Container Loading Guide for Terracotta Pots
How to maximize container space, reduce transit damage, and plan lead times for seasonal inventory. Expert guide from a manufacturer shipping 400+ containers annually.
Loading terracotta pots into shipping containers is both an art and a science. Done correctly, you can fit 15–20% more units per container while keeping damage rates below 2%. Done poorly, you waste space and risk shattered pots arriving at your warehouse.
This guide covers everything we've learned from loading 400+ containers to US ports including Long Beach, Savannah, Newark, and Houston.
1. Container Types for Terracotta
| Container Type | Capacity | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20ft Standard | 33 CBM | 3,500–5,000 units | Most economical for trial orders |
| 40ft Standard | 67 CBM | 8,000–12,000 units | Best per-unit shipping cost |
| 40ft High Cube | 76 CBM | 10,000–15,000 units | Extra height for tall planters |
| LCL (Shared) | Per CBM | Sample orders | Higher cost per unit, more handling |
2. Nesting and Stacking Techniques
The key to maximizing container space is nesting — placing smaller pots inside larger ones. This reduces empty air space and protects delicate rims.
Standard Nesting Configurations:
- Conical pots: Nest 3–4 sizes together (e.g., 15cm inside 20cm inside 25cm)
- Cylindrical pots: Stack rim-to-base with cardboard separators
- Large urns: Load individually, wrapped in bubble wrap, secured with straps
- Saucers and trays: Stack flat, use as base layers for stability
💡 Pro Tip
Our export team uses custom Excel calculators to determine optimal nesting combinations for each order. A typical 40ft container with mixed SKUs achieves 85–90% space utilization vs. 70–75% for single-SKU loading.
3. Packaging and Protection
Proper packaging is non-negotiable. Terracotta is brittle, and ocean transit involves vibration, humidity changes, and occasional rough handling.
Pre-Loading Protection Checklist
- Individual wrap for glazed or finished pots (bubble wrap or foam)
- Cardboard corner protectors on rim edges
- Shrink wrap per pallet (5–6 layers for moisture protection)
- Corner boards on pallet edges (prevent strap damage)
- Desiccant packs in containers (absorb moisture during transit)
- Load bars or wooden braces to prevent shifting
Pallet Configuration:
| Pallet Type | Dimensions | Units per Pallet | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Euro | 120×80 cm | 80–120 | Small to medium pots |
| US Standard | 120×100 cm | 100–150 | Medium pots, US warehouse compatibility |
| Oversized | Custom | 1–6 | Large urns and jars |
4. Loading Sequence
Load order matters. Heavier, stable items go first; lighter, fragile items go last.
Recommended Loading Order:
- Base layer: Saucers, trays, and heavy cylindrical pots (creates stable foundation)
- Mid section: Nested conical pots, wrapped and strapped
- Top section: Large individual urns, secured with load bars
- Final securing: Straps, wooden braces, and desiccant placement
⚠️ Critical Warning
Never load glazed pots directly against each other without separators. Vibration during transit causes micro-abrasions that ruin finishes. Always use foam or cardboard between glazed surfaces.
5. Seasonal Planning and Lead Times
Container shipping has seasonal peaks that affect both cost and availability.
| Season | Container Availability | Freight Rates | Planning Advice |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jan–Mar | High | Low | Best time to book for spring inventory |
| Apr–Jun | Medium | Medium | Book 6–8 weeks ahead |
| Jul–Sep | Low | High | Peak season, book 10–12 weeks ahead |
| Oct–Dec | Medium | Medium | Plan for Q1 spring orders |
💡 Cost-Saving Tip
Booking containers during January–March can save 15–25% on ocean freight compared to peak summer rates. For spring retail inventory, place orders by October and ship by January.
6. Damage Prevention and Insurance
Even with perfect loading, transit damage happens. Here's how to minimize risk:
- Container inspection: Check for holes, rust, or door seal issues before loading
- Photo documentation: Photograph each layer during loading for insurance claims
- Cargo insurance: Insure for 110% of CIF value (covers total loss and major damage)
- Moisture control: Desiccant packs prevent mold growth in humid climates
- Weight distribution: Keep container weight balanced to avoid tilt during lifting
Need Help Planning Your Container Load?
Our export team provides free container optimization consulting for orders over 1 container. Get a loading plan, space utilization estimate, and damage prevention protocol.
Request Container Loading Plan