Drive-in racking is a dense pallet storage system designed to maximize warehouse space by reducing aisle quantity and storing pallets in deep lanes. Forklifts drive directly into the rack structure to place and retrieve pallets, making this solution suitable for warehouses that store large quantities of similar products with low SKU variety.
Drive-in racking is a high-density storage system where pallets are stored on continuous rails inside deep rack lanes. Instead of accessing every pallet from a front aisle, forklifts enter the rack lanes to store or retrieve pallets.
This system is ideal for warehouses that handle large batches of the same SKU. It is commonly used in cold storage, food and beverage warehouses, raw material storage, chemical warehouses and other bulk pallet storage operations.
Drive-in racking is usually based on a LIFO, or Last-In First-Out, inventory flow. This means the last pallet stored in a lane is usually the first pallet retrieved. For this reason, it works best when each lane is dedicated to one SKU, one batch or one product category.
Key Points
High-density pallet storage
Forklifts drive into rack lanes
Suitable for low-SKU bulk inventory
Best for batch-based storage
Usually follows LIFO inventory flow
Commonly used in cold storage and food warehouses
Key Benefits
High Space Utilization
Drive-in racking reduces the number of working aisles and uses deep storage lanes to increase pallet capacity. This makes it suitable for warehouses where maximizing storage density is more important than direct access to every pallet.
Bulk Storage
This system is ideal for storing large quantities of the same product. By assigning each lane to one SKU or batch, the warehouse can achieve higher storage capacity with a relatively simple rack structure.
Low SKU Friendly
Drive-in racking works best when SKU variety is limited and each SKU has a high pallet quantity. It is especially practical for products with stable inventory flow and batch-based storage requirements.
Dense Lane Storage
Multiple pallets can be stored deep in a single rack lane. This allows the warehouse to reduce aisle space, improve storage density and lower storage cost per pallet position.
Typical Layout / Working Principle
Forklifts drive into the rack lane to store or retrieve pallets.
Pallets are placed on support rails along the depth of the lane.
Storage usually starts from the rear position and moves forward.
Retrieval usually starts from the front position.
Each lane is best assigned to one SKU or one batch.
Forklift operation and rack protection are important for safe use.
Planning Highlights
SKU Concentration
Drive-in racking is most suitable when each SKU has a high pallet quantity. If SKU variety is too high, the warehouse may lose efficiency because different products cannot be accessed independently.
FIFO / LIFO Requirement
Drive-in racking normally works on a LIFO basis. It is not the best choice when strict FIFO operation is required. If FIFO is important, drive-through racking or pallet shuttle racking may be more suitable.
Product Turnover
This system is suitable for low to medium product turnover and batch-based inventory movement. It is less suitable for operations that require frequent random pallet picking.
Impact Protection
Because forklifts enter the rack structure, column guards, upright protectors and careful driving procedures are important. Proper protection helps reduce rack damage and improve warehouse safety.
Lane Depth
Lane depth should be designed according to SKU quantity, batch size, pallet quality and operating frequency. Very deep lanes can increase storage density, but they may also reduce operational flexibility.
Pros and Cons
Pros
Cons
Kepadatan penyimpanan yang tinggi
Reduced aisle requirement
Lower storage cost per pallet position
Suitable for bulk pallet storage
Good use of floor space
Simple structure compared with automated systems
Suitable for low-SKU, high-volume inventory
Practical for cold storage where space is expensive
Usually works on LIFO inventory flow
Not ideal for high SKU variety
Lower pallet selectivity
Slower access to inner pallets
Forklifts must drive inside rack lanes
Higher risk of rack impact damage
Requires skilled forklift operators
Not suitable for frequent random picking
Best-Fit Applications
Food Products
Drive-in racking is suitable for food warehouses that store large quantities of the same product or batch. It helps improve storage density for palletized food inventory with stable turnover.
Beverage & Drinks
Beverage warehouses often store large volumes of similar SKUs. Drive-in racking can reduce aisle space and increase pallet capacity for drinks, bottled products and bulk beverage inventory.
Industri Kimia
For chemical and industrial materials stored in batch quantities, drive-in racking provides dense pallet storage. Proper safety planning, pallet quality and load stability should be confirmed before use.
Raw Materials
Manufacturing warehouses can use drive-in racking for raw materials that are stored in bulk and moved by batch. It helps reduce warehouse footprint while maintaining organized stock lanes.
Related Equipment
Forklift Berpenyeimbang
Counterbalanced forklifts are commonly used with drive-in racking systems because they can handle pallet movement in loading areas and enter rack lanes for storage and retrieval. The forklift size, lifting height, turning radius and load capacity should be matched with the rack lane width, pallet weight and warehouse operating conditions.
Truk Jangkauan
Reach trucks can be used in certain drive-in racking layouts, especially in indoor warehouses where aisle space is limited and higher lifting height is required. The final selection depends on rack depth, pallet size, floor condition and operating method.
Drive-in racking is best suited for low-SKU, high-volume products stored in large batches. It is commonly used for food, beverage, raw materials, chemical products and cold chain bulk storage.
Drive-in racking usually has one entry side and works mainly on a LIFO basis. Drive-through racking has access from both sides and can support FIFO operation in certain layouts.
Standard drive-in racking is usually not ideal for FIFO operation. If FIFO is required, drive-through racking or pallet shuttle racking may be more suitable.
The ideal lane depth depends on SKU quantity, batch size, pallet movement frequency and warehouse operation method. Deeper lanes increase density but reduce flexibility, so lane depth should be carefully planned.
Pallets should be strong, consistent and suitable for rack rail support. Damaged or weak pallets can affect safety and handling efficiency inside deep lanes.
Ready to Optimize Your Bulk Storage?
Drive-in racking is a practical solution when your warehouse needs high-density storage for low-SKU, high-volume products.
Share your warehouse size, pallet dimensions, pallet weight, SKU quantity, lane depth requirement and forklift type with Akuros. Our team can help you evaluate whether drive-in racking is suitable for your storage density, inventory flow and daily operation.
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