A furniture importer in Atlanta was shipping 14 CBM of dining tables from a factory in Ho Chi Minh City. Their forwarder quoted two options: LCL at $85 per CBM ($1,190 total freight) or a 20ft FCL at $1,800. The importer chose LCL because the total number was lower. What they did not factor in was the $320 CFS handling charge at origin, $280 CFS charge at destination, $150 in document fees for the consolidation, and 6 additional days of transit time while the container waited at the CFS to be filled with other shippers’ cargo. The actual LCL cost was $1,940, more than the FCL quote, and the goods arrived a week later.
Understanding when FCL makes sense versus LCL is one of the most impactful decisions in ocean freight. Choose correctly, and you optimize both cost and transit time. Choose incorrectly, and you either pay a premium for unused container space or pay hidden fees that make LCL more expensive than a full container.
FCL (Full Container Load) is an ocean freight shipping method where the shipper books an entire container exclusively for their cargo. The container is loaded at the shipper’s facility or a designated loading point, sealed, and transported to the consignee without being opened or co loaded with other shippers’ goods during transit.
Key characteristics of FCL:
| Container Type | External Dimensions | Internal Volume | Max Payload |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20ft Standard | 20’ × 8’ × 8’6” | ~33 CBM | ~28,200 kg |
| 40ft Standard | 40’ × 8’ × 8’6” | ~67 CBM | ~28,750 kg |
| 40ft High Cube | 40’ × 8’ × 9’6” | ~76 CBM | ~28,600 kg |
| 45ft High Cube | 45’ × 8’ × 9’6” | ~86 CBM | ~27,600 kg |
For detailed specifications including door openings and internal measurements, see our guide on shipping container dimensions.
The decision between FCL and LCL comes down to volume, cost, speed, and security.
| Factor | FCL (20ft) | LCL (14 CBM) |
|---|---|---|
| Base freight | $1,800 (per container) | $1,190 ($85 × 14 CBM) |
| Origin CFS/handling | $0 (loaded at factory) | $320 |
| Destination CFS/handling | $0 (delivered to warehouse) | $280 |
| Documentation | $75 (single B/L) | $150 (consolidation docs) |
| Transit time addition | 0 days | +3 to 7 days (CFS processing) |
| Total | $1,875 | $1,940 |
| Damage risk | Lower (sealed container) | Higher (multiple handling points) |
FCL rates are quoted per container for a specific port pair and equipment type. The rate includes the ocean transportation from port of loading to port of discharge. Rates vary based on:
In addition to the base rate, FCL shipments incur surcharges:
Negotiate annual contracts. If you ship 50+ FCL containers per year on a trade lane, negotiate an annual service contract with the carrier. Contract rates are typically 15% to 30% below spot rates.
Time your bookings. Where possible, schedule shipments during off peak periods to avoid PSS surcharges.
Optimize container utilization. A 40ft container shipped at 50% capacity means you are paying for 33 CBM of air. Work with your customers to maximize loading efficiency or consider splitting between a 20ft FCL and LCL for the remainder.
The freight forwarder books the container with the ocean carrier, specifying the port pair, equipment type, cargo description, and target sailing date. GoFreight’s ocean export and ocean import modules streamline this booking process by centralizing carrier schedules, rate comparisons, and booking confirmations in a single workflow.
An empty container is picked up from the carrier’s depot or terminal and delivered to the shipper’s loading location (factory, warehouse, or CFS).
The shipper loads the cargo into the container, ensuring proper weight distribution and securing methods. The container is sealed with a numbered security seal. The seal number is recorded on the bill of lading.
The loaded container is trucked to the port of loading and delivered to the carrier’s terminal before the vessel cutoff deadline.
The container is loaded onto the vessel and transported to the destination port. Transit time varies by lane (14 to 35 days for transpacific, 25 to 40 days for Asia to Europe).
At the destination port, the importer or their customs broker files the customs entry and obtains release. For US imports, ISF filing must be submitted at least 24 hours before the vessel departs the foreign port.
Once cleared, the container is picked up from the terminal and delivered to the consignee’s facility for unloading. The empty container is then returned to the carrier’s depot.
1. Overweight containers. Exceeding the container’s maximum payload or the road weight limit results in the shipment being rejected at the terminal. Always verify both the container’s structural limit and the applicable road weight regulations.
2. Improper cargo securing. Cargo that shifts during transit causes damage to the goods and potentially to the container. Use appropriate dunnage, strapping, and blocking to secure cargo within the container.
3. Missing the vessel cutoff. Every carrier has a gate cutoff (typically 1 to 2 days before sailing) and a documentation cutoff. Missing either means your container waits for the next vessel, adding a week or more to transit time.
4. Not managing demurrage and detention free time. Failing to pick up containers within the carrier’s free time window or return empties late results in daily charges that accumulate quickly. Track free time deadlines and coordinate trucking accordingly.
5. Ignoring VGM requirements. SOLAS regulations require a Verified Gross Mass declaration for every packed container before it can be loaded onto a vessel. Submitting an incorrect VGM or missing the VGM submission deadline delays the shipment.
FCL stands for Full Container Load. It is an ocean freight shipping method where a shipper books an entire container exclusively for their cargo. The container is loaded at the shipper’s facility, sealed, and transported to the destination without being opened or shared with other shippers’ cargo. FCL is priced per container regardless of how full it is, making it most cost effective when the shipper has enough cargo to fill 50% or more of the container’s volume or weight capacity.
A standard 20ft container holds approximately 33 CBM (cubic meters) of volume with a maximum payload of about 28,200 kg. A 40ft standard container holds approximately 67 CBM with a maximum payload of about 28,750 kg. A 40ft high cube container provides approximately 76 CBM of volume. In practice, the usable capacity depends on the cargo’s shape, stackability, and whether the shipment is weight limited (heavy goods) or volume limited (light, bulky goods). Most FCL shipments are either weight constrained or volume constrained, rarely both simultaneously.
FCL is typically cheaper than LCL on a per CBM basis when the cargo volume exceeds approximately 12 to 15 CBM, though the exact crossover point varies by trade lane. FCL also avoids the CFS handling charges, consolidation fees, and additional transit time that LCL incurs. For smaller volumes (under 8 to 10 CBM), LCL is usually more cost effective because you only pay for the space your cargo occupies. The total cost comparison should include not just the freight rate but also handling charges, documentation fees, and the value of faster transit time.
Technically, a container booked as FCL belongs to one shipper. However, freight forwarders often consolidate multiple shippers’ cargo into a single container and issue house bills of lading to each shipper. This is buyer’s consolidation (or co loading), and from the carrier’s perspective, the container is still booked as FCL by the forwarder. From each shipper’s perspective, they are shipping LCL. This distinction matters for documentation, customs clearance, and liability.
FCL (Full Container Load) refers to ocean freight where an entire shipping container is booked for one shipper. FTL (Full Truckload) refers to trucking where an entire truck trailer is booked for one shipper. The concepts are analogous but apply to different transport modes. FCL containers are standardized (20ft, 40ft) while FTL trailers vary by type (dry van, flatbed, reefer) and region. Both are distinguished from their partial load equivalents (LCL for ocean, LTL for trucking).