Pallet Rack & Storage Products
Every racking system solves a different problem. Selective rack gives you access to every pallet. Drive-in maximizes density. Cantilever handles long stock. Here's what's out there and when each one makes sense.
Selective Pallet Rack
Selective pallet rack is the workhorse of warehousing. Every pallet sits on its own pair of beams, so you can reach any load without moving another. If your operation handles mixed SKUs and needs fast access, this is where you start.
View suppliers →Drive-In Rack
Drive-in rack trades selectivity for density. Forklifts drive directly into the rack structure to place and retrieve pallets, stacking them 5-10 deep in a single lane. If you store large quantities of the same SKU and don't need to access every pallet individually, drive-in makes your square footage work harder.
View suppliers →Cantilever Rack
Cantilever rack has no front columns. Arms extend from a single row of uprights, so you can store long, bulky, or irregularly shaped items without fighting a frame. Lumber, pipe, steel bar, furniture, boats — anything that doesn't sit nicely on a 48x40 pallet belongs on cantilever.
View suppliers →Mezzanine
A mezzanine is a freestanding elevated platform inside your building — essentially an extra floor without the construction project. When you've run out of floor space but have vertical room to spare, a mezzanine doubles or triples your usable area for a fraction of what new construction costs.
View suppliers →Shelving
Industrial shelving is the hand-loaded counterpart to pallet rack. Smaller items, lighter loads, and human-height access — no forklift needed. From open steel shelving in a parts room to high-density mobile shelving in a medical stockroom, it's the system you use when individual items matter more than full pallets.
View suppliers →AS/RS (Automated Storage & Retrieval Systems)
AS/RS replaces forklifts and manual picking with automated cranes, shuttles, or mini-load systems that store and retrieve loads on command. It's a capital-intensive leap, but for operations running 24/7 with high throughput demands, it eliminates labor constraints, maximizes cube utilization, and delivers consistent speed that manual systems can't match.
View suppliers →Pallet Flow Rack
Pallet flow rack uses gravity roller conveyors set on a slight decline inside a rack structure. Load from the back, pick from the front — pallets roll forward automatically as you pull from the lane. It gives you the density of drive-in with the FIFO rotation that perishable goods and lot-controlled inventory demand.
View suppliers →Carton Flow Rack
Carton flow is pallet flow's smaller sibling — gravity-fed roller or wheel tracks built into rack shelves so cases and cartons roll forward as you pick from the front. It turns a static pick face into a self-replenishing one, cutting walk time and keeping the most-picked items within arm's reach.
View suppliers →Push Back Rack
Push back rack gives you 2-6 pallets deep in a LIFO configuration, all loaded and retrieved from the same aisle face. Each pallet sits on a nested cart; when you push a new pallet in, it nudges the ones behind it back on inclined rails. Pull a pallet out, and the next one rolls forward. No driving into the rack structure required.
View suppliers →Wire Decking
Wire decking is the mesh panel that sits on pallet rack beams, giving pallets a stable surface and — more importantly — letting fire sprinkler water pass through to the levels below. It's not glamorous, but it's required by fire code in most jurisdictions, and it prevents the kind of pallet fall-through incidents that send people to the hospital.
View suppliers →Rack Protection
Rack protection is everything between your forklifts and your rack columns — guard rails, column protectors, end-of-aisle barriers, bollards, and bumpers. It's the cheapest insurance policy in a warehouse. A $50 column protector can prevent a $5,000 rack repair and an even more expensive inventory loss or injury.
View suppliers →Rack Repair
Rack repair kits bolt onto damaged uprights to restore their load capacity without replacing the entire column. When a forklift clips a rack upright — and it will — you have two choices: replace the full column (which means unloading the bay) or repair it in place. For most damage, repair is faster, cheaper, and just as strong.
View suppliers →Warehouse Safety
Warehouse safety products cover everything that keeps people and product from getting hurt — floor markings, safety netting, rack labels, capacity signage, anti-collapse mesh, pedestrian barriers, and inspection programs. None of it is exciting. All of it matters. The warehouse industry averages about 16 fatalities per year from rack collapses alone.
View suppliers →Not sure which product you need?
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