Logistics
Ocean vs. Air for SMB Importers: A Decision Frame
2024-12-05 · 5 min read
Most small and mid-size importers treat ocean versus air as a cost question. It is really a question about what speed is worth to your specific business — and the honest answer changes by product, season, and stage of the product lifecycle.
Start with the raw gap
On major lanes in 2026, air freight runs roughly $2.50 to $6.00 per kilogram for standard service, while ocean full-container rates work out to roughly $0.20 to $0.50 per kilogram equivalent at typical densities, according to rate analyses from ExFreight and Suaid Global — a gap of anywhere from four to fifteen times. Transit tells the opposite story: air moves door-to-door in five to eight days on most international lanes, while trans-Pacific ocean runs 25 to 40 days door-to-door depending on coast.
When air earns its premium
The working rule of thumb, per ExFreight's decision framework, is that air freight becomes economically defensible when the freight cost stays under 10–15% of cargo value. That describes high-margin, time-sensitive categories: apparel launches, beauty, electronics accessories. For a new product launch, air buys something ocean cannot — a four-to-six-week head start on the selling window, faster cash conversion, and the ability to test demand before committing to volume. Miss a seasonal window and the sale is not delayed; it is gone.
When ocean is the obvious default
Predictable inventory turns, replenishment programs, bulky or low-value-density goods, and anything where you can plan lead time into the calendar. Below roughly $10 per kilogram of cargo value, air freight as a share of landed cost simply erodes too much margin.
The Latin America wrinkle
For U.S. buyers, nearshore lanes compress the entire decision. Ocean from Brazil to the U.S. East Coast runs roughly 16 to 22 days door-to-door — half the trans-Pacific timeline — and air from Brazil takes four to six days, per Suaid Global transit data. From Colombia and Central America, ocean transits to Gulf ports are shorter still, and from Mexico, truck and rail replace the question entirely. Nearshoring does not just cut distance; it shrinks the penalty of choosing the cheaper mode.
The underused play: hybrid
Air the launch quantity to prove demand and capture early full-price sales; move replenishment by ocean once cadence is established. Growing brands consistently under-use this because it requires planning two logistics programs instead of one — but it captures most of air's strategic value at a fraction of its cost. Sea-air combinations through hub transshipment offer a middle path as well, cutting pure-ocean transit substantially at roughly 40% less than full air freight, per Suaid Global.
One caution for 2026 planning: mode economics are not static. Red Sea diversions continue to add transit days and cost to some East Coast ocean routings, and peak-season ocean rates are widely forecast to firm in the second half of the year. Whatever frame you build, rerun it quarterly.
The takeaway
The decision, distilled: air is a margin investment in speed; ocean is a margin defense through patience. The best SMB importers are not loyal to either. They match the mode to what each shipment is actually for.
Sources: ExFreight, Suaid Global, FreightAmigo market data.