Envelope Sealers

Envelope sealers streamline the mailing process by efficiently sealing large volumes of envelopes, saving time and reducing labor costs for businesses of all sizes. Ideal for offices, print shops, and mail centers, these machines ensure a secure, professional finish for every envelope, enhancing productivity and mail presentation. Whether you're handling invoices, marketing materials, or bulk mailings, reliable envelope sealers prevent leaks and damage, ensuring your correspondence arrives intact. At MyBinding.com, we offer a wide selection of high-quality envelope sealers from trusted brands, backed by expert customer support and service options. Our competitive prices and fast shipping make it easy to find the perfect sealer to fit your workflow and budget, helping you maintain smooth, efficient mailroom operations every day.

Envelope Sealers

Envelope sealers streamline the mailing process by efficiently sealing large volumes of envelopes, saving time and reducing labor costs for businesses of all sizes. Ideal for offices, print shops, and mail centers, these machines ensure...

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Formax

Item#: FD432

$9,626.00

features

  • Closes and seals envelopes in a single operation
  • Processes up to 18,000 envelopes per hour
  • Equipped with a precision moistening roller
  • Handles both standard and nested envelopes
$9,626.00

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Frequently Asked Questions

An envelope sealer is worth buying when hand sealing takes too much staff time or creates inconsistent results. Offices, mailrooms, billing teams, fundraising teams, and print shops can benefit when they send repeated batches of invoices, statements, notices, letters, or marketing mail. The buying decision should be based on daily or weekly mailing volume, envelope type, and labor time. If only a few envelopes are sent each day, manual sealing may still be enough. If staff are sealing stacks by hand, a machine can improve speed and consistency. For a fuller mailing workflow, compare mailroom equipment before choosing one machine.

Start with the number of envelopes sealed per day or per mailing run. Light office use may only need a compact unit that handles occasional batches. Higher-volume mailrooms need a stronger machine built for repeated use and faster throughput. Also consider whether the same envelope size is used every time or whether your team switches between different envelope formats. A machine that is slow to adjust can become frustrating in mixed jobs. Look at feed reliability, sealing method, ease of filling or cleaning, and where the machine will sit. The right sealer should reduce handling time without adding a complicated setup step.

Check envelope size, flap style, paper weight, and whether the envelopes are already gummed. Most sealers are intended for standard envelopes with moistenable adhesive flaps, but not every envelope style feeds the same way. Thick envelopes, unusual flap shapes, invitation envelopes, or oversized mailers may need extra review before buying. If your team uses multiple envelope types, test or confirm compatibility before standardizing on one unit. Also consider whether envelopes are filled by hand or produced through another mail process first. A sealer should match the envelopes used most often, not just a single batch. For form and mail preparation, see paper folders.

Avoid buying only by price, ignoring envelope compatibility, or choosing a machine that is too small for the mailing volume. A low-volume sealer used for large batches may slow the team down and wear faster. Also avoid assuming all envelopes seal the same way. Flap design, adhesive condition, and paper thickness can affect feeding and sealing quality. Another common mistake is placing the machine where there is no room for finished envelopes to stack cleanly. Plan the whole process: folding, inserting, sealing, stacking, and mailing. A sealer should remove a bottleneck, not create another one.

An envelope sealer can make mailroom work more consistent by reducing repetitive hand sealing and keeping batches moving through the process. It helps when teams send invoices, statements, notices, renewals, fundraising letters, or direct mail pieces on a set schedule. Consistent sealing also improves presentation because envelopes look cleaner and are less likely to arrive poorly sealed. For teams with deadlines, the biggest value is usually time saved during peak mailing periods. Pair the sealer with clear staging: folded documents in one area, inserted envelopes in another, sealed mail in a finished tray. That simple workflow can reduce missed pieces and rushed handling.