Lumber & Building Material Pallets pallet supply for Arlington metro operations.
Get a Price →Lumber & Building Material Pallets suppliers serving Arlington businesses range from regional yards with limited inventory to national networks with deep multi-grade stock. United States Pallets sits in the second category, structured specifically for high-volume B2B operations - 50+ pallets per order minimum, scheduled programs for 500+/week accounts, and dimensional consistency tight enough for AGV-equipped warehouses.
Pallet demand in Arlington, Texas is shaped by the local economy and the regional supply chain - distribution, manufacturing, and food/beverage operations all consume pallets at predictable cadences. United States Pallets aligns our Lumber & Building Material Pallets delivery rhythm to those operations, with same-day rush options when production schedules tighten and standing-order programs for predictable weekly volume.
Heavy-duty pallets for lumber and construction materials.
Yes. We deliver to every commercial address in Texas, with same-day shipping standard in our Southeast/Mid-Atlantic core and scheduled weekly delivery elsewhere. Arlington-area accounts are typical - submit a quote with your dock location and we route accordingly.
Yes. We buy back used pallets from Arlington collectors, recyclers, and warehouses - 250-pallet minimum per load, single-size only (no mixed-size loads). Fast ACH payment, typically same-day or net-7 depending on volume. Pickup arranged on standard outbound delivery routes.
Yes, with ISPM-15 heat-treated pallets carrying IPPC stamps and full ISPM-15 documentation. Required for international shipments to all WTO member countries. Common for Arlington customers with port access via Texas\'s major export gateways.
Local Texas suppliers offer geographic proximity. United States Pallets offers nationwide sourcing depth, multi-grade inventory always in stock, sub-2-business-hour quote response, audit-ready documentation, and standing-order automation that local yards typically don\'t match.
BOL, packing list, grade certifications standard. Heat-treated loads add IPPC stamps and ISPM-15 documentation. Pharma-grade loads add batch records. Food-grade loads add FSMA Sanitary Transportation Rule certifications. All documentation ships electronically before delivery.
Response under 2 business hours.
Kiln-dried hardwood meets NWPCA Uniform Standard for Wood Pallets; moisture content verified <19% at dispatch, blade-cut deck boards, no visible bark.
Texas Department of Agriculture (TDA) pest-quarantine rules require ISPM-15 documentation on pallets shipped from quarantined zones (cotton boll weevil, fire ant); our Texas yards maintain TDA registration for compliant export.
Cross-border maquiladora freight at Laredo, Brownsville, and El Paso requires USMCA-compliant phytosanitary documentation; we provide bilingual treatment certificates accepted by SAT Mexican customs.
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.
Block pallets (four-way entry) use nine 4-inch hardwood blocks with continuous-face top deck; ideal for ASRS (automated storage and retrieval) and AGV (automated guided vehicle) operations where stringer interruptions cause read-failures.
Drop-trailer programs maintain a customer-dedicated 53-foot trailer on-site; we swap full-for-empty on a scheduled 24/48/72-hour rotation; preferred for high-throughput dock operations.
Marine industry suppliers (Fort Lauderdale, Stuart, Miami) use exterior-rated pallets that resist saltwater corrosion; treated lumber stock available; preferred for boat-component freight to Bahamas and Caribbean.
Delivery freight runs $250-450 per truckload (53-foot) within 75 miles of a yard; longer hauls priced at $2.50-3.50 per loaded mile; flatbed loads premium 10-15%.
Sustainability reports provided quarterly to standing-order customers; documents pallets recycled, lumber diverted from landfill, and CO2-equivalent savings vs new-only sourcing.