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How many 55-Gallon Drums fit in a 20ft Container?

Read the complete guide below.

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The Short Answer

You can fit approximately 80 standard 55-gallon drums in a 20ft container. This requires tight floor loading of 40 drums (4 drums wide, 10 drums deep) and double stacking them. Without double stacking, the capacity is capped at 40 units.

Shipping liquid bulk in 55-gallon drums is the standard for chemical, oil, and food supply chains. However, containerizing them leads to a classic "Cube vs. Weight" fight. If you load too few, you pay for empty air. If you load too many, you get flagged at the weigh station.

The "Magic Number" for a 20ft container is 80 drums, but achieving this requires specific stacking patterns and pallet choices that many first-time exporters get wrong.

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The Stacking Trap (Weight Limits)

Fitting 80 drums physically is easy. Fitting them legally is the hard part. A standard 55-gallon drum filled with water or oil weighs approximately 450-500 lbs (200-225 kg).

  • The 80-Drum Reality Check80 drums x 500 lbs = 40,000 lbs. The max payload of a standard 20ft container is approx 47,000 lbs. You are safe on ocean weight.
  • The Road Weight Trap (US)In the USA, trucks are strictly limited to 80,000 lbs Gross Vehicle Weight. This typically allows for only 36,000 - 44,000 lbs of cargo depending on the chassis (Tri-axle vs standard). If you load 80 drums of heavy liquid, you might be stuck at the port, unable to find a trucker legal to haul it.

The Floor Math: 4-Wide vs 3-Wide

A standard drum diameter is roughly 23 inches (584mm). A container internal width is 92 inches (2352mm).

MetricCalculationResult
Single Row Width23 inches x 4 drums92 inches
Container Width2352 mm / 25.492.6 inches
Clearance92.6" - 92"0.6 inches!

*0.6 inches of clearance means this is a "Tight Fit". If your pallets are slightly oversized or drums are dented/bulging, the 4th drum won't fit. You must use "Offset" (nesting) patterns.

The Shift to Plastic & IBCs (2026)

The era of steel drums is slowly fading. In 2026, we are seeing a massive shift towards Plastic Drums (HDPE) and IBC Totes for three reasons:

  1. 1. Rust Contamination

    Steel drums dent. Dents crack liners. Cracks lead to rust in high-purity chemicals. Plastic drums "bounce" back.

  2. 2. Weight Reduction

    A steel drum weighs ~40 lbs empty. A plastic drum weighs ~22 lbs. Across 80 drums, that is nearly 1,500 lbs of free cargo weight you gain back.

Case Study

The $14,000 Leak (Why Securing Matters)

A lubricant exporter loaded 80 drums without "plywood separators" between the upper and lower stack. During a rough North Atlantic crossing, the vibration caused the top drums to "walk".

The Incident:

Three drums on the top layer fell into the "door gap". When the trucker opened the doors at the destination, 1,200 lbs of oil spilled onto the warehouse dock.

Clean Up Cost
$8,500
Lost Product
$5,500
The Fix:

Always use a layer of plywood or "honeycomb cardboard" between stacked drums. This creates a high-friction unified floor that prevents individual drum migration.

Will It Fit?

Don't risk leaving cargo on the dock. Use our 3D Container Loader to simulate your exact drum dimensions and pallets.

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Essential Loading Tools

To load 80 drums efficiently, your warehouse needs these specific tools:

Drum Grabber (Forklift)

"Beak" style attachments that grab the top rim. Essential for double stacking without pallets (floor loading).

Ty-Gard 2000

Flexible barrier straps adhered to the container walls. They prevent the "Rearward surge" when the container is opened.

Critical Safety: Heat Expansion & Venting

Containers get hot. A container crossing the equator can reach internal temperatures of 135°F (57°C). Liquids expand when heated.

The "Bulging Drum" Risk

If you fill a drum to 100% capacity in a cold warehouse and ship it to a tropical climate, the liquid will expand and potentially burst the bung seal.

  • The Rule: Never fill beyond 95% capacity (leave "Headspace").
  • Vented Bungs: Use bungs with microporous vents that allow gas to escape without letting liquid out.
  • Orientation: Always load drums vertically. Horizontal loading increases leak risk by 400%.

Pre-Loading Checklist (The "Red Flags")

Reject any drum that shows these signs before it enters the container:

Chime DentsDamage to the top/bottom rim weakens vertical stacking strength.
Rust Near BungSign of previous leakage or poor storage. Will fail under vibration.
Label IntegrityHazmat labels must be visible. If torn, Customs will hold the cargo.

The 55-gallon drum (208 liters) is the global standard for industrial liquid shipping. It's robust, stackable, and fits perfectly into the modular logistics system. But how many fit in a container? It depends on your loading pattern.

A Brief History: Why 55 Gallons?

The 55-gallon drum is a legacy of Standard Oil (Rockefeller). Originally, oil was shipped in 42-gallon wooden barrels (which is why oil is significantly priced per "barrel").

In 1905, Nellie Bly patented the steel drum. It was stronger than wood and didn't leak. The industry standardized on 55 gallons because it was the maximum weight (approx 400-500lbs filled) that two men could tilt and roll manually without a forklift (which hadn't been invented yet).

Fun Fact: The dimensions (22.5" diameter) were specifically chosen to fit 4-across in standard American railcars of the 1920s.

Material Matters: Steel vs. Plastic

Note: Plastic (Poly) drums often have slightly wider "bellies" than steel drums due to molding. While a steel drum is exactly 23 inches, a poly drum might flex to 23.5 inches under heat. This can ruin a tight "4-wide" loading pattern. Always measure your specific drums before loading.

The 3 Loading Patterns

Strategic Shift: Why Switch to IBC Totes?

For high-volume shippers, 55-gallon drums are actually quite inefficient. The "Round peg in a square hole" problem creates wasted space (voids) between drums. Enter the **Intermediate Bulk Container (IBC)** or "Tote."

Variable4x Drums (Palletized)1x IBC Tote (275 Gal)
Total Volume220 Gallons275 Gallons (+25%)
Footprint40" x 48" (Standard Pallet)40" x 48" (Same Footprint!)
Filling LaborFill 4 separate bungsFill 1 top opening
Loading SpeedSlow (Unstable)Fast (Caged, Stackable)

The Math: shipping 220 gallons vs 275 gallons in the same footprint means you instantly gain 25% more product volume per container by switching to Totes. If you ship 100 containers a year, switching to Totes saves you 25 container shipments purely on density efficiency.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not strictly. 'Floor Loading' (hand stacking) fits 80 drums. If you palletize (4 drums per pallet), you can only fit 20 pallets (80 drums) if you pinwheel. However, un-palletized drums are harder to unload.
No. A 20ft container is only 7'10" tall internally. Two drums high is approx 70 inches (5'10"), leaving room for a pallet. Three drums would be 105 inches (8'9"), which is taller than the container ceiling.
A 40ft container is limited by WEIGHT, not volume. You physically CAN fit 160 drums, but that would weigh 80,000 lbs, which is illegal on almost every road. 40ft containers are rarely used for dense liquids.
If shipping hazardous liquids, the drum itself must be 'UN Rated' (e.g., 1A1/Y1.8/...). This code stamped on the drum certifies it can withstand the pressure of expanding gases during transport.

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