Final Revenue Ranking (Latest Reported FY)
| Rank | Company | Revenue (Latest FY) | Core Strength | Swedish Hubs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tetra Pak | €12.8bn (2024) | Aseptic carton systems | Lund |
| 2 | Billerud | SEK 40.5bn (2025) | Liquid board & cartonboard | Gävle, Gruvön, Karlsborg |
| 3 | SCA (Packaging) | SEK 20.4bn (2025) | Kraftliner & containerboard | Obbola, Munksund |
| 4 | Nefab | ~SEK 10.3bn (2025 run-rate) | Industrial eco-packaging | Jönköping |
| 5 | Trioworld | ~€1bn (2024) | Flexible plastic film | Smålandsstenar |
| 6 | Graphic Packaging International | $8.6bn (2025 global) | Folding cartons | Lund (legacy AR ops) |
| 7 | Emballator Group | ~SEK 2.7bn (2024) | Metal & plastic rigid packs | Ulricehamn |
| 8 | DS Smith (Sweden ops) | FY2024 basis | Corrugated packaging | Mariestad, Värnamo |
| 9 | Boxon Group | ~SEK 1.6bn (2024) | Packaging logistics & labels | Helsingborg |
| 10 | adapa Group | ~€620m (2023/24) | Flexible food packaging | Landskrona |
Group-level revenues are used where Swedish operations are core. Currency conversions reflect average FY exchange levels.

1. Tetra Pak
Founded in 1951 in Lund, Tetra Pak remains Sweden’s largest packaging-linked business by revenue.
Revenue: €12.8bn (2024)
Employees: 24,000+
Core categories:
Aseptic cartons
Filling equipment
Processing systems
Recycling technologies
Lund remains a global R&D centre for beverage carton systems.
2026 relevance:
Ongoing work on fibre-based barrier materials
Efforts to reduce or eliminate aluminium layers in liquid cartons
Recycling infrastructure investment across Europe
Tetra Pak defines dairy and beverage packaging across Nordic and EU retail chains.
2. Billerud
Founded in 1855, Billerud is one of Europe’s leading producers of liquid carton board and specialty paperboard.
Revenue: SEK 40.5bn (FY2025)
The earlier SEK 43.5bn peak reflected stronger market conditions.
In 2025, weaker European demand and lower board prices reduced net sales.
Key pressures:
Oversupply in European cartonboard
Reduced Asian liquid board volumes
Price compression in standard grades
Core categories:
Liquid carton board
Folding box board
Kraft paper
Containerboard
Strategic direction:
Focus on premium specialty grades
Fibre-based barrier innovation
Cost optimisation amid demand slowdown
This demand pressure adds credibility to Sweden’s “dual-speed” packaging economy in 2026.
3. SCA (Packaging Segment)
SCA represents the structural backbone of Sweden’s fibre-based export model.
Revenue: SEK 20.4bn (2025)
Unlike converters, SCA owns forest assets.
This vertical integration secures fibre supply and energy input.
Obbola mill:
One of the most advanced kraftliner facilities globally
Significant recent expansion investment
Core packaging exposure:
Kraftliner
Containerboard
Packaging paper
SCA benefits directly from long-term fibre substitution trends.
4. Nefab
Founded in 1949, Nefab focuses on engineered industrial packaging.
Revenue: ~SEK 10.3bn (2025 run-rate)
Core categories:
Reusable transport packaging
Fibre-based industrial solutions
Wood and protective systems
Growth drivers:
Electrification supply chains
Battery packaging requirements
Lifecycle CO₂ optimisation
Industrial packaging demand remains structurally strong despite FMCG volatility.
5. Trioworld
Trioworld specialises in polyethylene film solutions.
Revenue: ~€1bn (2024)
Core focus:
Stretch film
Agricultural film
Industrial film
Recycled-content solutions
Flexible plastics face regulatory scrutiny under PPWR.
Trioworld’s strategic response:
Higher PCR integration
Development of recyclable film systems
Volume pressure remains visible in parts of the flexible segment.
6. Graphic Packaging International (Sweden Operations)
Graphic Packaging’s global revenue stands at $8.6bn (FY2025).
Swedish significance:
The AR Packaging acquisition consolidated Lund as a Northern European carton hub.
Key innovation:
Fibre-based “KeelClip” systems replacing plastic multipack rings
Retail-ready carton packaging
This places Swedish operations at the centre of fibre substitution efforts in beverage packaging.
7. Emballator Group
Founded in 1906, Emballator produces rigid packaging for food and industrial use.
Revenue: ~SEK 2.7bn (2024)
Core categories:
Plastic buckets
Metal containers
Industrial rigid packs
Strategic direction:
Lightweighting
Improved recyclability
Rigid packaging remains essential for niche food and industrial segments.
8. DS Smith (Sweden)
DS Smith operates corrugated facilities across Sweden.
Group revenue basis: FY2024 reporting.
Core categories:
Corrugated transport cases
Retail-ready packaging
E-commerce solutions
Corrugated demand links to private label and distribution efficiency.
9. Boxon Group
Founded in 1932, Boxon operates at the interface of packaging production and logistics.
Revenue: ~SEK 1.6bn (2024)
Core functions:
Packaging optimisation
Labels
Supply chain packaging services
Acts as a systems integrator rather than a raw material producer.
10. adapa Group (formerly Schur Flexibles)
Formerly Schur Flexibles, the company now operates as adapa Group.
Revenue: ~€620m (2023/24 public reporting)
Following restructuring after 2022 financial irregularities, adapa repositioned its strategy.
Focus:
Mono-material flexible films
Design for Recycling (D4R) solutions
High-barrier recyclable laminates
Flexible packaging faces structural adjustment in 2026 due to PPWR compliance.
Structural Themes in 2026

1. Dual-Speed Economy
High demand:
Fibre-based packaging
Kraftliner
Barrier innovation
Volume pressure:
Commodity board grades
Certain flexible plastic applications
2. Vertical Integration Advantage
SCA’s forest ownership provides cost and supply stability.
This is a structural advantage in volatile fibre markets.
3. Regulation-Driven Innovation
PPWR implementation phases increase:
Recyclability requirements
Carbon transparency
Material simplification
This benefits fibre innovators and mono-material specialists.
Sweden’s packaging industry in 2026 is defined by structural transition rather than expansion.
Fibre-based leaders retain strategic advantage.
Flexible producers are adapting under regulatory pressure.
Vertical integration and energy resilience shape competitive positioning.
For Sweden supermarket operators, packaging performance is now directly tied to private label strategy, recyclability compliance and cost control. At the same time, Sweden private label growth continues to reinforce demand for fibre-based formats, simplified material structures and retail-ready design aligned with EU regulation.
Revenue leadership remains concentrated among carton and board producers, with global scale anchored in Swedish engineering.
Editor’s Note : All financial figures are based on publicly available FY2024–FY2025 company reports and disclosures, including 2025 year-end reports released in early 2026. Currency conversions reflect approximate average exchange rates.
As of Q1 2026, the Swedish packaging sector is navigating a dual-speed economy: strong demand for sustainable fibre innovation alongside volume pressure in traditional flexible plastics during final PPWR implementation phases.








