In 2026, international freight costs remain elevated compared to pre-pandemic levels. But businesses that apply systematic cost management strategies consistently outperform those that simply accept whatever rates they are quoted. Here are ten proven approaches that work for businesses of every size.
- Take Control of Your Freight Terms — If buying on CIF or DDP terms, switch to FOB or FCA and appoint your own freight forwarder. Many businesses save 10-20% on freight simply by taking this step.
- Commit to a Preferred Forwarder Programme — Negotiate annual rate agreements based on committed volume. Typical savings range from 15-30% versus spot rates.
- Optimise Your Packaging and Cube Efficiency — Reduce external dimensions to lower volumetric weight for air freight, and improve container cube efficiency for ocean freight.
- Consolidate and Batch Your Shipments — Shipping 20 small orders individually costs far more than consolidating them into one or two larger shipments.
- Plan Around Seasonal Rate Peaks — Freight rates can vary by 40-80% between their lowest and highest seasonal points. Avoid October-November and post-Chinese New Year where possible.
- Use LCL Consolidation Below 12-15 CBM — For smaller shipments, LCL consolidation is nearly always cheaper than booking an FCL container you will only partly fill.
- Evaluate Multimodal and Rail Options — For China-Europe trade, rail freight offers 12-18 day transit at 30-40% lower cost than air freight.
- Negotiate Duty Savings Through Origin Optimisation — Check whether any of your sourcing countries have preferential trade agreements with your destination market.
- Audit Every Invoice — Industry estimates suggest 5-10% of all freight invoices contain at least one error. Implement systematic invoice reconciliation against agreed rate sheets.
- Leverage Digital Freight Marketplaces for Rate Benchmarking — Regularly benchmark your rates against market alternatives. Platforms like CargoLinked make this easy — many businesses discover 10-20% savings opportunities simply through regular benchmarking.