For most sellers, AriZona Supply’s 6x9-inch 25-pack is the cleanest default. BALTIC BUBBLE’s 10x13-inch 50-pack fits steadier shipping volume, and Jiffy 081’s 8x12-inch 25-pack sits in the middle for compact items that need a little more length. The larger PandaDoc and Uline options fill the bulky end of the lane.
Quick comparison
| Product | Size | Pack Count | Best Fit | Main Trade-Off |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AriZona Supply Bubble Mailers (6x9 in, 25-Pack) | 6x9 in | 25 | Small electronics, slim accessories, everyday shipments | Too tight for thicker cases or bundled parts |
| BALTIC BUBBLE Bubble Mailers Envelopes (10x13 in, 50-Pack) | 10x13 in | 50 | High-volume shipping and fuller accessory orders | Extra space can let small items move |
| Jiffy 081 8x12 Bubble Mailers (25-Pack) | 8x12 in | 25 | Compact items that need a little more length | Not large enough for bulky bundles |
| PandaDoc Bubble Mailers (12x18 in, 25-Pack) | 12x18 in | 25 | Thicker cases and larger accessory bundles | More empty space around small parts |
| Uline Bubble Mailers (14x18 in, 25-Pack) | 14x18 in | 25 | Bulkier shipments that need extra cushioning room | Overkill for most compact electronics |
Who should use bubble mailers for electronics
This category fits sellers shipping flat, low-profile items that do not need a box to stay under control. It works well for cable-heavy orders, small accessories, hobby parts, and refurbished items that still fit neatly inside soft packaging.
It is not the right outer package for bare circuit boards, exposed contacts, glass, screens, lenses, or heavy power supplies. Those items need more than bubble padding. Bare components also need anti-static protection before they go into anything else.
Bubble mailers protect the finish and help with light knocks. They do not add the rigid structure that fragile electronics sometimes need.
How to choose the right size
Start with the finished shape of the item, not the box or bag it arrived in.
- 6x9 in: Best for slim accessories and flat orders.
- 8x12 in: A better fit when the item is compact but needs a little more length.
- 10x13 in: Useful for fuller accessory orders or small bundles.
- 12x18 in and 14x18 in: Better for thicker cases and bulkier shipments that still belong in a mailer.
- If the flap has to be forced shut, move up a size or use a box.
That is the simple rule here: the smallest mailer that closes cleanly is usually the one that packs the fastest and stays the neatest.
1. AriZona Supply Bubble Mailers (6x9 in, 25-Pack) — Best overall
AriZona Supply Bubble Mailers (6x9 in, 25-Pack) leads the list because the 6x9 size keeps small electronics compact without turning the package loose. That matters most when you are shipping slim, flat items that do not need much breathing room.
This is a good fit for small adapters, dongles, memory cards, short cables, and slim replacement parts. The 25-pack also makes sense for smaller packing stations or mixed catalogs that do not burn through one mailer size every day.
The trade-off is capacity. Once an order needs a thicker case, a cable bundle, or more wrap around the item, this size starts to feel cramped.
Choose this if most of your shipments are small and flat. Skip it when your orders regularly need more depth.
2. BALTIC BUBBLE Bubble Mailers Envelopes (10x13 in, 50-Pack) — Best value
BALTIC BUBBLE Bubble Mailers Envelopes (10x13 in, 50-Pack) is the value pick because the 50-pack suits steady shipping volume, and the 10x13 size gives you more room for fuller accessory orders.
That combination works best when the same kind of mailer moves out of your shop every day. It is easier to keep a high-volume bench stocked when one size and one pack count cover a large share of orders.
The trade-off is slack. Small items can move around more easily in a larger envelope, and that extra room can make packaging feel less tidy.
Choose this if you ship often and want a larger supply on hand. Skip it if most orders are single, slim items that do not need the extra space.
3. Jiffy 081 8x12 Bubble Mailers (25-Pack) — Best for compact shipments where sizing matters
Jiffy 081 8x12 Bubble Mailers (25-Pack) sits in the middle of the pack and works well for compact shipments that need a little more length than the smallest mailer provides.
That makes it a clean fit for small electronics that are still easy to flatten out, but not quite as tidy as the smallest accessories. If an item has a short cable tail or a small connector that needs room to lie naturally, this size gives you a bit more breathing space without jumping all the way to a much larger envelope.
The trade-off is simple: it is useful only while the item stays compact. Once the contents start to bulge, the size loses the snug fit that makes it useful.
Choose this if you want a compact mailer with a little more forgiveness than 6x9. Skip it for bulky bundles or thicker cases.
4. PandaDoc Bubble Mailers (12x18 in, 25-Pack) — Best for larger accessory bundles
PandaDoc Bubble Mailers (12x18 in, 25-Pack) is the roomier option for thicker cases and larger accessory bundles. The 12x18 size gives you enough space to pack carefully instead of cramming the flap over the contents.
That matters when the order is still mailer-friendly but no longer small. A larger envelope gives the item room to sit more naturally, which helps when you are shipping a case or multiple pieces together.
The trade-off is extra empty space when the shipment is actually small. Bigger mailers take more attention to pack neatly, and they are easier to overuse on items that would fit better in a smaller size.
Choose this if your electronics orders often include a case or a multi-part bundle. Skip it for slim accessories, where the added surface area is more than you need.
5. Uline Bubble Mailers (14x18 in, 25-Pack) — Best for bulkier shipments
Uline Bubble Mailers (14x18 in, 25-Pack) is the largest pick here and fits best when the shipment is already on the bulky side. It is the right lane for electronics protection that needs more envelope around the contents.
This size makes sense when smaller mailers would feel forced or when you need more room around a larger item. The 25-pack keeps it manageable for sellers who only need that size for certain orders.
The trade-off is obvious: this is too much mailer for most compact electronics, and the larger footprint takes more storage space and more packing discipline.
Choose this if your shipments are bulky enough that smaller sizes stop working cleanly. Skip it for small accessories, where a smaller mailer will stay neater and easier to handle.
Final recommendation
If you ship small electronics most often, start with AriZona Supply Bubble Mailers (6x9 in, 25-Pack). It is the cleanest default for flat, compact orders.
If you ship the same kind of item in volume, BALTIC BUBBLE Bubble Mailers Envelopes (10x13 in, 50-Pack) makes restocking easier. If your items need a little more length without moving up too far, Jiffy 081 8x12 Bubble Mailers (25-Pack) is the tidy middle choice.
For thicker bundles, PandaDoc Bubble Mailers (12x18 in, 25-Pack) gives you more room. For the bulkiest shipments in this group, Uline Bubble Mailers (14x18 in, 25-Pack) is the large-format option.
FAQ
Are bubble mailers enough for electronics?
They are fine for small, flat electronics such as cables, adapters, dongles, and memory cards. They are not enough for bare boards, glass, screens, or heavy parts that need more structure.
What size bubble mailer works best for small electronics?
6x9 and 8x12 cover most compact items. Move to 10x13 when the order includes a fuller accessory bundle, and use 12x18 or 14x18 for bulkier shipments.
Do electronics need anti-static packaging inside the mailer?
Yes for bare circuit boards, exposed contacts, and loose components. Bubble padding helps with cushioning, but it does not replace anti-static protection.
Is a bigger bubble mailer better for protection?
Not automatically. Extra space can create movement, which makes packing messier and the shipment less controlled. A closer fit is usually the better choice.
When should I use a box instead?
Use a box for glass, screens, hard corners, heavy power supplies, and anything that needs real crush resistance. A box adds structure that a bubble mailer does not provide.