Increasing competition has forced five major companies sharing the market to diversify their services beyond simple forwarding of packages.
From online shopping and home delivery to options to pay utility bills; these are part of the services for which several companies are in the industry are counting on to maintain competitiveness against their peers in the market of courier services in Costa Rica.
International Freight Forwarder
Consolidation of land freight from Mexico to Central America
Customs Brokers
Special cargo handling (hazardous and oversized)
Organization that operates in Costa Rica
Phone: (506) 2293 4300
Unik promotes the concept of "everything you need under the same roof" oriented to integral services, offering our customers the whole palette of services included in cargo transportation.
Organization that operates in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama
Phone: (507) 232-8318 - (507) 431-5196
We are your best choice of integrated logistics services. Ranges from Central America to the most distant countries of the world. Our goal is to reach beyond our competitors.
Organization that operates in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama
Phone: (502) 2429 0900 - (502) 2429 0909
Sistemas Aereos Group is a leader in providing multimodal transportation services and logistics services for 20 years, operations in 7 countries. Our Business Is Transporting Your Business
Organization that operates in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama
Phone: (503) 2500 4000 - (503) 2508 0409
International Freight Forwarders
Organization that operates in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama
Phone: (506) 22210710 - (506) 8867 9569
Developing the region's short distance cargo and passenger sea travel could lower costs and favor agricultural exports.
Central America's short distance maritime transport project (TMCD, Spanish Acronym) is advancing. Feasibility studies have determined that with little investment, the 49 ports located in Central America and Mexico, "could be adapted for short distance passenger and cargo transportation, as it is done in Europe".
Port authorities from Central America and the Dominican Republic are studying plans to cut costs of cargo handling.
The proposal is currently under review at a meeting in Nicaragua of Central American port officials who fear that high handling charges could eat into the benefits to be gained from a trade association with the European Union.
"By comparison with the costs of the cargo itself, handling costs in Central America are very high," said Carlos González De la Lastra, president of the Central American Commission of Maritime Transport (Cocatram).