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Custom Export Crating in Miami: ISPM 15, Heat Treatment, and Saving on Ocean Freight

Custom Export Crating in Miami: ISPM 15, Heat Treatment, and Saving on Ocean Freight

Export crating looks like a commodity service until you ship a high-value machine out of Miami and watch it arrive damaged, rejected at the destination port, or sized into an ocean container that cost twice what it should have. Good crating is a small line item that protects a large one. Here is what South Florida exporters should think about in 2026.

ISPM 15 is non-negotiable

Any wood packaging material used in international shipments has to comply with ISPM 15, the international phytosanitary standard that requires wood to be heat-treated (HT) or, less commonly now, methyl bromide fumigated. Compliant wood carries the IPPC stamp showing the country code, treatment provider code, and treatment method. Shippers using non-compliant wood face cargo rejection at the destination, mandatory re-export, or destruction of the packaging at the shipper’s cost. Every reputable Miami crating shop uses IPPC-marked lumber. Cheap operators sometimes do not. Verify before you ship.

Heat-treated versus kiln-dried

HT and KD are not the same thing. Kiln-dried lumber may have been heated for moisture control, but unless it carries the IPPC stamp confirming it met the ISPM 15 treatment specification, it does not satisfy the regulation. Asking your crating provider for the IPPC-stamped material on every export crate is how you avoid surprises.

Crate engineering saves more than it costs

A crate that is six inches taller than necessary, or four inches wider, can push a shipment into a higher freight class, a larger container, or a different mode altogether. Skilled crating shops measure the actual cargo, design around fragile or off-center weight points, optimize external dimensions for ocean container fit, and add internal bracing only where the load path needs it. The same machine in a poorly designed crate can cost 30 percent more to ship than in a well-designed one.

Specialty crates for the South Florida market

Miami exporters ship a diverse mix: yacht components, industrial equipment, medical devices, art and antiques, trade-show exhibit hardware, and food-grade machinery. Each category has its own crate engineering considerations. Yacht components need extra reinforcement against drop and side-impact. Medical devices often need cleanroom-compatible packing inside the crate. Art needs climate buffering and shock isolation. A crating shop that asks about contents before quoting is a better partner than one that quotes a number off square footage alone.

Crating, packing, and bonded staging together

Many Miami export shipments benefit from staging at a bonded warehouse, where the crate can be built, the cargo loaded inside, and the assembled unit held until the ocean booking is ready. This avoids double-handling at the port and avoids exposing the crated cargo to weather. Pairing crating with bonded storage, transloading, and drayage to the port simplifies the export workflow significantly.

What to ask your crating provider

Four questions sort the strong providers from the rest. Is all wood IPPC-stamped? Will you provide a written crate spec or drawing before building? Do you build to ocean container internal dimensions when relevant? And can you handle pickup, crating, bonded storage, and drayage to the port as a single service?

Need export crating in South Florida? Learn about our packing and crating service or call (786) 445-0150.

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