1. Choose Your Shipping Method
Your first decision is air, sea FCL, or sea LCL. It hinges on three variables: cargo volume, urgency, and budget. Sea freight is 5–10× cheaper than air but takes 55–70 days door-to-door from China. Air takes 5–9 days but costs substantially more per kilogram.
| Method | Best For | Transit | Typical Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air Freight | Urgent, high-value, light cargo | 5–9 days | Up to 500 kg |
| LCL | Shared container, < 15 CBM | 16–23 days sea + 2 weeks clearance | 1–15 CBM |
| FCL 20' | Heavy cargo, 15–28 CBM | 55–70 days | Up to ~28 CBM / 21 tons |
| FCL 40'/HC | Bulky cargo, 28–67 CBM | 55–70 days | Up to ~67 CBM / 26 tons |
If your cargo is under 2 CBM, consider air. Between 2–15 CBM — LCL is almost always the most economical. Above 15 CBM — run the numbers on FCL 20', because the fixed price per container often beats LCL from that point.
2. Main Chinese Export Ports
Not all Chinese ports are created equal. The port your supplier is closest to affects inland trucking cost, sailing frequency, and transit time. The six ports below handle the majority of cargo shipped to Israel:
- Shanghai (CNSHA) — The world's busiest port. Fastest and most frequent sailings to Israel. Best for suppliers in Jiangsu, Zhejiang, or Shanghai itself.
- Ningbo (CNNGB) — Often bundled with Shanghai. Strong option for cargo from Zhejiang province.
- Yantian / Shenzhen (CNYTN / CNSZX) — South China's export hub. Best for Guangdong suppliers — electronics, textiles, furniture.
- Qingdao (CNTAO) — North China. Industrial machinery, auto parts, steel.
- Xiamen (CNXMN) — Mid-south coast, direct Piraeus routing available.
- Hong Kong (HKHKG) — Premium option; higher costs but faster customs at origin.
3. Transit Times — The Post-Suez Reality
Before the Red Sea / Bab-el-Mandeb disruption, a standard sailing from Shanghai to Ashdod ran around 30 days. Today, with most carriers re-routing around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid the Red Sea threat corridor, transit times have nearly doubled — typical FCL now runs 55–70 days, and LCL 16–23 days port-to-port (because LCL consolidations still mostly route via the Mediterranean). If you are importing from China in 2026, plan lead-times using today's numbers, not the ones you remember from 2022.
Transshipment — not one hub, several
Cargo from China to Israel rarely arrives on a single direct vessel. It is handed off at a transshipment port — and there are several, depending on the carrier, the specific service loop, and available vessel capacity. The most common hubs on China–Israel services are:
- Piraeus (Greece) — The most frequent for Asia-originating cargo, but no longer the default for every service.
- Port Said / East Port Said (Egypt) — Strategic Mediterranean hub at the northern Suez mouth.
- Gioia Tauro (Italy) — Used heavily by MSC and some alliances for Med redistribution.
- Algeciras (Spain) — Common for services re-routed via the Cape of Good Hope.
- Tanger Med (Morocco) — Growing hub for carriers bypassing the Red Sea entirely.
Bottom line: your Bill of Lading might say "via Piraeus" at booking, but the vessel can ultimately be rerouted through any of the above hubs. This is normal in the current environment and not a red flag — but it does affect transit time.
Current port-to-port transit times
The table below reflects today's typical transit times, already accounting for Cape re-routing where relevant. Add 7–14 days for customs clearance and last-mile delivery within Israel.
| Origin Port | LCL (current) | FCL (current) |
|---|---|---|
| Shanghai | 16–20 d | 60–68 d |
| Ningbo | 18–22 d | 60–66 d |
| Shenzhen / Yantian | 18–22 d | 55–62 d |
| Qingdao | ~20 d | 62–68 d |
| Xiamen | ~20 d | 60–66 d |
| Hong Kong | ~18 d | 58–62 d |
4. How China–Israel Freight Pricing Works
Freight rates on the China–Israel lane are not a fixed list — they move every 1–2 weeks based on vessel capacity, fuel prices, seasonality, and Suez-region stability. Understanding the structure of the price is more durable knowledge than memorising a specific number.
How LCL (partial shipment) is priced
LCL is priced by W/M — Weight or Measurement. The formula is: W/M = max(weight in metric tons, volume in CBM, 1). You pay a per-W/M rate × the W/M of your cargo. Example: a shipment of 500 kg + 2 CBM has a W/M of 2 (because 2 CBM is greater than 0.5 tons) — so you pay 2 × the rate per W/M. The minimum is 1 W/M.
How FCL (full container) is priced
FCL is priced per container, not by weight or volume. A 20' Dry Van and a 40' High Cube each have a flat sea-freight rate for a given lane. Container rates are roughly 1.4× higher for a 40' vs. a 20', which is why 40' HC is usually the better value if your cargo fits.
Why you should not trust static price lists online
Any freight rate you find on a static webpage is out-of-date the moment it is published. Carriers like ZIM, OOCL, MSC, and CMA CGM publish validity windows of 14–30 days. Post–Red-Sea disruptions and Chinese New Year capacity shifts can swing rates by 20–40% within weeks. The only reliable way to get a current rate is a live quote against today's carrier tariffs.
Our instant quote tool pulls live LCL and FCL rates from multiple carriers and shows you total-landed-cost for any Chinese port — including local charges, in about a minute. It's free and there's no commitment.
5. Local Charges at Ashdod — What to Expect
Sea freight is not the full price. Every container or LCL shipment landing at Ashdod incurs local charges — fees paid to the port, the destination agent, and the carrier once the cargo arrives in Israel. These are separate from the ocean freight and separate from customs duty. Many first-time importers see the sea freight quote and are blindsided by the rest.
The specific amounts vary by carrier (ZIM, OOCL, MSC, CMA CGM all have different tariffs), by shipment type (LCL is charged per W/M, FCL per container), and by cargo characteristics (heavy cargo, reefer, and dangerous goods trigger additional surcharges). Here are the types of charges you will see on your invoice.
Charges on every shipment
- THC (Terminal Handling Charge) — Port of Ashdod fee for loading/unloading your container or cargo from the vessel. Charged per W/M on LCL, per container on FCL.
- ISPS — International Ship & Port Facility Security charge. Small per-W/M or per-container fee.
- EBS / BAF (Bunker/Emergency Fuel Surcharge) — Fuel adjustment billed by the carrier. Fluctuates with oil prices.
- Computerization / Documentation — Fixed fee for manifest filing and customs-electronic declarations.
- WRP / WAR Risk Surcharge — War-risk premium added by carriers serving Israel; varies by route and risk rating.
- D/O (Delivery Order) Fee — Fixed fee (usually in NIS) per Bill of Lading for releasing cargo to you.
- Agent / Collection Fee — Percentage of freight (typical industry range: 0.6–1% with a minimum) charged by the destination agent for handling.
- Communication — Small fixed NIS fee for telex release and B/L correspondence.
Cargo terminal charges (Ashdod)
After your cargo is discharged from the vessel, it does not go directly to you — it first moves to a cargo terminal (מסוף מטענים), a bonded facility where customs inspection, clearance, and final release happen. The terminal is a third party — independent of the port and the shipping line — and it charges its own fees. Most importers don't realise these exist until they see the invoice.
How terminal costs are calculated — they are not a single flat rate. The final invoice depends on:
- Shipment type — regular vs. hazmat — Dangerous-goods cargo (UN-classified) is handled in segregated zones with additional safety procedures, and the surcharge on hazmat handling is significant.
- Volume (CBM) — Most terminals charge per CBM on LCL and per container on FCL.
- Weight — Above certain thresholds, heavy-weight handling adds to the charge.
- Number of pallets — Per-pallet handling fees on LCL (palletised cargo is handled separately from loose cartons).
- Storage / demurrage days — Terminals allow a free storage period (typically 5–7 days). Beyond that, daily charges kick in and can add up fast if clearance is delayed.
- Special handling (forklift / re-palletising / inspection opens) — Extra labour, forklift time, and any physical inspection opened by customs are all separately billable.
Because so many variables feed into the terminal bill, it is the component most prone to surprise charges. A good forwarder prices this accurately up-front rather than bundling it into a vague line item.
Conditional surcharges (FCL only)
- Heavy Cargo Surcharge (CWC / CWX) — Carriers add a surcharge per 20' TEU when cargo weight exceeds industry thresholds (commonly 18t and 24t tiers). Charged by the carrier, not the forwarder.
- Special Equipment Handling — Reefer (RF), Open Top (OT), and Flat Rack (FR) containers require extra handling and carry a per-container fee.
- Container Handling at destination — Per-container fee (NIS) at Ashdod for yard handling.
- Bank Transfer Fee — Some carriers add a NIS fee for customers paying in foreign currency without a credit agreement.
Our instant quote page itemises every one of these charges for your specific shipment. No bundled numbers, no surprises on the invoice later.
6. Customs Clearance in Israel
Once your cargo lands at Ashdod, clearance takes 2–10 working days depending on product classification, required permits, and lab testing. You will need:
- Commercial Invoice — from the Chinese supplier, in English, with HS codes
- Packing List — weights, dimensions, number of packages per line item
- Bill of Lading (B/L) — or Sea Waybill — original or telex release
- Certificate of Origin — Form A or China–Israel FTA form if you want preferential duty rates (signed 2023)
- Import License (if required) — for electronics, telecom, food, medical devices, cosmetics
- Standards Institute approval — for products that fall under mandatory Israeli Standards (SII)
The China–Israel Free Trade Agreement (in force since 2023) eliminates or reduces duty on many product categories. Ask your supplier for a China–Israel FTA Certificate of Origin — most don't volunteer it, but nearly all can provide one on request.
7. 7 Mistakes to Avoid
- Accepting EXW blindly — EXW puts origin trucking and export clearance on you. Most importers are better off with FOB or FCA.
- Trusting the CBM the supplier gives you — Always verify before booking. A 20% deviation changes the LCL price materially.
- Missing the heavy cargo thresholds — Cargo above ~18 tons (and again above 24 tons) triggers carrier CWC/CWX surcharges per TEU. Mis-declaring weight to avoid them leads to back-charges and penalties.
- Booking without IMDG for dangerous goods — Lithium batteries, chemicals, cosmetics with alcohol — all need DG declaration and MSDS.
- Ignoring Standards Institute pre-approval — Electronics and telecom without SII approval can be stuck in Ashdod for weeks.
- Ordering before Chinese New Year — Factories close 2–3 weeks in Jan–Feb. Port congestion spikes right before and right after.
- Choosing forwarders purely on sea freight rate — Local charges and customs speed vary 30%+ between forwarders. Total-landed-cost is what matters.
Frequently Asked Questions
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