Commander deck boxes with room for dice

Three deck boxes in our data are actually built with room for dice, not just a deep card compartment you're hoping has slack. The Ultra Pro Satin Tower has a documented dice compartment built into its base. The Dragon Shield Double Shell is built explicitly for a full double-sleeved deck plus tokens and dice. Ultimate Guard's "Flip'n'Tray" and "Boulder'n'Tray" boxes add a visibly taller body over their plain siblings, the extra height being a fold-out tray, though we don't have exact tray dimensions to hand you.
Boxes with a documented dice compartment
Ultra Pro Satin Tower Deck Box. This is the long-standing community default for double-sleeved Commander decks, and part of the reason is the base: it includes a small dice compartment separate from the 76mm card compartment. It holds 100 single-sleeved or 100 double-sleeved cards, and the card compartment alone clears even a thick Dragon Shield Matte stack with room left over.
Dragon Shield Double Shell. The roomiest card compartment in our records at 90mm, and Dragon Shield built it specifically with tokens and dice riding alongside the deck, not just a deeper box for cards. If your Commander deck runs a lot of counters, this is the one built with that in mind from the start.
The "n'Tray" line: taller for a reason
Ultimate Guard sells a plain Boulder 100+ and a Boulder'n'Tray 100+ side by side, and both are rated for the same 100 double-sleeved, 120 single-sleeved, 210 unsleeved capacity. The difference is height: the plain Boulder 100+ stands 98.5mm tall, and the Boulder'n'Tray 100+ stands 136mm tall, a 37.5mm jump with the same footprint otherwise. That extra height is the fold-out tray, an attachment for dice and tokens sitting above the card compartment rather than a bigger card compartment.
The Flip'n'Tray 100+ XenoSkin follows the same pattern. Its card compartment measures 81mm interior, already generous for 100 double-sleeved cards, and the exterior stands 158mm tall against a card-only box of similar footprint at closer to 100mm. Again, that gap is the tray, not extra card room.
Where our data goes quiet
We can tell you the card compartment depth for the Satin Tower, the Double Shell, and the Flip'n'Tray 100+. We cannot tell you how many dice or tokens actually fit in any of these trays, how deep the tray compartments run, or whether a full set of Commander counters plus a d20 crowds them. The naming and the exterior height comparisons are real and documented; the tray's own interior capacity just isn't something we've measured. If dice capacity is the deciding factor for you and not just "does a compartment exist," that's a question worth checking against the actual product before buying, not something we'll guess at here. Whatever you land on, confirm the card compartment itself clears your exact sleeve combo with the fit checker first; a dice tray is a nice extra, not a substitute for a deck that actually fits.
| Box | Card capacity | Card compartment depth | What we know about dice room |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ultra Pro Satin Tower Deck Box | 100 single or 100 double-sleeved | 76mm | Documented dice compartment in the base |
| Dragon Shield Double Shell | 100 double-sleeved | 90mm | Built explicitly for tokens and dice alongside the deck |
| Ultimate Guard Boulder'n'Tray 100+ | 100 double; 120 single; 210 unsleeved | not listed | 37.5mm taller than the plain Boulder 100+, the gap being the tray |
| Ultimate Guard Flip'n'Tray 100+ XenoSkin | 100 double; 120 single | 81mm | Roughly 50-60mm taller than a comparable card-only box, the gap being the tray |
Quick answers
Does "Flip'n'Tray" always mean a real dice tray? The name and the height difference say yes, there's a separate compartment. We just don't have the tray's own dimensions in our records, so we can't promise it fits a specific dice set or counter collection.
What if I only want the extra tray, not extra card room? Compare the plain and tray versions of the same line, like the Boulder 100+ against the Boulder'n'Tray 100+. They share the same card capacity, so you're paying for the tray specifically, not a bigger deck box.
Which one would we actually buy? The Satin Tower if you want the best-documented all-around Commander pick with a dice spot included. The Double Shell if you also want the deepest card compartment on the market, in case your sleeve combo runs unusually thick.
A box that holds your deck and loses your dice to the bottom of a bag isn't doing its whole job, and these three are the ones in our data actually built to solve both problems at once, even if one of those two answers is more precisely measured than the other.
Not sure your exact combo fits?
Pick your game, sleeves, and container. The fit checker answers with the millimeters shown.