Packing Tips 2026-02-05 10 min read

How to Pack Fragile Items: A Complete Guide

How to Pack Fragile Items: A Complete Guide
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Written by Sheriff

Owner, Perth Priority Removals · 14 years local moving experience

Professional packing techniques for glasses, plates, TVs, mirrors, artwork, and electronics. Common mistakes that cause breakage and how to avoid them.

Packing fragile items is where most DIY moves go wrong. After unpacking thousands of boxes across Perth, we know exactly what breaks and why - and it's usually preventable.

Want us to handle the breakables? Get a quote for our packing service - we bring all materials and pack to professional standards.


Golden Rules of Packing Fragiles

These five rules prevent 90% of breakage:

  1. Heavy items in small boxes, light items in larger boxes - If you can't lift it comfortably, it will get dropped
  2. Wrap items individually, then fill all voids - Nothing should move when you shake the box
  3. Reinforce box bottoms with H-pattern tape - The bottom seam is the failure point
  4. Label FRAGILE + THIS SIDE UP + room destination - On multiple sides
  5. Do the shake test - Gently shake the sealed box. Any rattling = more padding needed

Materials Checklist

Before you start, gather:

  • Dish pack boxes (double-walled, stronger than standard)
  • Packing paper (not newspaper - ink transfers to items)
  • Bubble wrap (for electronics and artwork)
  • Packing tape (quality tape, not masking tape)
  • Permanent marker (for labelling)
  • Cell dividers (for glasses - optional but recommended)
  • Foam sheets (for TV screens and mirrors)
We supply all packing materials - delivered with your move or separately.

Room-by-Room: Kitchen

Glasses and Stemware

Glasses are the most commonly broken item. Here's how professionals pack them:

  1. Stuff the inside - Ball up paper and fill the glass cavity
  2. Wrap from the stem - If it has a stem, wrap that first with extra paper
  3. Two layers minimum - Wrap, fold ends, wrap again
  4. Store upside down - Glasses are stronger on their rims
  5. No glass touches another - Paper or dividers between each

Pro tip: Wine glasses are weakest at the stem. Wrap stems with 3-4 layers.

Plates and Bowls

Plates break when stacked flat and dropped. The safer way:

  1. Wrap each plate individually - Even identical plates
  2. Stack vertically, like records - Not flat
  3. Paper between each - Even after individual wrapping
  4. 5cm crushed paper padding - Top and bottom of box
  5. Shake test - Nothing should move

Mugs and Ceramics

  • Stuff handles and interiors with paper
  • Wrap completely, two layers
  • Pack in smaller boxes (heavy when full)

Electronics: TVs, Computers, Consoles

TVs and Monitors

Best practice: Transport upright. If you must lay a TV flat briefly (some models allow this for short distances), minimise time, protect the screen face, and never stack anything on top.

If you have the original box: Use it. The custom foam inserts are designed for that specific TV.

If you don't have the original box:

  • Get a TV-specific box (we stock these)
  • Cover the screen with foam sheet or thick blanket
  • Cardboard corner protectors on all four corners
  • Secure so it can't tip or slide

Computers and Laptops

  • Back up all data before packing
  • Remove HDDs from desktop PCs if possible (or pack tower laying down)
  • Anti-static bags for loose components
  • Photo your cable setup before disconnecting
  • Original boxes are best if available

Lithium Batteries (Important for Perth Heat)

Power banks, e-scooters, cordless tools, laptops - these all have lithium batteries.

  • Keep lithium battery items with you in your air-conditioned car
  • Don't pack in the truck — heat can cause swelling or worse
  • Never pack damaged or swollen batteries — dispose of them properly before moving
  • Declare valuable electronics to your removalist

Moisture Protection

If moving early morning or on a humid day:

  • Wrap electronics in plastic as an outer layer
  • Don't wrap plastic directly against screens (condensation)
  • Allow electronics to acclimatise before powering on at the new place

Mirrors and Artwork

Mirrors

  1. Tape an X across the glass - Prevents shattering and holds shards if cracked
  2. Wrap in bubble wrap - Two layers
  3. Use a picture/mirror box - Telescopic boxes adjust to size
  4. Mark "GLASS" and "THIS SIDE UP" - Multiple sides
  5. Transport upright - On edge, not flat

Artwork

  1. Glassine paper first - Protects painted surfaces from sticking
  2. Cardboard corners - On all four corners
  3. Bubble wrap - Bubble side OUT (bubbles can leave marks on surfaces)
  4. Custom crating for valuable pieces - Worth the investment for originals

China, Antiques, and Collectibles

Fine China

  • Each piece wrapped individually in acid-free paper
  • Cell dividers essential for cups and bowls
  • Smaller boxes only - don't overload
  • Consider insurance valuation before moving

Collectibles

  • Original packaging if available
  • Custom foam inserts for odd shapes
  • Photo documentation for insurance purposes
  • Consider professional packing for irreplaceable items

Common Mistakes That Cause Breakage

We see these on almost every DIY move:

MistakeWhy It Causes BreakageFix
Overloading boxesToo heavy to lift safely, gets droppedWeight limit: you should lift it comfortably
Not filling voidsItems shift and collide in transitShake test - if it rattles, add more padding
Single-layer wrappingOne layer isn't enough cushioningMinimum two layers for fragiles
Flat-stacking platesDrop = all plates break at onceStack vertically like records
Reusing old boxesCardboard weakens with each useNew boxes for fragiles
Using newspaperInk transfers to itemsUse clean packing paper
Not labelling"Fragile" box gets a heavy box stacked on topLabel all sides

Perth-Specific: Heat and Humidity

Perth moves - especially November to March - mean heat, longer drives, and variable humidity.

Heat damage risks:

  • Candles and cosmetics — Will melt in a hot truck
  • Vinyl records — Warp above 30°C
  • Medications — Some need cold chain (carry with you)
  • Adhesives — Heat can soften tape and labels

What to do:

  • Book an early morning start (before 2pm in summer)
  • Pack heat-sensitive items last, unload first
  • Transport irreplaceable items in your air-conditioned car
  • Don't leave packed boxes in direct sun or closed vehicles

Insurance: What You Need to Know

"Carry insurance documentation" isn't enough. Here's what actually matters:

  • Check what's covered under transit insurance vs contents insurance
  • Declared value items — High-value items may need separate declaration
  • Photo everything before packing - timestamp photos are evidence
  • Items packed by owner — Many policies have exclusions for owner-packed goods
  • Damaged vs broken — Know the difference for claims

Our insurance: We carry comprehensive transit and public liability insurance. Ask us for a Certificate of Currency if you need it for your own records.


When to Hire Professional Packers

Consider our packing service if:

  • You have valuable artwork, antiques, or collectibles
  • Time is short and you can't pack properly
  • You're not confident packing fragile items
  • You want insurance coverage that applies to professionally-packed goods
  • You have a lot of glass, china, or electronics

We bring all materials and pack to professional standards. Most 2-3 bedroom homes can be packed in a day.


Quick Reference: Do / Don't

DoDon't
Wrap each item individuallyAssume "it'll be fine"
Use proper packing paperUse newspaper (ink transfers)
Fill all voids in boxesLeave empty space
Label FRAGILE on multiple sidesAssume movers will guess
Reinforce box bottomsTrust old tape
Keep lithium batteries with youPack them in the truck
Take photos before packingRely on memory for claims

Frequently Asked Questions

Do removalists provide packing materials?

We supply boxes, paper, bubble wrap, tape, and specialty items like TV boxes and wardrobe cartons. Contact us for materials pricing or add them to your move quote.

Should I pack fragile items myself or hire professionals?

For everyday items, DIY is fine with proper technique. For valuable, antique, or sentimental items, professional packing is worth the cost - and it's usually covered by better insurance.

How do I pack a mirror without a mirror box?

Tape an X across the glass (holds shards if cracked), wrap in blankets or bubble wrap, sandwich between two pieces of cardboard taped together, and transport upright.

What's the best box for dishes?

Dish pack boxes (double-walled) with cell dividers. Don't use regular boxes - they're not strong enough and dishes are heavy.

Can I leave clothes in drawers during a move?

Lightweight clothes in solid drawers are usually fine. Empty dressers and desks - drawers fall out and add weight that can damage the furniture.

How do I protect electronics from Perth heat?

Transport electronics in your air-conditioned car, not the truck. Pack them last, unload first. Allow time to acclimatise before powering on.


Want Us to Pack the Breakables?

We supply all materials and professionally pack glassware, TVs, artwork, antiques, and anything fragile - so it arrives safely and you're covered by our insurance.

See our packing services | Full moving checklist | Read our 105 reviews

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