Enter Shipping Inputs
Sample Shipping Scenarios
| Route | Carrier / Service | Chargeable Weight | Shipping Subtotal | Duty + Tax | Total Shipping | Landed Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia Pacific → Europe | DHL / Express Air | 2.5 kg | $53.09 | $51.25 | $104.34 | $324.34 |
| North America → Latin America | FedEx / Economy Air | 5.4 kg | $105.67 | $124.50 | $230.17 | $640.17 |
| Europe → Middle East | UPS / Express Air | 1.8 kg | $47.85 | $23.93 | $71.77 | $221.77 |
These rows are illustrative planning examples generated with the same calculator logic.
Formulas Behind the Calculator
Volumetric Weight = (Length × Width × Height) ÷ Volumetric Divisor
Chargeable Weight = max(Actual Weight, Volumetric Weight)
Linehaul = Chargeable Weight × Carrier Base Rate × Zone Multiplier
Fuel = Linehaul × Fuel Surcharge Rate
Insurance = Declared Value × Insurance Rate
Shipping Subtotal = Linehaul + Fuel + Insurance + Optional Fees + Packaging − Discount
Customs Duty = Declared Value × Duty Rate
Import Tax = (Declared Value + Customs Duty + Shipping Subtotal) × Tax Rate
Total Shipping Cost = Shipping Subtotal + Customs Duty + Import Tax
Landed Cost = Declared Goods Value + Total Shipping Cost
How to Use This Calculator
- Select the shipment origin and destination regions.
- Choose a carrier, service level, currency, and unit system.
- Enter actual package weight and package dimensions.
- Add declared goods value, insurance, duty, tax, fuel, and packaging inputs.
- Turn optional service fees on or off for remote delivery, fragile handling, signature, and Saturday delivery.
- Press the calculate button to show the result above the form, review the graph, and export the summary as CSV or PDF.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is chargeable weight?
Chargeable weight is the larger of actual weight and volumetric weight. Carriers use it because shipment space matters as much as physical mass.
2. Why can a light parcel still cost a lot?
A bulky parcel can trigger volumetric billing. Even if the box is light, it still occupies valuable aircraft or vehicle capacity.
3. Are duties and taxes the same everywhere?
No. Import charges vary by country, product category, trade rules, thresholds, and customs methods. Use this calculator for planning, then confirm final rates before shipping.
4. Why include a fuel surcharge?
Many carriers update fuel fees regularly. Including the percentage gives a more realistic estimate than freight alone, especially on longer international routes.
5. What does landed cost mean?
Landed cost combines goods value with shipping, duty, and import tax. It helps ecommerce teams protect margins and price products more accurately.
6. Can I model premium services and economy services?
Yes. The service selector changes the base rate and volumetric divisor, letting you compare faster delivery against cheaper shipping options.
7. Why does one carrier cost more than another?
Carrier pricing differs because of network strength, service guarantees, route coverage, volumetric rules, and how each operator prices surcharges and last-mile handling.
8. How accurate is this calculator?
It is best for budgeting and scenario planning. Final invoices can still differ because of customs classification, negotiated contracts, destination restrictions, and live carrier fees.