Export Drayage at PortMiami: ERD, Cutoffs, and Getting Your Container on the Vessel

Exporting through PortMiami? Understand ERD, cargo cutoffs, and how to time export drayage so your container makes the vessel without extra fees.

Export Drayage at PortMiami: ERD, Cutoffs, and Getting Your Container on the Vessel

Import drayage gets most of the attention, but exporters face their own timing puzzle — one with a window that closes on both ends. Deliver a container to the terminal too early and it may be refused or charged storage; too late and it misses the vessel entirely. Understanding two dates, the ERD and the cutoff, is what keeps export loads moving through PortMiami and Port Everglades.

The export window: ERD to cutoff

Earliest Return Date (ERD)

The ERD is the first day the terminal will accept your loaded export container for a given vessel. Terminals don’t want export boxes sitting on their lot for two weeks, so they open receiving only a few days before sailing. Deliver before the ERD and your driver may be turned away — a wasted trip you’ll pay for.

Cargo cutoff

The cutoff is the last moment the terminal accepts the container for that sailing. There are usually several: a cargo cutoff, a documentation cutoff, and for reefers and hazmat, earlier specialized cutoffs. Miss any of them and your container “rolls” to the next vessel, disrupting delivery commitments and sometimes triggering storage or re-booking fees.

Why the window keeps moving

ERDs and cutoffs shift when vessels run late, and they shift often. A booking made two weeks ago may have a different receiving window today. Exporters who treat the original booking confirmation as gospel are the ones who show up on the wrong day. Your drayage carrier should be re-checking the terminal’s receiving schedule the day before every planned ingate.

A clean export drayage sequence

  • Book the empty pickup — the ocean carrier assigns a depot or terminal for the empty container; your drayage carrier pulls it and delivers it to your facility for loading.
  • Load and secure — weigh the cargo (you’ll need a verified gross mass, or VGM, under the SOLAS rule), seal the container, and record the seal number.
  • Time the ingate — deliver to the terminal inside the ERD-to-cutoff window, with documentation filed and the booking active.
  • Confirm the ingate receipt — the gate transaction is your proof the container made it; keep it with the shipment file.

Where a local yard changes export math

The ERD window creates a staging problem: your cargo is ready on Monday, but the terminal won’t take the container until Thursday. Rather than leaving a loaded box on a chassis at your dock — burning chassis rental and tying up your yard — a container can be loaded on your schedule and staged at our secure Miami yard minutes from both ports, then ingated the moment receiving opens. For cargo that arrives loose, our container freight station can stuff the container on site. That flexibility is the practical difference between an asset-based carrier and a dispatch service — and it’s all visible in real time through our shipment tracker.

Export-specific pitfalls to avoid

  • Booking rolls without notice — confirm the vessel and window 48 hours before ingate.
  • VGM missing at the gate — no verified weight, no ingate. File it early.
  • Hazmat cutoffs — dangerous goods often close a full day earlier than general cargo.
  • Reefer plug availability — refrigerated exports need a plug reservation and a pre-trip inspection on the container.
  • Wrong empty — inspect the empty at pickup; a damaged or dirty container refused at loading wastes the whole cycle.

Frequently asked questions

What happens if my container misses the cutoff?

It rolls to the next sailing, which may be days or a week later. You may owe re-booking fees, extra chassis days, and storage. If a roll is unavoidable, get the box to a yard rather than paying terminal storage while it waits.

Can I deliver an export container before the ERD?

Generally no — terminals refuse early containers or charge storage from day one. Stage the loaded container at an off-dock yard and ingate when the window opens.

Who provides the VGM?

The shipper is responsible for the verified gross mass. Certified scales at loading, or weighing during drayage, both work — build it into the plan rather than discovering the requirement at the gate.

Moving exports through South Florida? Get an export drayage quote and we’ll manage the window for you.

Off-Dock Container Storage in Miami: When a Yard Beats the Terminal
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