Sachet Pack
Small flat sachets for single-serve powders and samples.
A sachet is the format for a single dose or a sample: flat, cheap, and easy to tear. The barrier film keeps a powder or liquid fresh until it's opened.
We print them full-color and add a tear notch.
- Single-serve flat pouches
- Barrier film with tear-notch
- For powders, samples, condiments
- Full-color print
“Low minimums were the whole reason we tried them. 250 pouches to test a flavor, then 5,000 when it took off — same bag, same print, no drama.”
“The magnetic boxes are the nicest thing about our subscription, and I say that as the person who makes the product. Zero damage across 3,000 shipments.”
One dose, sealed until it matters
The sachet is packaging reduced to its minimum: two layers of film, four seals, one serving. It costs cents, weighs grams, and mails flat in an envelope, which is why it is the format for samples, single doses and travel sizes across food, supplements, cosmetics and cleaning products. Nothing else puts a product into a stranger's hand as cheaply.
Film follows the fill
Powders (drink mixes, supplements, spices) run on a standard barrier laminate that keeps moisture out and flavor in. Liquids and creams (sauces, serums, gels) need a heavier seal-strength spec so a purse or a mail sack cannot burst the pack. Oily contents want a foil-core laminate that oils cannot migrate through. Tell us the fill and we spec the film; a sample sachet with your actual product settles any doubt before a run.
The tear notch matters more than it seems: a sachet that needs scissors fails its one job. We die-cut the notch and test the tear direction across the seal so it opens clean every time.
Sampling economics
Sampling programs live and die on cost per handout, and sachets run by the thousand for what boxes of minis would cost by the dozen. Stapled to a card, dropped in every parcel, or handed out at events, the sachet does trial-generation work no ad can. Full-color print turns each one into a miniature billboard; a QR to buy the full size closes the loop. Larger single-serve formats step up into flat pouches, and coffee has its own single-serve format in drip coffee bags.
What sizes and minimums?
From 50 x 70 mm up to palm-size, filled volumes from 1 to 50 ml. Printed runs start around 1,000 units; the format only makes sense at volume, and pricing reflects that.





