---
title: "Ocean FCL 101"
description: "Learn what FCL freight is, its different purposes, and an overview of the shipment lifecycle."
language: en
canonical: https://www.flex.thisisbrew.com/flexu/ocean-fcl-101/
lifecycle: live
---

# Ocean FCL 101

## 1. What Is FCL Ocean Freight? (1:39)

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Around 90% of goods imported and exported in the world are shipped in large containers on ocean vessels, and most of those containers are shipped FCL.

FCL stands for Full Container Load. It is a term used for ocean freight shipments in which all goods in a container are owned by one party. In the FCL mode of shipping, cargo is loaded in a container and a single rate is paid for that entire container regardless of how much cargo is actually loaded in.

In the case where cargo is too small to fill a full container, businesses usually look at alternative shipping modes like Less than Container Loads, otherwise known as LCL. In FCL shipping, the most commonly used containers are dry storage containers. And they usually come in the following sizes 20 foot, 40 foot, 40 foot high cube, 45 foot high cube.

Aside from the standard dry container, there are other specialty containers that can be utilized for specific types of cargo, such as refrigerated containers, otherwise known as Reefers, which are used for temperature sensitive cargo like produce; Open-top containers for cargo, which is easily loaded through the door of a container like recycled tires; Tanks, for liquid cargo like chemicals or even wine; Flat Racks, which are used for oversized cargo like factory equipment.

## 2. Why Ship FCL? (2:09)

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PRESENTER: Shipping cargo and containers help shelter goods from the elements. The practice of containerized shipping helps standardize freight shipping by keeping costs relatively low. Containerization has also made it easier to move goods globally in via multiple modes of transportation, whether by steamships, trucks, or even trains. Containers are also uniquely coded, which makes it easier to track the movement of goods from start to finish.

Let's check out some examples of goods that are well-suited for being shipped via FCL.

Bulk non-perishable food stuffs like canned goods are usually low margin and require the lowest cost option for moving. And FCL usually serves as the lowest cost option. Higher margin commodities such as consumer electronics are also well-suited for FCL movement.

Furniture's margin would quickly evaporate if moved by air due to the size and weight of the cargo. Clothing is well-suited when it is being shipped as stock replenishment. Goods with large batch size such as component goods use and manufacturing are also particularly well-suited to being shipped FCL due to the volume agnostic rate structure standard steamship lines employ.

Here are some additional benefits of FCL shipping. FCL offers a reliable schedule but slow overall transit time, especially in comparison to air but usually has the steadiest surface. Faster ocean shipping than LCL since the cargo in an FCL shipment is owned by one party. There is less potential for damage in FCL because there are less hand-offs in the shipment journey.

And in more recent history of ocean shipping, ocean carriers now offer premium services for FCL shipments that may need extra care or expedited transit.

## 3. The FCL Shipment Journey (3:28)

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NARRATOR: Just like when you want to make a dinner reservation, booking cargo on a ship is essentially reserving space for a container on an ocean vessel in advance. At this initial phase of the FCL lifecycle, we should know the following. What commodities being shipped? What container size is needed for the cargo?

How many containers are needed?

Where the cargo will be shipped to and from? And of course, when the cargo will be ready for pickup at the factory? These pieces of information are used to determine which vessel schedule is appropriate to book.

Next, the carrier would determine if there is enough space on the vessel to accept the booking. Assuming there is space available on the vessel, the ocean carrier would then provide a shipping order or booking confirmation back to the freight forwarder who will then provide it to the shipper in order to proceed with moving of the shipment.

The next phase is loading the container in gate end of the container at the terminal before departure from port, trucking becomes a component in this phase. As a trucker is needed to pick up an empty container from the port, then your trucker will transport the empty container from the port to the factory. Once the container is fully loaded at the factory, a trucker then brings up the full container back to the port for the container to gate in, it is then ready to onboard the ocean vessel for departure.

Before the shipment actually depart from the origin port, there is documentation that needs to be validated. During this phase the shipper will typically submit documentation to the freight forwarder about the shipment cargo.

The freight forwarder will use this documentation to clear the export customs, begin the import process with the destination country, drop the House Bill of Lading also known as the HBL, and submit required information to the ocean carrier prior to the deadline listed on the shipping order or booking confirmation.

Once the ocean carrier receives the information from the freight forwarder they will use it to complete customs requirements, manage gate in operations, mitigate the risk of undeclared dangerous goods, and help distribute weight and cargo safety across the ship.

Typically, when the vessel is about a week to a few days out from destination, the ocean carrier will send the forwarder information or documentation required for the forwarder to clear customs, pick the container up from the port, and let them know what they owe the ocean carrier for the services rendered.

Similar to the beginning of the shipment journey, a trucker is involved to help transport the container once it has offloaded from the ship. Before the container is picked up by the trucker, a few items must be cleared for pickup, import customs clearance, freight charges cleared to the ocean carrier, and the trucker must have a delivery order that allows the container to be released to them on behalf of the owner of the goods.

Once everything is cleared, the trucker can now recover the container from the arrival port and bring it to its final destination where it will be unloaded by the customer. When finally unloaded, the trucker will return the empty container back to the port.

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*This is a markdown version of [https://www.flex.thisisbrew.com/flexu/ocean-fcl-101/](https://www.flex.thisisbrew.com/flexu/ocean-fcl-101/) for AI/LLM consumption.*
