Direct cold-chain kiln-dried pallets for tenants of Dundalk Marine Terminal (Baltimore, MD).
Get a Price →Pallet demand in Baltimore, MD 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 Cold-Chain Kiln-Dried Pallets delivery rhythm to those operations, with same-day rush options when production schedules tighten and standing-order programs for predictable weekly volume.
When Baltimore, MD operations need Cold-Chain Kiln-Dried Pallets at scale, the supplier shortlist comes down to three things: inventory depth, delivery reliability, and documentation. United States Pallets engineers our Cold-Chain Kiln-Dried Pallets program to win on all three - new GMA stock plus recycled Grade A and B always available, scheduled weekly delivery, and BOL/IPPC/grade certifications electronic before each load arrives.
top US auto and RoRo port. Kiln-dried wood pallets below 19% moisture content engineered to prevent dimensional shift in sub-zero environments for frozen food, ice cream, and pharmaceutical cold chain.
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.
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 Baltimore customers with port access via MD\'s major export gateways.
Yes. Standing-order programs for Baltimore operations running 500+ pallets/week lock in tiered pricing, reserve delivery slots, and run on autopilot in the background. Custom contract terms available for accounts running 2,000+/week.
Local MD 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.
Yes. We buy back used pallets from Baltimore 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.
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.
FAA Part 121 air-cargo operations at MIA, MCO, and TPA require flame-retardant treated pallets for in-cabin loads; we maintain Class A flame-rated stock for forwarder accounts.
Florida DOACS regulations require ISPM-15 documentation on every export load originating from PortMiami, Port Everglades, JAXPORT, and Port Tampa Bay; we maintain on-call certification staff at all four ports.
ISPM-15 export pallets receive heat treatment to 56C core temperature for 30 minutes; stamping shows IPPC logo, country code 'US', registered facility number, and treatment code 'HT'.
Deck board edge type defaults to chamfered for forklift safety; square-edge available on request for ASRS compatibility; rounded-edge banding tracks available for high-throughput line-side delivery.
Standing-order programs schedule a recurring weekly truckload (or partial) for the same delivery window; price-locked for 12 months; preferred for 3PL warehouse refill cycles.
Cold storage facilities (Plant City corridor) use HDPE plastic pallets that wash down at 180F; suitable for USDA Grade A dairy plants and frozen-protein operations; we lease as well as sell.
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.