registered facility number.
Research Triangle pharmaceutical manufacturers in Durham and Research Triangle Park require FDA 21 CFR 178.3520 indirect food additive compliant pallets; our pharma-grade stock serves GSK, Eli Lilly, and Pfizer manufacturing sites.
North Carolina furniture manufacturers in High Point, Hickory, and Lenoir use custom oversized pallets for assembled freight; 60x40 and 72x48 builds available on 5-day production lead time for furniture-market exhibitors.
Recycled-Grade B pallets meet structural spec but may have up to 2 replaced deck boards; suitable for industrial loads outside food/pharma; price point 30-40% below new GMA.
Recycled-Grade A pallets meet 48x40 GMA spec with cosmetic wear only; no broken boards, no replaced stringers, all original GMA stamp visible; suitable for primary food-grade and pharmaceutical loads.
Flatbed delivery handles oversized loads or pallets with overhanging product; tarping included; preferred for export crates and bulk lumber shipments.
Citrus packhouses operate seasonal volume peaks November-April; we maintain dedicated Polk County and Indian River inventory to support 6-12 truckload weekly delivery during peak; standing-order pricing locks rates Oct 1.
Lumber index pricing: we benchmark against the Random Lengths southern yellow pine #2 index for hardwood-blend spec; updates monthly; standing-order pricing protects against +/-15% market swings.
Sustainability reports provided quarterly to standing-order customers; documents pallets recycled, lumber diverted from landfill, and CO2-equivalent savings vs new-only sourcing.