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Why 20ft Containers Beat 40ft for Heavy SPC Flooring Shipments | Ecoflors
Logistics & Procurement · Import Guide · SPC Flooring

Why 20ft Containers Beat 40ft
for Heavy SPC Flooring Shipments

By Ecoflors Export Team · Changzhou, China May 2026 8 min read
Key takeaways for flooring importers
SPC flooring at 7mm–8mm weighs 10–12 kg/m² — making it one of the heaviest flooring products shipped by sea.
A standard 40ft container hits the 28-tonne port weight limit at approximately 2,300–2,500 m² of 7mm SPC — leaving 40% of the container volume empty and wasted.
A 20ft container maxes out at approximately 2,100–2,200 m² of 7mm SPC — close to its payload capacity with no wasted volume.
For thinner products (Dryback LVT 2mm, SPC 5mm), the 40ft container becomes viable again because weight constraints ease significantly.
The wrong container choice can trigger port overweight surcharges of US$800–2,000 per shipment at Rotterdam, Hamburg, and Felixstowe.

The Problem Most Importers Discover Too Late

When a flooring importer books a 40ft container for SPC flooring, the assumption is straightforward: more space means more product per shipment, lower freight cost per m², better margins. This logic works perfectly for lightweight goods — garments, flat-pack furniture, hollow products. For heavy SPC rigid-core flooring, however, the logic breaks down completely, and the discovery usually happens at the port.

The issue is weight, not volume. Specifically, a 40ft standard container has a maximum gross weight limit of 30,480 kg (30 tonnes). Subtract the tare weight of the container itself (approximately 3,800–4,200 kg), and the actual payload limit is around 26,000–27,000 kg. At EU and UK ports, many terminal operators enforce an even stricter limit of 28 tonnes gross for road transport compliance — meaning the effective payload drops to approximately 23,000–24,000 kg once the container tare is subtracted.

Now apply that number to SPC flooring. A 7mm SPC click plank with a 0.5mm wear layer and IXPE underlay weighs approximately 10.5–11.5 kg/m². Divide 23,000 kg by 11 kg/m², and you get approximately 2,090 m². A 40ft container holds roughly 4,500–5,000 m² of 7mm SPC by volume. Consequently, you can only legally load 2,090 m² before hitting the weight limit — leaving more than half the container empty.

“A 40ft container carrying 7mm SPC flooring to Rotterdam is, by weight, half-empty. You are paying for 40 feet of container and using 20.”

The Weight Reality: Product by Product

Not all vinyl flooring is equally heavy. The density of the SPC core — which Ecoflors maintains at 1.95–2.05 g/cm³ per EN ISO 23999 testing — means that thicker SPC planks accumulate weight rapidly. Furthermore, the IXPE or EVA acoustic underlay adds another 0.3–0.5 kg/m² depending on specification.

Weight per m² by product and thickness
Product Thickness Core density Weight / m² 20ft max load 40ft max load (weight-limited)
Dryback LVT 2mm Flexible PVC ~3.0 kg/m² ~7,000 m² ~7,500 m² (volume limited)
Dryback LVT 3mm Flexible PVC ~4.2 kg/m² ~5,200 m² ~5,500 m² (volume limited)
Loose Lay LVT 5mm PVC + fibreglass ~8.5 kg/m² ~2,470 m² ~2,700 m² (weight limited)
SPC Click 5mm 1.95 g/cm³ ~8.8 kg/m² ~2,380 m² ~2,610 m² (weight limited)
SPC Click 6mm 1.95 g/cm³ ~9.8 kg/m² ~2,140 m² ~2,350 m² — 40ft half empty
SPC Click 7mm 2.00 g/cm³ ~11.0 kg/m² ~1,910 m² ~2,090 m² — 40ft over 55% empty
SPC Click 8mm 2.05 g/cm³ ~12.2 kg/m² ~1,720 m² ~1,885 m² — 40ft over 60% empty

The table makes the inflection point clear. For Dryback LVT at 2mm–3mm, the 40ft container is limited by volume — meaning you can fill it to capacity. For SPC 6mm and above, the 40ft container is limited by weight — and you hit the limit with the container still more than half empty.

The Container Math: 20ft vs 40ft Side by Side

Here is the calculation that most importers are not running before they book their shipment. Assume a standard EU-bound order of 7mm SPC click flooring destined for Rotterdam.

40ft Standard Container
2,090 m²
Maximum load at 7mm SPC
Container tare: ~4,000 kg
EU road limit (gross): 28,000 kg
Effective payload: ~24,000 kg
÷ 11 kg/m² (7mm SPC) = 2,182 m²
Container volume used: ~45%
Freight cost per m²: higher
⚠ You are paying for 40ft but using 20ft of space

The 20ft container has a lighter tare weight (approximately 2,200 kg vs 4,000 kg for a 40ft), which means it has a higher effective payload-to-tare ratio for heavy goods. Moreover, the 20ft container’s smaller internal volume means that the weight limit and the volume limit are reached at approximately the same load — there is no wasted space.

Why the 40ft container is not simply “two 20ft containers”

A common assumption is that a 40ft container holds exactly twice what a 20ft holds. For lightweight goods, this is approximately true. For SPC flooring, it is not. The 40ft container has a heavier tare weight, a larger internal volume, but the same EU road weight limit. Consequently, the weight ceiling is reached with far more unused volume in a 40ft than in a 20ft.

Furthermore, at EU ports — particularly Rotterdam and Hamburg — terminal and road transport operators enforce axle weight limits on road vehicles independently of the container gross weight. A 40ft container that is weight-legal at the port gate may still trigger an axle overweight violation on the first Dutch motorway if the load is poorly distributed. A 20ft container on a standard flatbed is inherently better distributed across fewer axles.

Port-Specific Weight Rules Every Importer Needs to Know

Weight limits are not uniform across European ports. Furthermore, the rules differ between port terminal operation and road transport compliance — a container can be legal at the port but illegal on the road that leaves it.

EU and UK port weight limits for road-bound containers — 2026
Port Country Max gross (20ft on truck) Max gross (40ft on truck) Key rule
Rotterdam 🇳🇱 Netherlands 28,000 kg 28,000 kg Axle weight ≤ 10,000 kg per axle on NL roads
Hamburg 🇩🇪 Germany 28,000 kg 28,000 kg StVO §34: 40-tonne total for 5-axle truck, but 28t common for 20ft/40ft single containers
Antwerp 🇧🇪 Belgium 28,000 kg 28,000 kg Belgian road law: max 44 tonnes total vehicle weight with permit
Felixstowe 🇬🇧 United Kingdom 26,000 kg 26,000 kg UK post-Brexit: 44-tonne limit for 6-axle vehicles; 26t effective for standard 40ft delivery
Le Havre 🇫🇷 France 28,000 kg 28,000 kg Code de la Route: 44t total, but 28t effective for single-container delivery
⚠ UK importers: stricter limits apply

At Felixstowe, the effective gross weight limit for a 40ft container on a standard 4-axle vehicle is approximately 26,000 kg — lower than the EU standard. This means the payload for 7mm SPC in a 40ft container entering the UK drops to approximately 1,800–1,900 m² before exceeding road weight limits. The 20ft container becomes even more advantageous for UK-bound SPC shipments as a result.

When the 40ft Container Does Make Sense

The 20ft recommendation is not universal. Specifically, three scenarios favour the 40ft container for flooring shipments.

Scenario 1 — Thin Dryback LVT (2mm–3mm)

At 2mm Dryback LVT weighing approximately 3.0 kg/m², a 40ft container can carry approximately 7,500 m² before hitting the weight limit — and the volume limit is actually reached first. In this case, the 40ft container is fully efficient: both weight and volume are utilised close to capacity. Consequently, Dryback LVT importers generally prefer 40ft containers for large orders where the volume efficiency justifies the higher freight cost.

Scenario 2 — Mixed SKU Orders

When an importer orders multiple SKUs — for example, a mix of 5mm SPC click and 2mm Dryback — the combined weight per m² averages out to something lower than pure 7mm SPC. A 40ft container can work efficiently in this case because the lighter Dryback LVT balances the heavier SPC. Furthermore, the larger internal volume of a 40ft container makes it easier to segregate and load multiple SKUs cleanly.

Scenario 3 — Long-Haul Inland Destinations

For shipments that will travel deep inland after port arrival — for example, from Rotterdam to a warehouse in southern Germany — a single 40ft container can reduce the number of truck trips required for a given quantity. If the importer has a high-cube warehouse that can handle a 40ft delivery directly, consolidating into one container trip can offset the volume inefficiency through lower domestic transport cost.

Ecoflors standard container recommendation by product

For SPC click 5mm and below: 20ft or 40ft containers are both viable — consult with your freight forwarder based on destination port rules. For SPC click 6mm and above: Ecoflors recommends 20ft containers as standard for all EU and UK shipments. For Dryback LVT 2mm–3mm: 40ft containers are preferred for large orders. For mixed SKU orders: calculate blended weight per m² before specifying container size — contact the Ecoflors export team for a pre-order loading plan.

How to Calculate the Right Container
Before You Book

Importers can run this calculation in under five minutes for any SPC or LVT order. Here is the process Ecoflors uses when preparing container loading plans for distributors.

01
Confirm product weight per m²
Request the technical data sheet from your supplier. The weight per m² should be stated — if it is not, ask specifically. For SPC, multiply total thickness (in mm) by core density (g/cm³) and add wear layer and underlay weight. Ecoflors provides a confirmed weight per m² on every quotation.
02
Confirm destination port weight limit
Use the table above as a starting point, but confirm with your freight forwarder — road weight rules change, and terminal operators sometimes apply tighter limits during port congestion periods. Rotterdam, Hamburg, and Antwerp are generally 28 tonnes gross. Felixstowe is effectively 26 tonnes for standard 40ft deliveries.
03
Calculate maximum payload
Subtract container tare weight from port gross limit: for a 20ft container, tare is approximately 2,200 kg → payload ≈ 25,800 kg. For a 40ft, tare is approximately 4,000 kg → payload ≈ 24,000 kg. Divide payload by product weight per m² to get maximum theoretical load. Apply a 3–5% safety margin.
04
Compare with container volume
Check whether your calculated m² load fits within the container’s internal volume. For most SPC specifications above 6mm, you will find the weight limit is hit well before the volume limit in a 40ft — confirming the 20ft preference. For thin LVT, volume is usually the binding constraint, not weight.
05
Request a loading plan from your supplier
A serious SPC manufacturer should be able to provide a detailed container loading plan — showing carton count, carton weight, layer configuration, and total gross weight — before production starts. Ecoflors provides this as standard for all distributor programme members. If your current supplier cannot provide this, it is a meaningful quality signal.

The Overweight Surcharge: What It Actually Costs

Importers who have never experienced a port overweight inspection often underestimate the cost. At Rotterdam, an overweight container that triggers a mandatory re-weighing and load redistribution can result in the following charges, applied to a single shipment.

Typical overweight surcharge components — Rotterdam 2026
Charge Typical amount Notes
Terminal re-weighing fee €180–280 Mandatory inspection fee when overweight is flagged
Container hold / storage €120–200/day While awaiting re-inspection or redistribution
Cargo redistribution €400–800 Labour to unload, repack, and reload into compliant containers
Additional container rental €300–600 If cargo must be split into a second container
Fine (NL road transport authority) €200–1,500 If vehicle has already left port before overweight discovered
Total exposure €1,200–3,380 Per incident — before any delay cost to your own customers

Moreover, an overweight incident creates a compliance record at the terminal — which can trigger more frequent inspections on future shipments from the same importer. The downstream cost of a pattern of overweight violations is difficult to quantify but consistently reported by freight forwarders as a significant operational burden.

The Practical Answer

For most SPC flooring importers buying 6mm, 7mm, or 8mm rigid-core product destined for European ports, the answer is straightforward: use 20ft containers. The 20ft container aligns weight capacity with volume capacity for heavy SPC, eliminates the overweight risk at EU and UK ports, and typically delivers a lower freight cost per m² once the wasted volume of an overloaded 40ft is properly accounted for.

Furthermore, distributors sourcing multiple thicknesses in the same order should ask their manufacturer for a blended loading plan rather than defaulting to either container type. Ecoflors provides container loading plans — including carton count, gross weight calculation, and stacking configuration — as a standard part of the quotation process for all distributor programme members.

The flooring industry has a habit of treating logistics as an afterthought — something the freight forwarder handles. For heavy SPC flooring, logistics is a cost engineering problem that starts at the product specification stage. Knowing your product’s weight per m² is as fundamental as knowing its wear layer thickness.

From Ecoflors · Factory-direct SPC & LVT supplier
Every quotation includes a container loading plan.
FOB price, carton count, gross weight calculation, and port compliance checklist — included as standard for all distributor enquiries. SPC 5mm–8mm · Dryback LVT 2mm–3mm · Loose Lay 4mm–5mm · MOQ 800 sqm / SKU.