More than 90% of global trade moves by sea. At International Shipping Commerce, ocean transport isn't just a service — it's our foundation. Whether you're shipping a single pallet or hundreds of containers, we deliver flexible, transparent, and dependable ocean freight solutions to and from any major port worldwide.
| Challenge | Our Solution |
|---|---|
| Volatile freight rates | Long-term carrier contracts with locked-in pricing for loyal clients |
| Port congestion | Real-time intelligence and alternative routings (e.g., divert to less crowded ports) |
| Missing documentation | 24-hour document audit before vessel departure |
| Demurrage & detention fees | Proactive alerts and container tracking to return empties on time |
| Cargo damage | Container sealing, GPS shock sensors, and insurance options |
We don't just book your container. We manage your ocean shipment from booking to delivery.
Best for: Large shipments that fill most or all of a standard container.
How it works:
You rent an entire container exclusively for your cargo
Load at your warehouse or our origin depot
Container sealed and tracked as a single unit
Unloaded at destination
Advantages:
Lower cost per unit for high-volume cargo
Faster port handling (containers move as a unit)
Reduced risk of damage or loss
Direct door-to-door or port-to-port options
Container sizes:
| Container Type | Internal Dimensions (L x W x H) | Max Payload | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20ft Standard | 5.9m x 2.35m x 2.39m (19'4" x 7'9" x 7'10") | 28,000 kg (61,700 lbs) | Heavy, dense cargo (machinery, pallets, drums) |
| 40ft Standard | 12.03m x 2.35m x 2.39m (39'6" x 7'9" x 7'10") | 26,000 kg (57,300 lbs) | Volumetric cargo (furniture, e-commerce, retail) |
| 40ft High Cube | 12.03m x 2.35m x 2.69m (39'6" x 7'9" x 8'10") | 26,000 kg (57,300 lbs) | Tall or light cargo (mattresses, machinery with height) |
| 45ft High Cube | 13.56m x 2.35m x 2.69m (44'6" x 7'9" x 8'10") | 25,000 kg (55,100 lbs) | Maximum volume (limited carrier availability) |
Transit time (example routes):
China (Shanghai) → USA (Los Angeles): 18–22 days
Vietnam (Ho Chi Minh) → Europe (Rotterdam): 30–38 days
USA (New York) → UK (Southampton): 12–16 days
India (Mumbai) → UAE (Jebel Ali): 8–12 days
Best for: Shipments under 15 cubic meters (CBM) that don't require a full container.
How it works:
Your cargo shares container space with other shippers' goods
Consolidated at origin CFS (Container Freight Station)
Deconsolidated at destination CFS
You pay only for the volume you use
Advantages:
Lower cost for small shipments
Flexible for samples, small orders, or testing new markets
No minimum volume requirement (as low as 1 CBM)
Disadvantages:
Slower transit (extra handling at CFS on both ends)
Higher risk of damage (multiple loading/unloading events)
Higher cost per CBM than FCL for shipments over 15 CBM
LCL pricing factors:
Chargeable weight (actual weight vs. dimensional weight — whichever is higher)
Origin CFS handling fees
Destination CFS deconsolidation fees
Bill of Lading issuance fee
When to choose LCL: Shipments under 10 pallets or 15 CBM. Above that, FCL becomes cheaper and safer.
Transit time: Similar to FCL plus 3–7 days for consolidation/deconsolidation at both ends.
Best for: Temperature-sensitive cargo requiring consistent temperature control throughout transit.
How it works:
Specialized containers with built-in refrigeration units
Plugged into vessel power (or generator on chassis for trucking)
Real-time temperature monitoring with data loggers
Alerts for any deviation from set range
Common temperature ranges:
| Cargo Type | Temperature Range | Humidity Control? |
|---|---|---|
| Fresh produce (bananas, avocados, berries) | +2°C to +13°C (36°F–55°F) | Yes (ventilation) |
| Frozen meat, seafood, ice cream | -18°C to -20°C (0°F to -4°F) | No |
| Dairy (cheese, butter, yogurt) | +2°C to +8°C (36°F–46°F) | No |
| Pharmaceuticals (vaccines, insulin) | +2°C to +8°C (36°F–46°F) | Yes (tight tolerance ±1°C) |
| Flowers & plants | +1°C to +4°C (34°F–39°F) | Yes (high humidity) |
| Wine & beverages | +10°C to +18°C (50°F–64°F) | No (avoid vibration) |
| Chocolate | +12°C to +18°C (54°F–64°F) | Yes (dry) |
Our reefer capabilities:
20ft and 40ft reefers available from all major ports
Pre-trip inspection (PTI) reports provided before loading
Backup generator rental for inland moves (where vessel power unavailable)
GDP-compliant handling for pharmaceuticals
Transit time: Same as standard FCL + 1–2 days for PTI at origin.
Cost premium: Reefer containers cost 30–50% more than dry containers due to equipment costs and power fees.
Best for: Oversized, heavy, or oddly shaped cargo that doesn't fit in a standard container.
Open Top Container:
Removable soft or hard top (canvas or steel)
Loaded via crane from above
Ideal for cargo that exceeds height limits of standard containers (e.g., machinery, timber, large pipes)
Flat Rack Container:
No sides or roof — just a flat platform with collapsible ends
Loaded from above, sides, or ends
Ideal for very wide, tall, or long cargo (e.g., turbines, vehicles, rebar)
Common uses:
Industrial machinery and presses
Construction equipment (excavators, bulldozers without tracks)
Large pipes, beams, and structural steel
Boats and small vessels (up to 40ft)
Heavy vehicles (forklifts, tractors)
Securing methods: Chains, nylon straps, steel lashings, wooden blocking and bracing — all inspected and certified by cargo surveyors.
Transit time: Same as standard FCL + 2–5 days for special equipment availability.
Cost premium: 20–40% above standard container rates (plus dunnage and lashing fees).
Best for: Project cargo, industrial equipment, or raw materials that cannot fit in any container — even on flat racks.
How it works:
Cargo loaded individually into vessel holds (not in containers)
Secured directly to the ship's structure
Commonly used for heavy-lift vessels with onboard cranes
Examples of breakbulk cargo:
Transformers and generators (100+ tons)
Wind turbine blades, towers, and nacelles
Locomotives and rail cars
Large industrial boilers and pressure vessels
Steel coils, plates, and rods (too heavy for containers)
Equipment used:
Conventional vessels with onboard cranes (up to 500 tons lifting capacity)
Heavy-lift vessels with 1,000+ ton cranes
Barges for river or shallow-draft ports
Transit time: Variable (15–60 days) — depends on vessel scheduling and port berthing windows.
Cost: High — but necessary for cargo that cannot be containerized. Quoted per piece, not per container.
Best for: Complex, multi-piece, high-value industrial projects requiring engineering, route surveys, and coordinated logistics.
Examples:
Building an entire factory overseas (all machinery, piping, electrical equipment)
Constructing a solar farm (thousands of panels, racks, inverters)
Mining equipment for remote sites (crushers, conveyors, haul trucks)
Oil & gas modules (wellheads, separators, compressors)
Our project cargo services include:
Route surveys (road, port, and site access)
Heavy-lift engineering (crane selection, sling angles, center of gravity calculations)
Port coordination (reserved berth windows, special equipment)
Customs compliance for project-specific temporary imports (ATA Carnets, temporary import bonds)
On-site delivery and positioning (final placement at your facility)
Lead time: 3–12 months from initial consultation to delivery (varies by complexity).
Cost: Six to seven figures for large projects. We provide phased budgeting and milestone billing.
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time (FCL) | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai, Ningbo, Shenzhen, Hong Kong | Los Angeles, Long Beach, Oakland | 18–25 days | MSC, Maersk, COSCO, ONE |
| Shanghai, Ningbo, Qingdao | Seattle, Tacoma, Vancouver (BC) | 20–28 days | Hapag-Lloyd, Evergreen, Yang Ming |
| Shanghai, Ningbo, Xiamen | New York, Savannah, Houston (via Panama) | 35–45 days | CMA CGM, ZIM, Wan Hai |
Peak season: August–October (pre-holiday rush). Rates increase 50–100%.
Current trends (2026): West Coast volumes recovering; East Coast remains congested due to Panama Canal draft restrictions.
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles, Long Beach, Seattle | Shanghai, Ningbo, Shenzhen | 20–30 days | MSC, COSCO, Matson |
| Houston, Savannah | Busan, Tokyo, Yokohama | 30–40 days | HMM, ONE, Evergreen |
Typical cargo: Recyclables (waste paper, scrap metal), agricultural products (soybeans, corn), chemicals, timber.
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai, Ningbo, Shenzhen | Rotterdam, Hamburg, Felixstowe, Antwerp | 30–38 days | Maersk, MSC, OOCL, Hapag-Lloyd |
| Singapore, Tanjung Pelepas | Rotterdam, Hamburg | 25–32 days | ONE, Yang Ming, PIL |
Alternative route: Via Suez Canal (standard) or around Cape of Good Hope (avoids Red Sea risks, adds 10–15 days).
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp | Shanghai, Ningbo, Singapore | 28–40 days | MSC, Maersk, CMA CGM |
Typical cargo: Automotive parts, luxury goods, wines, industrial machinery.
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp, Le Havre | New York, Newark, Norfolk | 10–14 days | MSC, Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd |
| Southampton, Liverpool | New York, Baltimore | 12–16 days | CMA CGM, ONE |
| Genoa, Valencia, Barcelona | New York, Savannah | 14–20 days | ZIM, COSCO |
Typical cargo: Wine, spirits, cheese, cosmetics, machinery, pharmaceuticals.
| Origin Ports | Destination Ports | Transit Time | Main Carriers |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York, Norfolk, Savannah | Rotterdam, Hamburg, Antwerp | 10–14 days | Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd |
Typical cargo: Machinery, vehicle parts, plastics, chemicals, forest products.
| Route | Transit Time | Key Ports |
|---|---|---|
| China → Southeast Asia | 5–8 days | Singapore, Port Klang, Laem Chabang, Ho Chi Minh |
| China → India (West Coast) | 12–18 days | Nhava Sheva, Mundra, Chennai |
| China → UAE (Jebel Ali) | 15–22 days | Dubai, Abu Dhabi |
| Southeast Asia → India | 6–12 days | Singapore to Chennai, Mundra |
Ideal for: Electronics, textiles, chemicals, raw materials, finished goods.
| Route | Transit Time | Key Ports |
|---|---|---|
| US East Coast → Brazil | 12–18 days | Santos, Paranaguá, Rio de Janeiro |
| US Gulf → Mexico (East Coast) | 3–7 days | Altamira, Veracruz |
| China → Mexico (West Coast) | 20–28 days | Manzanillo, Lázaro Cárdenas |
| China → Brazil | 35–45 days | Santos, Navegantes, Itajaí |
Growing trade lanes: Mexico is now the largest US trading partner. Increasing direct Asia-Mexico services.
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Request quote with commodity, weight, volume, origin/destination ports |
| 2 | Accept rate and provide shipping instructions (SI) |
| 3 | We book vessel space and confirm sailing date |
| 4 | Receive booking confirmation with container pick-up location (empty depot) |
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 5 | Empty container delivered to your warehouse (or you deliver cargo to CY/CFS) |
| 6 | Load and seal container (witnessed by your staff or our surveyor) |
| 7 | Container returned to port terminal by cut-off date |
| 8 | Submit export customs declaration (EEI in US, export manifest in other countries) |
| 9 | Vessel sails on scheduled date |
| 10 | Bill of Lading (BOL) issued — original or telex release |
Vessel tracked via AIS (Automatic Identification System)
Weekly position updates provided via email or dashboard
Proactive alerts for delays, rerouting, or weather issues
Estimated arrival date (ETA) updated every 72 hours
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 11 | Arrival notice sent to consignee within 24 hours of vessel docking |
| 12 | Submit import customs entry (ISF for US, ENS for EU, etc.) |
| 13 | Pay duties, taxes, and terminal handling charges (THC) |
| 14 | Container released to your customs broker |
| 15 | Arrange drayage (trucking) to your warehouse |
| 16 | Unload and return empty container to designated depot (avoid demurrage!) |
Total end-to-end lead time: Transit time + 10–20 days for export/import handling (varies by port efficiency).
| Document | Purpose | Provided By |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Invoice | Value and description for customs | Shipper |
| Packing List | Weight, dimensions, package count | Shipper |
| Bill of Lading (BOL) | Contract of carriage, title of goods | ISC (carrier) |
| Export Declaration (EEI) | US export statistics | ISC or shipper's broker |
| Import Security Filing (ISF) | US import advance data | Importer or ISC |
| Certificate of Origin | Tariff preference (e.g., USMCA) | Chamber of Commerce or shipper |
| Packing Declaration | Wood packaging compliance (ISPM-15) | Shipper |
| Dangerous Goods Declaration | For hazardous cargo | Shipper (with certified DG signatory) |
| Letter of Credit (L/C) | Payment guarantee (if applicable) | Importer's bank |
Missing one document? We audit 72 hours before vessel departure to flag issues. Do not assume everything is correct — let us check.
| Factor | Impact on Price |
|---|---|
| Route | Transpacific > Transatlantic > Intra-Asia |
| Season | Peak season (Aug–Oct) adds 50–100% |
| Equipment | Reefer (+30–50%), Flat rack (+20–40%) |
| Port pair | Congested ports add surcharges (e.g., LA/LB, Rotterdam) |
| Carrier | Premium carriers (Maersk, MSC) cost more than budget lines (ZIM, Wan Hai) |
| Fuel price | Bunker adjustment factor (BAF) fluctuates monthly |
| Currency | USD/EUR exchange rate affects euro-denominated legs |
Common surcharges:
Peak Season Surcharge (PSS)
Emergency Bunker Surcharge (EBS)
Terminal Handling Charge (THC)
Documentation Fee (Doc Fee)
Sealing Fee
Chassis Fee (US ports only)
Low Sulfur Surcharge (LSS) – IMO 2020 compliance
We show all surcharges upfront in your quote. No "surprise fees" after booking.
Rough estimates for port-to-port, not including inland trucking or customs handling.
| Route | 20ft FCL | 40ft FCL | LCL (per CBM) | Transit Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai → Los Angeles | $1,800–2,500 | $2,500–3,800 | $80–120 | 18–22 days |
| Ningbo → Rotterdam | $2,200–3,200 | $3,500–5,000 | $90–140 | 30–38 days |
| New York → Southampton | $1,500–2,200 | $2,200–3,300 | $60–100 | 12–16 days |
| Hong Kong → Singapore | $500–800 | $800–1,200 | $40–60 | 5–7 days |
| Mumbai → Jebel Ali (UAE) | $700–1,100 | $1,100–1,800 | $50–80 | 8–12 days |
| Santos (Brazil) → Houston | $2,000–3,000 | $3,000–4,500 | $100–160 | 14–20 days |
Over 90% of global trade travels by sea. At International Shipping Commerce, ocean transport is our core expertise. Whether you're shipping a single pallet or hundreds of containers, we deliver reliable, cost-effective, and fully traceable ocean freight solutions to and from every major port worldwide.
With direct carrier contracts, real-time vessel tracking, and a global network of trusted partners, we turn the complexity of ocean shipping into a seamless part of your supply chain.
| Challenge | Our Solution |
|---|---|
| Volatile freight rates | Long-term carrier contracts with locked-in pricing |
| Port congestion | Real-time intelligence and alternative routings |
| Missing documentation | 24-hour document audit before vessel departure |
| Demurrage & detention fees | Proactive alerts to return empty containers on time |
| Cargo damage | GPS shock sensors and full insurance options |
Best for: Large shipments filling a standard container.
Container sizes: 20ft, 40ft, 40ft High Cube, and 45ft.
Advantages: Lower cost per unit, faster port handling, reduced damage risk, door-to-door or port-to-port options.
Transit time (example): Shanghai to Los Angeles – 18–22 days.
Best for: Shipments under 15 cubic meters (CBM).
How it works: Your cargo shares container space with other shippers. You pay only for the volume you use.
Advantages: Cost-effective for small shipments, flexible for samples or test orders. No minimum volume.
Disadvantages: Slower transit due to extra handling at container freight stations.
Best for: Temperature-sensitive cargo including fresh produce, frozen meat, dairy, pharmaceuticals, flowers, and wine.
Temperature ranges: -20°C to +25°C, with real-time monitoring and data loggers.
Cost premium: 30–50% above standard dry containers.
Best for: Oversized, heavy, or oddly shaped cargo — machinery, construction equipment, pipes, boats, and vehicles.
How it works: Open top containers use crane loading from above. Flat racks have no sides or roof for maximum flexibility.
Cost premium: 20–40% above standard container rates.
Best for: Cargo too large for any container — transformers, wind turbine blades, industrial boilers, locomotives.
How it works: Goods loaded individually into vessel holds and secured directly to the ship.
Lead time: 3–12 months for complex projects.
| Trade Lane | Transit Time | Typical Cargo |
|---|---|---|
| Asia → North America | 18–28 days | Electronics, furniture, machinery |
| Asia → Europe | 30–38 days | Textiles, auto parts, consumer goods |
| Europe → North America | 10–16 days | Wine, pharmaceuticals, luxury goods |
| Intra-Asia | 5–12 days | Raw materials, chemicals, electronics |
| North America → Latin America | 12–20 days | Grains, machinery, plastics |
Booking – We secure vessel space and confirm sailing dates
Export – Container loaded, sealed, and returned to port
Ocean Transit – Real-time AIS tracking with weekly updates
Import & Delivery – Customs clearance, drayage, and empty return
Total end-to-end lead time: Transit time plus 10–20 days for export/import handling.
Bill of Lading (BOL)
Commercial invoice and packing list
Export declaration (EEI)
Import security filing (ISF)
Certificate of origin
Dangerous goods declaration (if applicable)
We audit all documents 72 hours before vessel departure — catching errors before they become costly delays.
Whether you need a single LCL shipment or a dedicated vessel for project cargo, International Shipping Commerce delivers reliability, transparency, and fair pricing.
International Shipping Commerce – Your cargo, our ocean.
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