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NMFC 77150 – Dried Produce Items | Class 50–400

Article ID
77150
Dehydrated produce, density-based NMFC listing
Freight Group
UNGROUPED ARTICLES
Ungrouped item outside standard food buckets
Class Range
50-400 13 classifications
Class set by density: 50 to 400
Hazardous
No
Non-hazardous food/feed ingredients

Classification Details

NMFC Description Class
77150.00 Show more
77150.01 Less than 1 400
77150.02 1 but less than 2 300
77150.03 2 but less than 4 250
77150.04 4 but less than 6 175
77150.05 6 but less than 8 125
77150.06 8 but less than 10 100
77150.07 10 but less than 12 92.5
77150.08 12 but less than 15 85
77150.09 15 but less than 22.5 70
77150.10 22.5 but less than 30 65
77150.11 30 but less than 35 60
77150.12 35 but less than 50 55
77150.13 50 or greater 50

Notes

Note 77151: NOTE-Does not apply on fruits or vegetables that have been prepared by a freeze-dehydration or freeze-drying method. For applicable provisions, see item 76850.

How to Determine Your Class

To find the correct freight class for your shipment:

  1. Calculate density to set the class: weigh the pallet, measure the full palletized cube (L×W×H in feet), then lbs ÷ cubic feet = PCF to determine Class 50–400.
  2. Choose permitted packaging for each product form: sift‑proof multiwall bags or lined boxes for flours and powders, drums for high-bulk items; Packages 510/1264/2165 are acceptable where specified.
  3. Control moisture and odor: barrier liners and tight closures for onion/garlic; apply “Keep Dry” and avoid co-loading with odor-sensitive foods like cocoa or tea.
  4. Confirm the right item note before booking: pea flour may fall under Item 77152, while other bean flours remain here; list contents clearly on the BOL to prevent reclass.

Note: All classifications are subject to Item 170. Verify with official NMFC publications for the most current requirements.

Business Value

  • Optimize freight spend with density-based classes: tighter cube or denser pack-out can move shipments toward lower classes and better LTL rates.
  • Reduce surprise reclass fees by matching packaging (bags, boxes, drums, or permitted packages) and labeling to NMFC wording.
  • Lower claim risk on powders and fibers by using sift-proof packaging and liners, minimizing leakage, odor transfer, and moisture damage.
  • Non-hazardous designation streamlines carrier acceptance and consolidations, improving scheduling and cut-off reliability for food processors and ingredient traders.