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How to print a shipping label at home (2026)

Three ways to print a shipping label - carrier website, third-party platform, carrier counter - with the cheapest commercial-rate path explained. Printer setup, tape, and barcode tips included.

8 min read·

Printing a shipping label at home takes maybe 90 seconds end-to-end once you know which path to use. The right path depends on whether you ship occasionally (carrier websites are fine) or regularly (a third-party platform saves 10-30% per label). This guide walks through both, plus the printer and tape setup that keeps the label scannable when it lands.

The short version

Three ways to print: carrier website (retail rates, occasional shippers), third-party platform like shiponline.app (commercial rates, regular shippers), or at the carrier counter (don't - more expensive than either online option). Any standard inkjet or laser printer works; a thermal label printer pays back at ~50 labels/month.

Step 1: Quote the rate before you print

Don't print the label before you've compared carriers - the rate the first carrier shows is rarely the cheapest available. A 5 lb parcel from California to New York can swing $4-8 between USPS, UPS, and FedEx, and the winner changes per shipment.

Get a quote with all four carriers side-by-side via the shipping rate calculator - takes 10 seconds and tells you which carrier + service to pick before you commit.

Step 2: Choose your printing path

Option A: Third-party platform (recommended)

Platforms like shiponline.app aggregate shipping volume across thousands of small businesses to qualify everyone for commercial-tier carrier rates - which are typically 10-30% cheaper than the retail rates the carrier websites show by default. The label prints as a standard PDF.

  1. 1

    Sign up free (no card required)

    shiponline.app, Pirate Ship, and Shippo all let you sign up without a credit card. You'll need a payment method before you can actually buy a label, but evaluating the platform is free.
  2. 2

    Enter the shipment details

    Recipient address, parcel weight and dimensions, plus a return address. Address verification typically happens automatically as you type.
  3. 3

    Pick a rate from the comparison

    All four carriers' services appear sorted cheapest first. Pick the one that matches your delivery deadline + budget.
  4. 4

    Pay and print

    The platform charges the carrier rate + a small flat per-label fee. Label PDF downloads instantly; print it on standard paper or 4×6 thermal label stock.

Option B: Carrier website (occasional shippers)

Each carrier has a self-service label tool. None of them pass commercial rates by default, but they work fine for occasional shipping.

  • USPS: usps.com → Click-N-Ship. Account needed. Pays retail rates.
  • UPS: ups.com → Create a Shipment. Account needed. Retail rates unless you have a negotiated contract.
  • FedEx: fedex.com → FedEx Ship Manager. Account needed. Retail rates by default.
  • DHL: mydhl.com → Ship a Package. Account needed. International-focused.

At 10+ labels/month the retail-vs-commercial gap on the carrier websites costs you more than a third-party platform's flat fee.

Option C: Carrier counter (avoid)

Walking into a USPS / UPS Store / FedEx Office and asking them to print a label charges retail rates plus the staff time. Real-world cost is typically 15-25% higher than printing online. Use this only when you have no printer and need to ship today.

Step 3: Print on the right paper

Standard letter paper (most shippers)

4×6 inch label centered on US Letter (8.5×11) paper is the default for any home or office inkjet/laser printer. The label PDF positions the label on the upper half of the page; cut along the dotted line and tape the label face-up on the largest flat surface of the parcel.

Use clear packing tape over the entire label so the barcode survives rain and rough handling. Don't tape over just the barcode - cover the whole label edge-to-edge.

4×6 thermal label printer (high-volume shippers)

A thermal printer (Rollo, Dymo LabelWriter, Zebra ZD220) prints peel-and-stick 4×6 labels with no ink or toner. Setup is plug-and-play on USB. Cost: $130-$250 for the printer; ~$0.03 per label for the thermal label paper.

Payback: at 50+ labels/month, the time saved (no cutting, no taping) plus ink/toner cost vs an inkjet typically makes a thermal printer pay back within 2-3 months. At 200+ labels/month the printer pays for itself in the first month.

Step 4: Make sure the label scans

Three barcode-killers to avoid:

  • Low-ink prints:faded barcodes don't scan. Replace ink/toner before the cartridge fully runs out.
  • Wrinkled tape over the barcode: creases break the barcode lines. Apply tape smooth and tight, starting from one edge.
  • Folding the label over a corner: if the box is too small for the label to lie flat on one surface, you need a bigger box. Folded labels cause carrier rejects.

Step 5: Drop off or schedule a pickup

  • USPS: blue collection box (small parcels only), USPS post office, or schedule a free carrier-route pickup at usps.com for next business day.
  • UPS: UPS Store, UPS Drop Box, or scheduled pickup ($5+).
  • FedEx: FedEx Office, FedEx Drop Box, or scheduled pickup ($5+).
  • DHL: DHL ServicePoint or scheduled pickup ($5+).

Shippers doing more than a couple parcels a week should set up recurring daily carrier pickups - 5 minutes to set up, saves a 30-minute dropoff trip every day.

What does a shipping label actually cost?

Total cost = carrier rate + platform fee (if any) + paper / thermal label material.

  • USPS Ground Advantage 1 lb, commercial: ~$4.85 + $0.99 platform fee + $0.05 thermal label = ~$5.89
  • USPS Ground Advantage 1 lb, USPS.com retail: ~$5.95 + $0 platform + $0.03 standard paper = ~$5.98
  • USPS Ground Advantage 1 lb, post office counter: ~$6.95 + 5-minute line + drive

The gap looks small at one label and compounds fast at 100. Third-party platforms break even vs USPS.com retail around 5-10 labels/month, then save 15-30% beyond that.

The takeaway

Standard inkjet or laser printer + standard packing tape + a third-party platform like shiponline.app handles 95% of shippers' needs. Upgrade to a thermal printer around 50 labels/month and the time + material savings pay back within a quarter. Skip the carrier counter unless you genuinely have no printer.

Print your next label with shiponline.app.

All four carriers at commercial rates. Free signup, no card required, label in 60 seconds.

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