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.
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
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
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
Enter the shipment details
Recipient address, parcel weight and dimensions, plus a return address. Address verification typically happens automatically as you type. - 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
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
Print your next label with shiponline.app.
All four carriers at commercial rates. Free signup, no card required, label in 60 seconds.
Start shipping smarter