- Main
- US Container ports
US Container Ports
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CriticalLong BeachLTM Volume9.7 MCapacity10.0 MUtilization97.4%Yoy Growt:-5.7%
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CriticalLos AngelesLTM Volume9.0 MCapacity2.4 MUtilization378.0%Yoy Growt:-4.6%
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CriticalNew JerseyLTM Volume9.0 MCapacity9.2 MUtilization97.8%Yoy Growt:+4.0%
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HighSavannahLTM Volume5.3 MCapacity6.5 MUtilization82.2%Yoy Growt:-7.0%
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CriticalHoustonLTM Volume4.4 MCapacity4.5 MUtilization98.7%Yoy Growt:+18.0%
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OptimalVirginiaLTM Volume3.1 MCapacity4.0 MUtilization76.4%Yoy Growt:+5.8%
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OptimalTacomaLTM Volume2.5 MCapacity4.6 MUtilization54.2%Yoy Growt:-19.4%
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OptimalCharlestonLTM Volume1.7 MCapacity3.2 MUtilization52.1%Yoy Growt:-9.0%
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OptimalOaklandLTM Volume1.6 MCapacity2.8 MUtilization55.8%Yoy Growt:-5.5%
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OptimalJacksonvilleLTM Volume1.5 MCapacity2.2 MUtilization69.2%Yoy Growt:+14.0%
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OptimalPort EvergladesLTM Volume1.1 MCapacity1.6 MUtilization70.0%Yoy Growt:+7.6%
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OptimalMiamiLTM Volume1.1 MCapacity1.5 MUtilization72.0%Yoy Growt:+2.4%
What This Reveals:
Current wait times at LA/Long Beach, Houston, Newark, Seattle Port efficiency trends (improving or worsening) Alternative port opportunities with lower congestion Seasonal bottleneck patterns
Strategic Business
Applications:
Route Optimization:
Ship to Oakland instead of LA when congestion differs by 5+ days
Customer Communications:
Proactively inform buyers about realistic delivery windows
Cost Forecasting:
High congestion = higher detention/demurrage fees to budget
Shipment Timing:
Accelerate orders when ports are clear, delay when backed up
Money-Saving Insight:
Port congestion above 80% typically adds 7-14 days transit time and increases last-mile costs by 15-25%. Switching to alternate ports during peak congestion can save thousands per container.