A manual pallet jack is one of the most straightforward purchases in warehouse equipment, right up until you search for one on Amazon and find 100 listings spanning $21 to $2,400, mixing standard hand trucks with electric jacks, scissor lifts, scale-integrated units, and replacement wheel sets. The search results don’t sort themselves. That’s what this analysis is for.
We pulled 100 Amazon listings for the keyword “manual pallet jack” and ran every rated product through a composite scoring model that weights both star rating and review volume, so a 4.7-star product with 75 reviews beats a 5.0-star product with two. After classifying each listing by type, 68 were genuine manual pallet jacks. The rankings and charts below reflect only those. The remaining categories — electric jacks, scale units, material stackers, and accessories — are addressed separately so buyers who need them can find what actually serves their operation.
The short version: the $300–$450 price tier is where this market performs best, Global Industrial dominates the top of the rankings by sheer review volume, and Crown’s commercial PTH 50 is the only premium listing that earns its price tag with documented performance. Here’s the full breakdown.
How the Manual Pallet Jack Market Rates
The rated manual pallet jack listings on Amazon average 4.21 stars, which sounds solid until you look at the distribution. Ten products in the dataset carry a perfect 5.0-star rating. Every single one of them has fewer than four reviews. Perfect scores without review volume don’t tell you much about product reliability — they tell you a listing is new and hasn’t accumulated the feedback that would push a rating toward its real equilibrium.
Strip away the 5-star cluster of low-review listings, and the picture shifts. The bulk of well-reviewed manual pallet jacks land in the 4.3–4.7 range, which is a healthy and realistic band for industrial equipment. There’s also a meaningful tail below 4.0 — about 10 products rated between 1.0 and 3.9 — most of which are either specialized variants with limited review volume or listings that have accumulated negative feedback on quality or leaking hydraulics.
N=43 rated manual pallet jack listings. Data collected May 2026. Accessories, electric jacks, stackers, and scale units excluded.
The 4.5–4.9 band is the peak of market performance: 12 products, most with meaningful review counts, and ratings that reflect durable buyer satisfaction rather than novelty. This is the zone where the highest-scoring picks in this analysis cluster. It’s also the zone to fish in if you’re evaluating listings outside our top five.
The below-4.0 listings are worth understanding rather than just avoiding. Four products rate between 3.5 and 3.9 stars, and the two reasons are predictably consistent across reviews: hydraulic leaks and fork warping under regular load. These aren’t corner cases — they’re the failure modes that separate quality castings from cheaper builds, and they show up in the review text regardless of which listing carries the low rating.
Does Spending More Get You a Better Manual Pallet Jack?
The relationship between price and quality in the manual pallet jack market is not linear, and the data makes this unusually clear. The $300–$450 tier delivers the highest average rating of any price band — 4.41 stars — across 24 listings. That’s the widest selection and the best average performance at the same time. Spending more does not reliably improve outcomes.
Based on 43 rated manual pallet jack listings. Over-$800 tier contains 1 rated product (Crown PTH 50); treat that bar as directional. Data collected May 2026.
The $300–$450 band’s lead isn’t marginal. Its average rating of 4.41 beats the $450–$600 tier by 0.28 points and ties or outperforms everything above $600. This is the range where established players like Tory Carrier and APOLLOLIFT compete head-to-head, and the competition appears to be keeping quality high. The $450–$600 range, dominated by Global Industrial, scores lower on average despite higher prices — a pattern worth noting before buying up.
The sub-$300 tier and the $600–$800 tier share the same average rating: 3.88. Both underperform the middle band. For sub-$300 jacks, this likely reflects cost cutting on hydraulic seals and wheel quality. For the $600–$800 range, it likely reflects specialized configurations — narrow aisle, extra-long fork, low-profile — that have more demanding use cases and attract more critical reviews from buyers with specific requirements. The one data point above $800 is the Crown PTH 50 at $799, and it genuinely performs, but it’s a different category of tool than what most buyers need.
What’s Actually in a “Manual Pallet Jack” Search
Before getting to the top picks, it’s worth understanding what Amazon’s algorithm serves when someone searches “manual pallet jack.” Standard hand pallet trucks account for 68 of the 100 listings — the clear majority, but not the whole picture. The remaining 32% includes material lift stackers, scale-integrated jacks, scissor lift jacks, electric pallet jacks, and a collection of accessories ranging from replacement load wheels to wheel chocks.
N=100 total listings. Classification based on title analysis and price signals. Rankings and charts above cover manual pallet jacks only.
The accessories category — which includes items like replacement load wheel sets, wheel chocks, and a hydraulic pump repair kit — are excluded from the rankings below but covered briefly at the end because they’re a natural next purchase. If you’re setting up a dock or warehouse for the first time, chocks and spare wheels are worth ordering alongside the jack itself.
Material lift stackers deserve a separate note because they’re easy to confuse with pallet jacks at a glance. A stacker raises loads vertically; a pallet jack moves loads horizontally. Both move pallets, but they’re different tools for different jobs. The eight stacker listings in these results include products from SuperHandy and Goodyear — both well-rated in that separate category — but they’re not substitutes for a standard hand pallet truck.
Top-Ranked Manual Pallet Jacks
Rankings use a composite score that multiplies star rating by the natural log of review count, so high ratings on thin review bases don’t crowd out proven performers. Only organic listings are ranked — no sponsored placements.
Standard Manual Pallet Jacks — Top 5
Notable Accessories — Natural Next Purchases
Nine listings in the search results are pallet jack accessories: wheel chocks, replacement load wheel sets, and a hydraulic pump repair kit. The search algorithm surfaces them because buyers frequently purchase them alongside a jack. Two are worth flagging specifically.
Brand Breakdown: Who Makes Manual Pallet Jacks on Amazon
Seven brands appear two or more times in the manual pallet jack results with enough review data to draw any conclusions. The market is more concentrated than it looks: Global Industrial alone accounts for 15 of the 68 standard listings. The brand averages below weight all their rated listings equally — not just their best performers.
| Brand | Listings | Avg Rating | Total Reviews | Avg Price | Take |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| APOLLOLIFT | 4 | ★ 4.55 | 45+ | $384 | Best brand average of any seller with 4+ listings. Consistent across models and in the market’s best price tier. |
| Tory Carrier | 9 | ★ 4.45 | 70+ | $461 | Widest selection of any single brand, solid average rating, and the most total reviews outside Global Industrial. Reliable choice across sub-types. |
| NORTHSKY | 4 | ★ 5.00 | 6 | $390 | Perfect rating, but only 6 total reviews across 4 listings. Too new to rank — revisit in 6 months when review volume is meaningful. |
| Apollo / APOLLO | 6 | ★ 4.20 | 15+ | $440 | Sister brand to APOLLOLIFT with a broader price range and slightly lower average. Adequate but not as consistent; verify the specific model before buying. |
| Global Industrial | 15 | ★ 4.08 | 270+ | $636 | Dominates the market by listing count and carries the most total review volume. Average rating of 4.08 reflects a wide range of models including specialized configurations that attract harder use. Top individual models score much higher. |
| VEVOR | 3 | ★ 3.75 | ~5 | $383 | Lowest brand average with negligible review volume in this category. VEVOR performs better in other equipment categories; their pallet jack line hasn’t established itself here yet. |
| MMS | 2 | ★ 3.60 | 22+ | $410 | Both MMS listings appear twice in results (same product); 22 reviews at 3.6 stars suggests real-world issues at this price. Skip. |
Global Industrial’s brand story is more nuanced than its 4.08 average suggests. The brand’s highest-performing models — the Standard Duty and Industrial Duty in 27″x48″ configuration — both sit at 4.5+ stars. The brand average is dragged lower by specialized variants (narrow aisle, extra-long fork, ergo configuration) that have harsher use cases and smaller buyer bases. If you’re buying a standard-configuration jack, Global Industrial’s sub-brand averages are misleading; look at the specific model rating.
APOLLOLIFT and Tory Carrier are the two brands where consistency matters as much as the top score. Both appear multiple times in the results, and both maintain their averages across variants rather than peaking on one listing and falling on the rest. For buyers who need multiple jacks or want confidence that a reorder will perform like the first unit, either brand is more reliable than buying one highly-rated listing from a single-product seller.
How to Choose the Right Manual Pallet Jack for Your Business
Most buyers over-specify on capacity and under-specify on fork dimensions. Here’s what the data and product specs suggest you actually need to decide before purchasing.
Standard GMA pallets are 48″ x 40″. A 27″-wide fork set handles these in either orientation. Go with 21″-wide forks only if your aisles or racking system genuinely can’t accommodate standard width — the Global Industrial Narrow Pallet Jack (21″x48″) ranked 7th overall and is the right buy for that specific scenario. Most operations don’t need it.
5,500 lbs handles virtually all standard warehouse, retail distribution, and manufacturing loads. 6,600 lb jacks cost more and weigh more — they’re warranted for stone, metal stock, or heavy machinery. The top three picks in this analysis all run at 5,500 lb capacity. Unless your specific freight regularly exceeds 5,000 lbs per pallet, the extra capacity costs you money and adds dead weight to push.
For light to moderate use (under 20 moves per shift), any of the top five picks will serve well. For sustained heavy use — multiple shifts, dock-to-rack-and-back repeatedly — the Global Industrial Industrial Duty or the Crown PTH 50 justify their higher prices through longer service life and serviceability.
Polyurethane (PU) wheels are quieter, gentler on sealed concrete, and more resistant to flat-spotting than nylon wheels. Most listings above $300 spec PU wheels, but verify before buying — the wheel spec is nearly always listed in the product title or bullets. For rough surfaces, unfinished concrete, or dock plates with gaps, prioritize steel load wheels over plastic variants.
If you need integrated weighing, look at scale-integrated jacks in the $1,000–$1,600 range — the SUNMAX HD4400W and APOLLOLIFT Scale Pallet Jack both appear in the results. For high-lift needs (raising loads to rack height), scissor jacks from APOLLOLIFT and Tory Carrier appear in this dataset in the $730–$970 range. For electric drive, the APOLLOLIFT Electric Pallet Jack at $1,390 is the best-rated electric option in these results.
Our Verdict
For most small and mid-sized operations, the decision comes down to two options: spend $320–$345 on the Tory Carrier or APOLLOLIFT if the budget is tight, or spend $520 on the Global Industrial Standard Duty if you want the highest composite score in the market. The gap between them is $200, not quality tiers — the $300–$450 range outperforms the $450–$600 range on average. The Global Industrial wins on review volume and rating combined, not on some irreplaceable spec advantage.
The Crown PTH 50 at $799 is the only premium pick that earns its price, and only for operations running high daily cycle counts where service network access matters. Everyone else should stay in the $300–$530 range and buy from Global Industrial, Tory Carrier, or APOLLOLIFT. The data doesn’t support spending more.

