Shared Container Transit Times
Realistic UK shared container transit times to Cyprus, Dubai, Nigeria, Kenya, Australia, USA and more — including consolidation and customs clearance.
Realistic UK shared container transit times to Cyprus, Dubai, Nigeria, Kenya, Australia, USA and more — including consolidation and customs clearance.

Transit time is one of the most common questions shippers ask before booking a shared container. The honest answer is that shared container shipping is slower than FCL because the consolidator waits for the container to fill before sealing it. This guide gives realistic UK port-to-port and door-to-door transit times for every major destination, explains the three factors that affect them, and shows you how to plan around them.
An FCL booking goes straight to the next vessel as soon as it is sealed. A shared container waits at the consolidation depot until it has enough cargo to fill economically — usually 5–10 days from your drop-off. That extra wait is the trade-off for the much lower per-CBM cost.
| Destination | Port-to-port | Add for consolidation + clearance |
|---|---|---|
| Cyprus (Limassol) | 10–14 days | +10–15 days |
| Dubai (Jebel Ali) | 21–28 days | +10–15 days |
| Nigeria (Lagos) | 28–35 days | +10–17 days |
| Ghana (Tema) | 28–32 days | +10–17 days |
| Kenya (Mombasa) | 35–42 days | +10–17 days |
| South Africa (Cape Town / Durban) | 30–38 days | +10–15 days |
| Australia (Sydney / Melbourne) | 45–55 days | +10–17 days |
| New Zealand (Auckland) | 50–60 days | +10–17 days |
| Canada (Toronto / Vancouver) | 18–24 days | +10–15 days |
| USA (New York / Houston / LA) | 14–24 days | +10–15 days |
Port-to-port quotes are the most common. They cover the journey from the UK consolidation depot to the destination CFS. Door-to-door quotes add UK collection and destination delivery — usually 1–3 days at each end. For most expat moves, door-to-door is the simplest option even though it costs slightly more.
A full container is typically 7–14 days faster door-to-door because there is no consolidation wait and customs is handled as a single entry. If transit time is critical, see shared container vs full container for the trade-offs.
Faster transits cost more. Direct sailings (e.g. UK to USA East Coast) are quicker but slightly pricier than transhipment routes (e.g. UK to Australia via Singapore). See the shared container costs guide for current pricing.
Missing or incorrect documentation is the single biggest cause of customs delays at the destination. Make sure your commercial invoice and packing list match exactly. The full checklist is in the shipping documents guide.
Destination customs clearance for groupage cargo is normally 5–7 working days. Some countries (notably West Africa) can run longer if duty payment or inspections are required. The destination agent will keep you updated and request any extra documents needed.
Successful shared container shipping comes down to preparation. The cargo you hand over to the depot is the cargo that arrives at the destination — there is no opportunity to repack mid-voyage. Treat your shipment as if it will be handled six times (truck, forklift, depot crew, container loader, destination CFS, last-mile driver), because in most cases it will be. Use double-walled boxes, fill voids with packing paper or air pillows, and label every carton with your name, destination city and Bill of Lading number once issued.
Book your collection slot at least seven working days before the published sailing date. UK consolidation depots cut off receiving 48–72 hours before a vessel departs, and missing the cut means rolling to the following week. If your shipment includes vehicles, allow extra time for the V5C and export-declaration checks — see our shared car shipping guide and R-Rak vehicle shipping guide for vehicle-specific lead times.
Always insure cargo above £1,000 declared value. Standard carrier liability under the Hague-Visby Rules is capped at roughly £600 per package or 2 SDR per kg — whichever is greater — and that rarely covers the replacement cost of household effects, electronics or vehicles. Full marine all-risks insurance typically costs 1.5–2.5% of declared value and pays out on the invoice value plus 10% (CIF + 10%), which is the maritime industry standard.
Sea freight is a wet, vibrating, high-humidity environment. Container interiors can swing between 20°C and 50°C across a single voyage and condensation ("container rain") is normal. Pack with that in mind — anything that can rust, mould or absorb moisture needs barrier protection.
We see the same handful of preventable mistakes derail otherwise straightforward shared container shipping shipments week after week. Most cost the shipper either time (a missed sailing, a port-storage charge) or money (an uninsured loss, a re-handling fee). The good news: every one of them is avoidable with five minutes of planning.
A realistic timeline for shared container shipping from the UK runs from quote to delivery in three predictable phases: pre-shipment (1–2 weeks), ocean transit (2–9 weeks depending on destination) and destination clearance plus last-mile (1–2 weeks). Skipping any phase compresses risk into the others — most "lost time" complaints we see come from shippers who booked the freight before they had finished packing.
In the pre-shipment phase, finalise your packing list and commercial invoice, complete any HMRC export formalities and confirm the collection address. The freight forwarder needs the final piece-count and dimensions 72 hours before sailing. During ocean transit there is nothing to do beyond tracking — your Bill of Lading is your proof of shipment and your release document at the destination port.
Destination clearance starts the moment the vessel arrives. Most countries allow 3–5 free storage days at the port; after that, demurrage and detention apply. Make sure your consignee is ready with funds for duty and VAT/GST and has the original Bill of Lading (or a Telex Release confirmation) in hand. See the transit time guide for route-specific port-to-port estimates.
My Shared Container is a UK-based shared-container freight specialist operating weekly consolidation services from London, Felixstowe and Southampton to more than 70 destinations worldwide. Every booking includes UK collection, depot handling, ocean freight, destination port handling and document support as standard — there are no hidden line-items on quote day.
Customers choose us for shared container shipping because we publish transparent per-CBM pricing, confirm space within the hour and assign a single point of contact for the entire shipment. Our depot teams are trained in vehicle securing, household-effects packing and palletised consolidation, so the same supplier handles your cargo from arrival to vessel cut-off — there is no hand-off risk between sub-contractors.
Compare us to a typical freight forwarder by reading the shared container shipping cost guide, then run the calculator for your route. If the numbers work, we confirm by email and WhatsApp the same day.
We sail weekly shared containers from UK ports to dozens of destinations worldwide. The most popular routes for transit times are Cyprus, Dubai, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the USA — but we cover more than 70 countries in total.
For destination-specific transit times, ports of arrival and pricing benchmarks see our pages for Cyprus, Dubai, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the USA. The full directory is on our destinations page.
Ready to book? Use the shared container CBM and cost calculator for an instant estimate, then submit your details for a confirmed quote within the hour. You can also message us on WhatsApp at +44 7376 584421 or email info@mysharedcontainer.co.uk.
Need to compare options first? Read the groupage shipping guide, the LCL shipping guide, or browse our full destinations directory to see weekly sailings for shared container shipping.
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