How Does a Cartoning Machine Work?
A step-by-step walk through the cartoning cycle — from a flat blank to a sealed, coded, leaflet-loaded carton — explained by the engineers who build them.
A cartoning machine works in six automated stations: it erects a flat carton blank into an open box, feeds the product, folds and inserts a leaflet, loads product and leaflet into the carton, codes and closes it by tuck-in tongue or hot-melt glue, then rejects any incomplete pack and conveys the finished carton out — running at roughly 30 to 400+ cartons per minute.
That’s the whole cycle in one sentence. Below, each station explained — the same sequence whether the machine is a vertical top-loader or a horizontal end-loader.
The Cartoning Cycle, Step by Step
Carton erecting
Flat carton blanks sit in a magazine. A vacuum suction cup pulls one blank, and mechanical guides square it open into a three-dimensional carton, held ready for loading. This is where the line speed is set — the faster blanks can be erected without crushing, the faster the cycle.
Product feeding
The product is brought to the loading point in time with the carton. The feeding method depends on the product: a conveyor and grouping system for flat items like blister cards, an automatic bottle feeder that singulates and orients round bottles, or a weight/count feeder that meters an exact number of pieces such as capsules or sachets.
Leaflet folding & staging
If the pack needs an instruction leaflet, a folding device creases the insert one to four times down to a size that fits the carton, then stages it next to the product so the two load together. This station is what makes a cartoner essential for pharmaceutical packaging, where the leaflet is mandatory.
Loading
Product and leaflet are placed into the carton. A horizontal machine uses a pusher to slide them in sideways through the open end; a vertical machine drops them in from above into an upright carton. Sensors verify at this point that both the product and the leaflet are actually present.
Coding & closing
The batch number and expiry are embossed or printed on the carton, then both ends are closed — either by tucking a mechanical tongue flap into a slit, or by applying hot-melt glue for a sealed, tamper-evident flap. The closing method is chosen for the product and market.
Rejection & output
Any carton that failed a check — missing product, missing leaflet, bad close — is automatically pushed off the line before it reaches your finished goods. Good cartons are counted and conveyed out, ready for the checkweigher, case packer or downstream line.
“People think the clever part of a cartoner is the loading. It isn’t — it’s the rejection. Any machine can push a product into a box. A good machine knows when the box is wrong and stops it from leaving. The detect-and-reject station is where a $30,000 cartoner earns its keep, because one empty box shipped to a pharmacy is a recall, not a saving.”
The Parts That Do the Work
Behind those six stations are a handful of sub-systems worth knowing when you compare machines:
Two Things That Change the Machine
Loading direction: vertical vs horizontal
A vertical cartoner top-loads product into an upright carton and suits bottles, vials and counted items; a horizontal cartoner end-loads flat product sideways and suits blisters, tubes and sachets. The full breakdown is in our vertical vs horizontal guide.
Motion system: intermittent vs continuous
An intermittent cartoner indexes and pauses at each station, running 40–120 cartons/min; a continuous-motion machine keeps carton and product moving together for 200–400+ cartons/min. Continuous motion is what makes a high-speed cartoning machine high-speed.
“If you’re specifying a cartoner, watch the feeder, not the headline speed. The cartoning cycle itself is mature — every builder does the six stations. Where machines actually differ is how they feed your specific product into station four. Get the feeder wrong and the most expensive cartoner in the world will jam.”
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a cartoning machine?
A cartoning machine is automated secondary-packaging equipment that erects flat carton blanks into boxes, loads products such as blisters, bottles, tubes or sachets, inserts a leaflet, then codes, closes and seals the carton. It replaces manual boxing on pharmaceutical, food and cosmetic lines.
How does a cartoning machine work, in short?
It works in six automated stations: erect the carton, feed the product, fold and stage the leaflet, load product and leaflet into the carton, code and close it by tuck-in tongue or hot-melt glue, then reject any incomplete pack and output the finished carton.
What is the difference between a cartoning machine and a case packer?
A cartoning machine does secondary packaging — it puts an individual product into its retail carton. A case packer does tertiary packaging — it collates many finished cartons into a shipping case. They are different stages of the same line, and a cartoner usually feeds a case packer.
What is the difference between tuck-in and hot-melt closing?
Tuck-in closing folds a tongue flap into a slit to hold the carton shut mechanically — simple and re-openable. Hot-melt closing applies glue to seal the flap permanently, giving a tamper-evident pack. Many cartoners, including HIJ’s, offer both as a selectable option.
How fast does a cartoning machine run?
It depends on the motion system. Intermittent cartoners run roughly 40 to 120 cartons per minute; continuous-motion high-speed machines run 200 to 400 or more. HIJ’s WZTS-130 runs 30 to 80 cartons per minute, with custom continuous lines built for higher output.
See the Cartoning Cycle on the Right Machine
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