[ihress_breadcrumbs]

When to automate palletizing in your plant (and when not to)

Share

Palletizing automation is one of the first decisions many industrial companies consider when looking to improve efficiency.

However, there is one question that is rarely answered clearly:

Does it always make sense to automate palletizing?

The answer is no.

Automation can bring great benefits, but only when the right conditions are in place. Otherwise, it can become an inefficient investment.

In this article, we analyze when palletizing automation makes sense, in which cases it adds the most value, and when it is better to wait or approach it differently.

Clear signs that you should automate palletizing

There are clear indicators that manual palletizing is limiting plant performance.

High volume of repetitive work

When the end-of-line requires:

  • Constant movements
  • Constant movements
  • Sustained pace for hours

It is a direct candidate for automation.

Difficulty in staffing the position

In many plants, palletizing is one of the hardest positions to fill due to:

  • Physical effort
  • Repetitive conditions
  • Low voluntary turnover

Automation helps stabilize these positions.

Injuries or fatigue in the team

When there are:

  • Muscle pain
  • Sick leave
  • Accumulated fatigue

It is not just an operational issue, but a sustainability problem.

End-of-line bottlenecks

If production slows down at the palletizing stage:

  • The line loses efficiency
  • Accumulations occur
  • Downtime increases

Here, automation has a direct impact on productivity.

Need for greater stability

Manual processes often have variability:

  • Different speeds depending on the operator
  • Stacking errors
  • Stacking errors

An automated system provides consistency.

Cases where automation adds the most value

Not all plants achieve the same return. There are contexts where automation fits especially well.

Stable production

When there are:

  • Stable volume
  • Low variability in throughput

The system can operate continuously and efficiently.

Repetitive and structured processes

Palletizing is ideal when:

  • Formats are known
  • Patterns are defined
  • Variability is controlled

Growing companies

If the plant:

  • Is increasing production
  • Plans new shifts
  • Wants to scale operations

Automation enables growth without relying on more labor.

Sectors with high logistical demands

Such as:

Where end-of-line stability is critical.

When it does NOT make sense to automate (and this is key)

This is the point that makes the difference.

Very low production volumes

If volume is low:

  • Return on investment may take too long
  • Automation may not be necessary

Extremely high variability

When there are:

  • Constant format changes
  • Very different products
  • Poorly defined processes

It may be more efficient to optimize before automating.

Very limited space

Some environments:

  • Do not allow easy integration of machinery
  • Make it difficult to design an efficient layout

Unoptimized processes

Automating an inefficient process only transfers the problem.

First, it is necessary to:

  • Organize the flow
  • Eliminate inefficiencies
  • Define processes

Progressive automation: a smart alternative

It is not always about fully automating or not automating at all.

It is not always about fully automating or not automating at all.

This involves:

  • There is an increasingly common approach: progressive automation.
  • Incorporating flexible solutions (such as cobots)
  • Adapting gradually

 

Advantages:

  • Lower initial investment
  • Lower initial investment
  • Scalability

How to make the right decision

Before automating palletizing, it is recommended to analyze:

  • Real production
  • Line throughput
  • Format variability
  • Available space
  • Project objectives

It is not about following a trend, but about making a data-driven decision.

Comparison table: automate vs not automate

FactorManual palletizingManual palletizing
Physical effortHighLow
Process stabilityVariableHigh
Labor dependencyHighReduced
ScalabilityLimitedHigh
Initial investmentLowMedium/High
Long-term efficiencyMediumHigh

Conclusion

Automating palletizing can be one of the most profitable decisions in an end-of-line… or an inefficient investment if not done at the right time.

The key is understanding:

  • How the plant really operates
  • What problems need to be solved
  • What future evolution is expected

At IHRESS, every project starts with this prior analysis, because automation is not about installing machines, but about improving overall plant performance.

Automating when it makes sense is what makes the difference.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

When there are repetitive tasks, bottlenecks, staffing issues, or a need to improve process stability.

No. It depends on production volume, process variability, and company objectives.

Progressive automation allows starting with partial solutions and scaling over time.

Food, beverages, logistics, and any industry with stable production.

It can lead to an inefficient investment if the process is not ready or the volume does not justify it.

Discover our end-of-line solutions

Contact us and we will help you carry out the analysis with no obligation.

Request a free consultation

Estás a un solo paso

Indicanos un correo electrónico para que podamos asesorarte mejor y poder descargar nuestro catálogo de productos

¡Hola!

¿Preparado para empezar una nueva etapa en el sector del embalaje de la mano de Ihress?

Información de contacto
¿En qué máquinas estarías interesado?

Hola FUTURO COLABORADOR

¿Preparado para empezar una nueva etapa en el sector del embalaje de la mano de Ihress?

Información de contacto
¿En qué máquinas estarías interesado?