Air vs Ocean Freight From Miami to Latin America: 2026 Guide
Miami is the U.S. gateway to Latin America for both air and ocean freight, so the real question for shippers isn’t where to route โ it’s which mode. The short answer: air wins on speed and reliability for high-value or urgent cargo; ocean wins on cost for everything dense, heavy, or planned. Here is how to decide lane by lane in 2026.
Transit time: days vs. weeks
Air freight from MIA reaches most Latin American capitals in 1โ3 days door-to-airport, with daily frequencies to hubs like Bogotรก, Lima, Santiago, and Sรฃo Paulo. Ocean transit from PortMiami or Port Everglades runs roughly 2โ4 days to the Caribbean basin, 5โ10 days to Central America and Colombia, and 2โ4 weeks to the Southern Cone โ before adding consolidation cutoffs and destination clearance.
Cost: the 5โ10x rule
As a working rule, air freight costs several times more per kilogram than ocean per the same weight. Air is billed on chargeable weight (the greater of actual or volumetric), so light, bulky cargo gets penalized. Ocean LCL is billed by cubic meter and FCL by container, so dense palletized freight rides cheapest by sea. Between them sits a hybrid many Miami forwarders quote: ocean to Miami plus air for the final urgent leg, or vice versa.
When air freight is the right call
Choose air for perishables and pharma, electronics and high-value goods where inventory carrying cost outweighs freight, urgent production parts, and launch or replenishment deadlines. MIA’s density of Latin American freighter capacity keeps rates more competitive than most U.S. gateways โ though recovery from the aprons needs discipline, as covered in our MIA air cargo recovery guide.
When ocean freight wins
Choose ocean for furniture, machinery, construction materials, retail replenishment on predictable cycles, and any dense cargo over roughly 500 kg where speed isn’t critical. Small shipments to the islands and Central America ride affordably via consolidation โ see our guide to Caribbean groupage from Miami.
Reliability and risk
Air offers tighter schedule integrity and fewer handling touches; ocean carries more variability from port congestion, weather, and rollings. Whichever mode you choose, a Miami-based freight forwarder managing pickup, export docs, and booking under one roof removes the most common failure point: hand-offs between vendors.
Frequently asked questions
How much cheaper is ocean freight than air to Latin America?
Per unit of weight, ocean typically runs a fraction of air cost โ often 20% or less for dense cargo. For light, voluminous freight the gap narrows because air charges volumetric weight.
What’s the fastest ocean transit from Miami to Latin America?
Nearby lanes are quick: 2โ3 days to Jamaica or the Dominican Republic and about 5โ7 days to Caribbean Colombia and much of Central America on direct services.
Can I split a shipment between air and ocean?
Yes โ a common tactic sends a launch quantity by air and the balance by ocean. Forwarders quote this as a split routing on one file so documentation stays coordinated.
Deciding between air and ocean? Go Freight quotes both modes from Miami to Latin America on one file. Get a quote or call (786) 445-0150.
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