South Florida importers live and die by how fast a container moves from the terminal to the door. Asset-based drayage — where the same company owns the trucks, chassis, and yard space — removes the handoffs that cause delays at PortMiami and Port Everglades. Instead of brokering loads out to third parties, an asset-based 3PL can stage equipment, pull containers on demand, and store freight in a bonded yard until it is ready to ship inland.
That control is exactly what Go Freight brings to the South Florida market: a company-owned fleet, bonded warehousing, and real-time tracking across the entire drayage and transload process. For shippers juggling tight delivery windows, working with an asset-based carrier is the difference between guessing where a container is and knowing.