# What Is a Ballotin? Belgian Chocolate Box Explained

2026-06-04

If you've ever been given a box of Belgian chocolates, there's a good chance it came in a ballotin. Compact, tapered, tied with a ribbon and filled with neatly arranged pralines. The ballotin is so closely tied to Belgian chocolate that, for many people, the two are inseparable.

![Leonidas Ballotin Assortment](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0324/8321/3447/files/SEOon_Leonidas_Ballotin.jpg?v=1780577396)

But what actually _is_ a ballotin, and why do Belgian chocolatiers still use one over a hundred years after it was invented? Here's a short, practical guide.

## A ballotin, in one sentence

A ballotin is a small, folded cardboard box, usually with four interlocking flaps and a tapered shape, designed specifically to hold individual chocolate pralines without crushing them. The name comes from the French _ballot_, meaning "small package of goods".

## Where the ballotin comes from

The history of Belgian chocolate is built on shared passion and brilliant innovations. Just as the Neuhaus family changed the game by inventing the protective _ballotin_ box over a century ago, Leonidas continues to evolve the tradition today by packing our fresh pralines in 100% sustainable, eco-friendly ballotins.

The ballotin was invented in Belgium in the early 20th century, shortly after the modern praline itself.

The problem with the new filled chocolates was that they were too delicate for the paper cones and cornets that confectioners used at the time — they arrived bruised or broken. The solution came from Jean Neuhaus II's wife, **Louise Agostini**, who designed a one-piece folded cardboard box that protected each chocolate while keeping the presentation elegant. The design was registered in 1915.

At the request of the Royal Master Confectioners Association of Belgium, the ballotin was made available to all Belgian chocolatiers, which is exactly why every serious Belgian brand, including Leonidas, still uses one today.

## What makes a ballotin different from other chocolate boxes

A ballotin isn't just "a box". The design is built around a few specific principles:

-   **Folded cardboard, no glue inside.** The flaps interlock to keep the box rigid without contaminating the chocolates.
-   **A tapered, deeper shape.** Pralines sit upright in a single layer (or two), with space around each one so they don't press into each other.
-   **Tied with a ribbon.** The ribbon isn't just decoration — it's what holds the box closed.
-   **Sold by weight, not by piece.** This is the Belgian tradition: you order 250g, 500g, 750g, 1kg and the chocolatier fills it in front of you.

It's worth comparing the ballotin briefly to the other boxes you'll see in our Brighton shop:

Box type

When it's right

**Ballotin**

The Belgian classic — best for fresh pralines bought by weight, gifting, and any occasion that calls for a traditional look.

**Tin box**

Better for travel and longer keeping. Premium feel, but heavier.

**Round / luxury gift box**

Statement gift — usually two layers, a more decorative shape and a bigger visual impact.

**Heritage / ribboned cardboard box**

A modern take on the ballotin with extra finish — good for premium gifting option.

## How to use a ballotin

A few practical tips from the shop:

-   **Order by weight.** A 250g ballotin holds roughly 15 chocolates, 500g around 30, and so on. Larger sizes have two layers separated by a card divider.
-   **Eat within 3–4 weeks.** Leonidas chocolates contain fresh fillings (especially the Manons) and aren't designed to sit on a shelf for months.
-   **Store cool, not cold.** A cool room is ideal. The fridge can dull the flavour and cause sugar bloom on the surface.
-   **Keep the ribbon on until you're ready to serve.** It keeps the flaps tight and the chocolates from shifting.

## Choosing the right ballotin

At Leonidas Brighton, we carry the full Belgian ballotin range — from a quick 250g treat to a 1.5kg centrepiece for weddings and large gifts. A few starting points, depending on who you're buying for:

-   **For a classic gift:** the **[Blissful Ballotin (Choose Your Selection)](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk/products/leonidas-ballotin-chocolate-box)** lets you pick milk-only, dark-only, white-only or a mix — the traditional way to buy a Belgian ballotin.
-   **For Manon lovers:** the **[Manon White & Hazelnut Ballotin](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk/products/leonidas-manon-ballotin-box-by-weight)** is built entirely around Leonidas' signature white chocolate praline.
-   **For a tour of the Manon family:** the **[Manon Mix Ballotin](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk/products/leonidas-manon-mix-ballotin-box-by-weight-fresh-butter-cream)** brings together the white, milk and dark coffee Manons in one box.
-   **For premium gifting:** the **[Heritage Gift Box](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk/collections/heritage-gift-boxes/products/leonidas-heritage-box-32-chocolates)** is our ribboned, two-layer take on the traditional ballotin — ideal for weddings, anniversaries and corporate thank-yous.

For larger ballotins for events or corporate orders, please get in touch directly and we'll build a custom selection for you.

## Frequently Asked Questions

**What does the word "ballotin" mean?** The word comes from the French _ballot_, meaning "small package of goods". It refers specifically to the folded cardboard chocolate box invented in Belgium in 1915.

**Who invented the ballotin?** The ballotin was designed by Louise Agostini, wife of Jean Neuhaus II, in 1915, shortly after he created the modern Belgian praline in 1912.

**Why don't Belgian chocolatiers use plastic or glued boxes?** A traditional ballotin is folded from a single piece of cardboard, so no glue touches the chocolates, and the tapered shape lets each praline sit without being crushed.

**How many chocolates fit in a ballotin?** As a rough guide: 250g holds around 15 chocolates, 500g around 30, 750g around 45 and 1kg around 60. Manons and other larger pralines take up more space, so counts can vary slightly.

**Where can I buy a Belgian ballotin in the UK?** You can buy a freshly filled Leonidas ballotin in person at our Brighton shop or order online for UK-wide delivery at [leonidasbrighton.co.uk](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk).

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> Source: [Leonidas Brighton](https://leonidasbrighton.co.uk/blogs/news/what-is-a-ballotin)
