SPC Flooring Container Cost Explained — How to Calculate Your True Landed Cost Per m²
Landed cost per m² = FOB price + ocean freight ÷ container yield + marine insurance + import duty (on CIF value) + customs clearance + port charges + local delivery. For a 5mm SPC click shipment from Ningbo to Felixstowe, the landed cost is typically 35–50% above the FOB price. The single largest variable is container yield — thinner products load significantly more m² per container, dramatically reducing the freight cost per m². A 2mm Dryback at 6,200 m²/20ft delivers a landed freight cost per m² approximately 2.5× lower than 8mm SPC at 2,200 m²/20ft — before the FOB price difference is even considered.
Step 1 — The Six-Component Landed Cost Formula
Every flooring importer uses the same formula — the difference between profitable and unprofitable procurement is whether they calculate it accurately before placing the order, or discover the real number after the invoice arrives. The six components below are the complete landed cost structure for SPC and LVT flooring imported from China.
Each component has a market-specific value. Ocean freight depends on the port pair and current rates. Import duty depends on the destination market and HS code. Container yield depends on product thickness. The sections below give you the current (April 2026) reference figures for each component across the four primary Ecoflors export markets.
Step 2 — Container Yield by Product Thickness
Container yield is the number of square metres that fit in a standard 20ft general purpose (GP) container, calculated against the maximum payload weight of 25,000 kg. This is the most important variable in landed cost calculation — and the one most commonly overlooked by importers who compare only FOB prices.
SPC flooring is dense. A 5mm SPC plank weighs approximately 8–9 kg/m². A 20ft container can carry approximately 25,000 kg of payload — which means the weight limit, not the volume limit, determines how many m² fit. Consequently, thicker SPC yields fewer m² per container at the same freight cost, producing a higher freight cost per m².
| Product | Thickness | Weight kg/m² | 20ft Yield (m²) | FOB from | Freight cost/m² * | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dryback LVT | 2mm | ~3.2 | ~6,200 m² | US$3.80/m² | ~US$0.24/m² | Highest yield · Residential / LATAM |
| Dryback LVT | 2.5mm | ~4.0 | ~5,100 m² | US$5.10/m² | ~US$0.29/m² | EU commercial · Class 33/42 |
| Dryback LVT | 3mm | ~4.8 | ~4,200 m² | US$5.90/m² | ~US$0.35/m² | NHS Class 44 · Airport |
| SPC Click | 4mm | ~6.4 | 3,049 m² | US$5.42/m² | ~US$0.48/m² | Herringbone / entry residential |
| SPC Click | 5mm | ~8.0 | 2,439 m² | US$6.18/m² | ~US$0.60/m² | UK BTR standard · Most specified |
| SPC Click | 6mm | ~9.6 | 2,023 m² | US$5.98/m² | ~US$0.73/m² | Renovation · Uneven subfloor |
| SPC Click | 7mm | ~11.2 | 1,742 m² | US$7.60/m² | ~US$0.85/m² | EU Class 42/43 · Heavy commercial |
| SPC Click | 8mm | ~12.8 | ~1,560 m² | US$7.80/m² | ~US$0.94/m² | AU NCC F5 acoustic · Class 43 Max |
* Freight cost per m² calculated at US$1,450 per 20ft container (Ningbo → Felixstowe, April 2026 reference rate). Rates vary — use as planning reference only. Container yield data from Ecoflors production records.
For dense products like SPC flooring, the 20ft container almost always delivers better economics than the 40ft or 40HQ. A 40ft container has twice the volume but the same legal weight limit (approximately 26,500 kg payload in most markets). Since SPC is weight-limited, not volume-limited, a 40ft container carries only marginally more m² than two 20ft containers — but at higher base freight cost. Additionally, 20ft containers are less likely to trigger overweight compliance holds at weight-sensitive ports like Port Botany (Australia) and Felixstowe (UK), where axle weight limits on port equipment are strictly enforced.
Step 3 — Ocean Freight Reference Rates (April 2026)
Ocean freight is quoted per container (FCL — Full Container Load) for the main trade lanes from Ningbo or Shanghai. The rates below are indicative reference rates based on the Drewry World Container Index for April 2026. Actual rates from your freight forwarder will vary — always obtain quotes from at least two forwarders before committing to container bookings.
| Origin Port | Destination Port | Market | Transit Days | 20ft FCL (Apr 2026) | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Felixstowe / Southampton | 🇬🇧 UK | 26–30d | ~US$1,350–1,650 | Via Suez · Subject to BAF surcharge |
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Hamburg / Rotterdam | 🇩🇪 EU | 20–25d | ~US$1,300–1,600 | North Europe lane · ETS surcharge applies |
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Port Botany / Melbourne | 🇦🇺 AU | 18–22d | ~US$1,100–1,350 | Direct service · Fuel surcharge variable |
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Long Beach / Los Angeles | 🇺🇸 US West | 14–18d | ~US$1,800–2,200 | Transpacific · BAF + PSS surcharges |
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Savannah / Houston | 🇺🇸 US East/Gulf | 18–22d | ~US$2,400–3,100 | Via Panama or Suez · Higher base rate |
Source: Drewry WCI April 2026 · Freightos Baltic Index (FBX) reference rates. 20ft rates approximately 60–65% of 40ft rates. All rates are port-to-port base freight excluding THC, documentation, and surcharges.
Ocean freight rates in 2026 remain more volatile than pre-2020 baselines. Red Sea routing disruptions continue to affect Asia-Europe lanes, adding €2,000–3,000 per container on affected sailings. The EU Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) adds a carbon surcharge on EU-destined shipments. Furthermore, Australia Post and domestic cartage operators have raised fuel surcharges significantly in Q2 2026. Always obtain current quotes from your freight forwarder — use the figures above for planning only, not for contract pricing.
Step 4 — Import Duty by Market (HS Code 3918.10)
SPC and LVT flooring is classified under HS Code 3918.10 in all major markets. The import duty rate depends on the destination market, the origin country (China in all cases), and whether any additional trade measures apply. Import duty is calculated on the CIF value — the total of goods value + ocean freight + marine insurance — not on the FOB value alone.
Step 5 — Additional Import Costs (Often Overlooked)
Beyond freight and duty, four additional cost items are consistently underestimated by first-time importers — and collectively they add US$0.20–0.45/m² to the landed cost of a 20ft SPC container.
| Cost Item | Typical Range | Per m² (5mm SPC / 2,439 m²) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marine insurance | 0.25–0.35% of cargo value | ~US$0.05/m² | Based on declared CIF value. Minimum premium applies on small shipments. |
| Origin THC + documentation | US$180–280 per container | ~US$0.09/m² | Terminal handling at Ningbo/Shanghai. Sometimes included in freight quote — verify. |
| Customs clearance fee | US$150–350 per container | ~US$0.10/m² | Customs broker fee. Higher for first-time importers or unusual documentation. |
| Destination port charges (THC) | US$200–450 per container | ~US$0.13/m² | Varies by port. Felixstowe higher than Rotterdam. Port Botany has surcharges. |
| Local drayage / final delivery | US$250–600 per container | ~US$0.18/m² | Port to warehouse. Distance and access dependent. Not always quoted by forwarder. |
Step 6 — Three Worked Examples
The Container Yield Advantage — Why Dryback Wins on Landed Cost for Large Volume
The comparison below illustrates why container yield — not FOB price — is the decisive landed cost variable for large-volume commercial procurement. All three products are suitable for Class 33/42 commercial specification. The landed cost difference between them is driven almost entirely by how many m² fit in a container.
For a UK housing association procuring 50,000 m² of Class 33/42 flooring, the choice between 2.5mm Dryback and 5mm SPC click involves not just the FOB price difference but also approximately 10 fewer 20ft containers — a logistics cost saving alone that in many cases exceeds the FOB price differential. Specifically, where floating installation is not required by the project specification and adhesive bond is acceptable, Dryback delivers the lowest landed cost at equivalent EN 685 class for any project volume above 2,000 m².
How to Use the Ecoflors Quote Engine
Ecoflors has a live B2B quote configurator that calculates FOB price and container yield in real time based on your specification inputs — thickness, wear layer, surface texture, edge detail, click patent fee, and colour mix. The configurator outputs the FOB price per m², the 20ft container yield, and the estimated container value. Use it as the starting point for your landed cost calculation, then add the market-specific freight, duty, and additional cost figures from this guide.
The configurator is available on request — contact sales@ecoflors.com or WhatsApp +86 134 8633 9267. Provide your specification and destination market, and we will return a factory-direct FOB quotation with full compliance documentation within one business day.
Frequently Asked Questions
Tell us your specification — thickness, wear layer, surface finish, destination market, and volume. We return FOB pricing, exact container yield for your product, and the complete compliance document package for your destination market within one business day. MOQ 800 sqm per SKU.