Classification Details
| NMFC | Description | Class |
|---|---|---|
| 108165.00 | Kits, jelly making, with or without empty glass jelly bottles, jars or glasses not exceeding 16 ounces in capacity, see Note, item 108166, in boxes | 70 |
Notes
Note 108166: NOTE-Applies only on kits for the home processing and canning of fruit jams, jellies or preserves.
How to Determine Your Class
To find the correct freight class for your shipment:
- Pack glass jars or bottles (max 16 oz each) with cell dividers or molded pulp, then cushion remaining kit parts (funnels, ladles, pectin) to prevent movement inside the box.
- Use sturdy corrugated boxes and fill voids fully; seal with reinforced tape and mark Fragile and This Side Up to match glass components in the kit.
- Palletize cartons tightly with no overhang; add corner boards and two straps plus stretch wrap to deter top-load crush during LTL handling.
- Put NMFC 108165 and Class 70 on the BOL. If any jars exceed 16 oz, verify if a different NMFC applies before tendering.
Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.
Business Value
- Predictable mid-tier costs: Class 70 keeps jelly kit shipments competitively rated versus higher-class fragile goods.
- Lower reclass risk: specific NMFC for boxed kits with or without empty glass jars reduces disputes and billing surprises.
- Seasonal readiness: retailers and e‑commerce can plan canning-season promos with consistent packaging and reliable LTL quotes.
- Fewer accessorials: non-hazardous household kits streamline carrier acceptance and limit special handling fees when packed correctly.