science

Box Labs

EST. 2024
PRODUCT DEEP DIVE2025· 7 min read

Magnetic Closure Boxes: When to Use Them and How They're Made

The magnetic closure rigid box is the most requested premium packaging format we produce. This guide explains exactly how the magnet is integrated, the different configurations available, when magnetic closure is worth the premium, and when a simpler closure serves better.

How a magnetic closure box works

A magnetic closure rigid box is a hinged-lid setup box where a neodymium (rare-earth) magnet embedded in the lid aligns with a steel plate or opposing magnet embedded in the base. When the lid approaches the closed position, the magnetic attraction draws it shut with a controlled, clean snap.

The magnet is concealed within the chipboard structure during manufacturing — it is not visible on the exterior or interior of the finished box. The wrap paper covers it entirely. From the outside, a magnetic closure box looks identical to a non-magnetic hinged box. The difference is entirely tactile — the resistance as the lid is drawn closed and the definitive snap of engagement.

How the magnet is integrated: the manufacturing process

During rigid box construction, the greyboard panels are assembled before the wrap paper is applied. The magnet integration steps:

  1. Routing: A recess is cut into the greyboard at the closure point of the lid — typically centered along the front panel, approximately 15–25mm from the edge
  2. Magnet placement: A neodymium disc or bar magnet is inserted into the routed recess and secured with adhesive
  3. Steel plate placement: A corresponding steel plate (or opposing magnet) is set into a routed recess in the front panel of the base, precisely aligned with the lid magnet
  4. Wrap application: The wrap paper is applied over the assembled greyboard, concealing both the magnet and the steel plate entirely

The precision of the routing and alignment is what determines whether the closure feels premium or imprecise. A misaligned magnet creates a closure that pulls to one side, audibly asymmetric, which undermines the brand signal the closure is intended to create.

Magnet configurations

ConfigurationDescriptionBest for
Single center magnetOne magnet centered on the front panel. Standard configuration.Most applications — cosmetics, electronics, gifting
Dual magnetTwo magnets positioned symmetrically left and right of center. Stronger closure, more even pull.Wider boxes, heavy lids, products requiring secure closure
Magnet + steel plateMagnet in lid, steel plate in base. Most common, lower cost than dual magnet.Standard luxury applications
Opposing magnetsMagnet in both lid and base. Stronger attraction, more precise alignment.Large-format boxes, high-end gifting, premium electronics
N35 grade magnetStandard neodymium grade. Adequate closure resistance for most applications.Cosmetics, jewelry, standard gifting
N52 grade magnetHigher strength neodymium. Noticeably stronger closure snap.Premium positioning where a stronger snap is part of the brand signal

When magnetic closure is the right choice

Magnetic closure rigid boxes are the correct specification when:

  • The opening moment is a brand event. If your customer or gift recipient is meant to experience opening the box as a deliberate, satisfying act — not a quick utilitarian opening — magnetic closure creates that experience
  • The box will be opened and closed repeatedly. Jewelry boxes, watch boxes, collectibles boxes, and corporate gift boxes are often kept and reused. Magnetic closure sustains repeated use better than friction-only or ribbon closures
  • The product is being filmed or photographed. The magnetic closure snap is the moment unboxing video creators linger on. It is the audible and tactile brand signal that distinguishes a premium product from a standard one
  • The product price point is over approximately $50. Below this range, the cost premium of magnetic closure may not be commercially justified relative to the packaging's contribution to total perceived value

When magnetic closure is not necessary

Magnetic closure adds approximately 15–30% to the unit cost of a rigid box. It is not always justified:

  • Internal corporate gifting where the box is discarded. If the recipient opens the box once and discards it, the closure mechanism adds cost without delivering repeat experience value
  • Products in the $20–$40 retail range. At this price point, a two-piece setup box (lid and base) with a premium print finish delivers better cost-to-perceived-value ratio than magnetic closure
  • High-volume automated gifting operations. If boxes are filled and sealed on a production line at volume, the additional complexity of magnetic closure may create assembly inefficiency

A useful test: Will someone film themselves opening this box? If yes — magnetic closure. If the box will be opened functionally and discarded — consider whether a two-piece setup box at lower cost delivers the same commercial outcome.

Magnetic closure and air travel / security

Neodymium magnets in retail packaging are well within the threshold that triggers airport security concerns. Consumer-grade packaging magnets are small, low-field strength, and do not affect cardiac pacemakers or electronic devices at the distances involved in normal retail handling. This is not a practical concern for standard retail or gifting applications.

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