BusinessWhich box file should you choose? A4 vs foolscap explained

Which box file should you choose? A4 vs foolscap explained

Buying box files sounds like the kind of task you can do in 30 seconds, until you realise there are four different sizes being sold as “standard”, half of them don’t fit the folders you already use, and the lid catches vary from satisfying and secure to “why is this open again?”

If you’re sorting anything from invoices and HR paperwork to household admin, choosing the right box files up front saves you time later. This guide focuses on the practical stuff: what size, material, and style to choose, so your paperwork stays where you put it.

If you’re buying for a home office or shared workplace, it’s worth comparing sizes and materials before ordering from Office Stationery.

First: A4 box file or foolscap box file?

The number one mistake people make is ordering the wrong size and trying to force it.

A4 box file

An A4 Box File is made for A4 documents. If your paperwork is printed at home, on office printers, or comes from typical UK/EU formats, A4 will cover most of what you store.

A4 tends to:

  • sit neater on modern shelving
  • take up slightly less space
  • look more uniform when you line up multiple categories

Real-world example: If you’re filing household paperwork, an A4 setup is usually more than enough. Four A4 box files labelled bills, school, car, home will cover most day-to-day admin without overcomplicating things.

Foolscap box file

A Foolscap Box File gives you a bit more breathing room. That matters if you:

  • store documents with tabs that stick out
  • use dividers and thick inserts
  • keep paperwork inside wallets

If you’ve ever tried to close an A4 file and watched the contents crumple slightly at the top, foolscap is usually the fix.

Real-world example: If you’re dealing with supplier invoices or client paperwork using tabbed dividers, foolscap can be the difference between files that close properly and files that constantly catch and bend at the edges.

The spine label isn’t optional (if you want the system to survive)

It sounds minor, but the spine label is the difference between “organised” and “random guessing”.

If you’re choosing files for shared office storage, don’t settle for tiny labels you can’t read unless you’re standing directly in front of them.

Look for:

  • a large spine label area
  • easy label replacement (insert sleeve or slot)
  • space for dates and categories

Some files use a dual colour effect on the spine. It’s not just style. Colour-coding makes it faster to find the right file when you’re dealing with multiple projects.

Material: pick what matches your workspace (not what looks nicest)

High-quality cardboard construction

Cardboard box files are classic for a reason. The best ones use high-quality cardboard construction with reinforced edges and a proper rigid feel.

They’re ideal for:

  • shelves
  • desks
  • tidy, dry office environments

If you store a lot of files upright, cardboard often holds shape better than budget plastic.

Plastic box file (and why it makes sense)

A Plastic Box File is the better choice if your files will be handled constantly, or if your office space is likely to involve spills, dust, or heavy use.

The biggest advantage is practicality:

  • wipe-clean plastic surfaces
  • better moisture resistance
  • often easier to carry

Many plastic styles also come with locking lids, which is a huge improvement if files get moved between rooms.

PP box file (the sensible middle option)

A PP box file (polypropylene) is a strong choice if you want something:

  • lighter than thick plastic
  • more durable than basic board
  • easy to clean and maintain

You’ll also find a lot of PP options made with recycled content, which is increasingly important for workplaces trying to buy greener supplies.

Capacity: small files look tidy… until they’re unusable

If the file bulges, it stops being useful. It won’t sit properly, the contents slide around, and the lid won’t close properly.

If you store thick paperwork, choose a wider file from the start.

Quick tip: If you’re choosing between spine widths, a wider spine is almost always better for bulky categories like accounts, manuals, or project packs. Overfilled slim files become messy fast.

Large-capacity box file

A Large-Capacity Box File makes sense for:

  • accounts and finance records
  • projects with lots of printed packs
  • “annual paperwork” categories

A well-made large-capacity file should still have a solid design. It should stay upright and not collapse when half full.

Real-world example: If you’re self-employed, a single large-capacity file for quarterly receipts and paperwork is often easier to manage than splitting everything across multiple slim files, especially when you need to pull it all out at tax time.

If you’re hybrid working: get a portable box file

If your filing moves between home and office, don’t rely on standard shelf files.

A Portable Box File is designed to travel and usually includes:

  • a handle
  • secure catch mechanisms
  • press-button closure
  • tighter lid fitting

If you commute with documents even once a week, you’ll immediately see the difference (especially when your bag gets knocked around).

Real-world example: If you’re carrying paperwork to meetings (especially training packs, onboarding documents, or signed forms), portable box files with proper closure stop pages getting crushed in your backpack or laptop bag.

A quick note on closures: locking lids are underrated

Some box files close “well enough”, until you move them.

If transport is part of your routine, look for:

  • locking lids
  • press-button fastening
  • reinforced lid edges

This matters for real-world use, not just aesthetics.

When box files aren’t the best choice (and what to use instead)

Box files are great for long-term storage and clear category filing, but they’re not always the best option for active documents.

Document wallet

A document wallet is perfect for:

  • temporary storage
  • keeping meeting papers together
  • sorting paperwork before filing properly

If you’re building a filing system that people actually stick to, wallets are often the “first step” before filing.

Expandable folders

Expandable folders work better for:

  • multi-part projects
  • receipts and monthly paperwork
  • paperwork that constantly grows

They’re also easier to carry than full box files.

Storage upgrades: file storage boxes, cabinets, drawers

If your shelves are overflowing, you may need a second layer of storage.

File storage boxes

File storage boxes are for archiving. They’re ideal when you need to keep paperwork for years but don’t need daily access.

A lot of offices use bankers’ boxes for exactly this reason. They stack, they hold weight, and they’re easier to label by year or category.

File drawer, file cabinet, and hanging file systems

If you access documents daily, drawers are better than shelves.

A file drawer makes retrieval quicker. A file cabinet scales better in larger offices. If you want the quickest navigation:

  • use a hanging file system with clear categories

It’s cleaner, faster, and reduces the number of box files you need overall.

And yes, there’s a place for sturdy metal boxes

For valuables and sensitive documents, sturdy metal boxes can be useful (especially if they’re lockable). But they’re usually not practical for everyday filing:

  • heavy
  • awkward to label
  • not space efficient

For most offices, locking cabinets are a better long-term solution.

Quick checklist: choosing the right box file

Before buying, ask yourself:

  • Do I store mostly A4 documents?
  • Do I need extra space for tabs and inserts (Foolscap Box File)?
  • Will this sit on a shelf or in a file cabinet?
  • Do I need it to be wipeable (wipe-clean plastic)?
  • Do I need a Large-Capacity Box File for bulky paperwork?
  • Will I carry it (choose Portable Box File)?
  • Do I need locking lids or press-button closure?
  • Should this really be archived in file storage boxes / bankers’ boxes instead?

Final thoughts: box files work best when they match your habits

The ‘best’ box file isn’t the fanciest one. It’s the one that fits the type of paperwork you actually deal with.

If you get the size right (A4 vs foolscap), label it properly with a clear spine label, and choose materials that suit your environment (PP, plastic, or sturdy board), box files become one of the easiest office storage upgrades you can make.

 

Helen Greaney
Helen Greaney
I'm a journalist with more than 18 years' experience on local, regional and national newspapers, as well as PR and digital marketing. Crime and the courts is my specialist area but I'm also keen to hear your stories concerning Manchester and the greater North West region.
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