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Process 6 min read

A Container Load Plan Your Freight Forwarder Will Accept (With a Template)

By Kubova Team

Isometric illustration of a shipping load-plan document with a 3D container loading diagram and a checklist

A load plan is the difference between “trust me, it fits” and a document a loading crew can work from. Most plans that get ignored fail for the same handful of reasons. Here is what belongs on one, a template you can copy, and the mistakes that get a plan quietly set aside at the warehouse.

Short answer: A load plan a forwarder will accept contains seven things — a reference + container type, a cargo list with dimensions/weight/quantity, placed-vs-ordered counts, total weight against the payload limit, volume utilization, a layout view (3D or top-down with a door view), and handling notes. Miss any of them and the crew either can’t verify it or can’t load from it.

A load plan is not a stuffing photo

Plenty of “load plans” are really after-the-fact evidence: a photo of a packed container. That tells you what happened, not what should happen. A real plan is made before loading and answers three questions the crew has: what goes in, in what order, and does it balance within the weight limit. It is also the artifact your customer or forwarder checks against the order.

The seven components

Every load plan a crew can act on has these, and the weak ones are missing two or three:

The template (copy this)

A minimal load plan fits on one page. The header carries the reference and totals; the body is the cargo table; the footer is the layout and notes.

FieldExample
ReferencePO-2026-0481 / Booking BKG-77213
Container1 × 40' High Cube (inner 1203 × 235 × 269 cm)
Total placed1,150 / 1,150 cartons
Total weight18,540 kg (limit 28,620 kg) ✓
Volume used90.4%
Layout3D plan + top-down + door view (attached)
NotesSKU-B this-way-up; no stacking on SKU-C
One-page load-plan header. The cargo table below it lists each SKU: name, L×W×H, unit weight, placed/ordered.
SKUCarton (cm)Unit kgPlaced / ordered
Carton A60 × 40 × 3012500 / 500
Carton B50 × 50 × 509400 / 400
Carton C40 × 30 × 205250 / 250
The cargo table — every SKU reconciled placed-vs-ordered.
Why the door view matters
Crews load from the doors inward, and the final bay is constrained by the door opening, not the full inner width. A plan that shows the door view tells them how the last column goes in — the single most common place a paper plan and a real container disagree.

Five mistakes that get a plan rejected

Generate one in seconds, not by hand

Drawing a load plan by hand is slow and easy to get wrong. Enter your cargo and container into a tool that outputs a real 3D plan plus a PDF, and you get every component above — reconciled counts, honest fill, a layout with a door view — in a document you can send straight to your forwarder. Because the plan reflects a physically valid load, the paper and the container agree.

Make a load plan your forwarder will accept

Calculate, then export a PDF with the 3D layout and door view. Free to start.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

What is a container load plan?

A container load plan is the document that tells the loading crew and your freight forwarder exactly what goes into a container and how. A good one shows the cargo list with per-SKU counts, the total weight and volume use, a 3D or top-down layout of where items sit, and a clear reference — not just a photo of a stuffed container after the fact.

What should a load plan include?

Seven things: a reference and container type; the cargo list with dimensions, weight and quantity per SKU; placed vs ordered counts; total weight against the payload limit; volume utilization; a layout view (3D or top-down with a door view); and any handling notes (this-way-up, no-stack, fragile). If any of those is missing, the plan is hard to act on or verify.

Why do forwarders reject or ignore load plans?

The common reasons are: no weights (so the payload can’t be checked), counts that don’t reconcile with the order, an unreadable or photo-only layout, no door view (so the crew can’t see how the last bay loads), and numbers that assume an overfilled container. A plan that addresses those is one a crew can load from directly.

How do I create a load plan quickly?

Enter your cargo and container into a calculator that outputs a real 3D plan and a PDF, rather than drawing it by hand. The plan should reflect a physically valid load — correct inner dimensions, weight limit respected, no overflow — so the document you hand over matches what will actually fit.

Who: Written and reviewed by the Kubova team, who build and operate the packing engine described here.

How: Drafted with AI assistance for research and structure; the technical claims, examples and product details are owned and verified by the team.

Why: To help logistics and engineering teams decide whether to let an AI agent plan their loads — not to chase a keyword. Published 2026-06-08.