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Ask HN: Have you ever freight shipped furniture internationally?

7 点作者 sdedovic将近 2 年前
I have some old family belongings and furniture I would like to ship from central&#x2F;eastern Europe to the States. I have seen a few websites that require contact forms, quotes, consultations, etc. My question is: has anyone had success shipping items like this? How do you find a service? What approximate costs can I expect?<p>I don&#x27;t need speed nor is this a &quot;relocation&quot; type of shipping.

3 条评论

GianFabien将近 2 年前
These days, the unit of shipping is a 20ft container. If you can&#x27;t fill one, then the freight company will need you to crate the furniture and it will be packed in a container with other less than full container shipments.<p>It is a lot of work for all parties involved and that is why even small details matter. In some cases it is cheaper to ship using a complete container, even if you have to fill it with packing material to stop things moving around.<p>My family have moved quite a bit of furniture internationally and considering the costs, insurance, damage, claims, etc. Unless you are talking about very high value antiques it is not worth the time, effort and cost.<p>In my experience people want new, modern looking stuff. A couple of years ago I had to sell beautiful estate furniture which cost tens of thousands to buy. I only got a couple of thousand after a lot of haggling, etc. I didn&#x27;t even recover the shipping costs that my family had paid decades ago.
edent将近 2 年前
I helped my in-laws move furniture across the world.<p>There is a minor chance it will get lost overboard or stuck in a canal. So you should arrange specialist insurance.<p>The reason everyone wants to give you a personal quote is that end users are unreliable. And you don&#x27;t know how things have to be packed. And you don&#x27;t know how much free space there is on an upcoming ship. And you don&#x27;t know how easy your home is to get a shipping container to. And... It goes on.<p>I&#x27;d start by looking at expat forums and seeing if people have decent&#x2F;recent experience with a company.<p>But… unless this stuff is either expensive, irreplaceable, or sentimental - you&#x27;re probably better off selling it locally and buying replacements.
dnh44将近 2 年前
What you need is a freight forwarder. You may not get a particularly good rate or exceptional service for a one time job like this. If you&#x27;ve got any acquaintances that import or export things I would ask them to recommend you a forwarder.<p>In order to give you a quote they will need the weight and dimensions of what you are shipping, the pickup and delivery address, a packing list, and a commercial invoice stating what each item is and what it&#x27;s worth. You&#x27;ve also got to think about how you will load everything. Your options are lifting by hand, using a forklift, or you&#x27;ll need a truck that has a tail-lift. If you&#x27;ve got all this information beforehand it will make things easier.<p>If you&#x27;re putting thing&#x27;s in a crate like another poster suggests then you&#x27;ll have to make sure the crate is heat-treated and has the appropriate stamp on it.<p>We just shipped something at work from the UK to the West Coast of the USA (sea-freight) and it cost about US$1700. It was a crate of about 1 cubic meter and weight about 350kg. This was door-to-port not door-to-door though.