Five signs a drayage company is costing importers more than expected demurrage exceptions appointment failures documentation Book Your Cargo

5 Signs Your Current Drayage Company Is Costing You More Than You Realize

Published on April 03, 2026 | By Book Your Cargo
Published by Book Your Cargo | bookyourcargo.com — Most drayage cost leakage does not come from a single visible failure. It comes from five recurring patterns that accumulate quietly across shipments: repeated demurrage that no one flagged in advance, exception management absorbed by your team instead of the provider, inconsistent performance at secondary ports, appointment failures with no clear accountability, and documentation problems that keep repeating on the same move types.

5 Signs Your Current Drayage Company Is Costing You More Than You Realize

Most drayage cost leakage does not come from a single visible failure. It comes from five recurring patterns that accumulate quietly across shipments: repeated demurrage that no one flagged in advance, exception management absorbed by your team instead of the provider, inconsistent performance at secondary ports, appointment failures with no clear accountability, and documentation problems that keep repeating on the same move types.

Most Drayage Cost Leakage Is Invisible Until It Isn't

Every drayage company in the U.S. produces some level of accessorial charges. The difference between an average provider and the best drayage company for your operation is not whether charges ever appear. It is whether the provider catches the conditions that cause them before the invoice does.

Importers, freight forwarders, and NVOCCs who stay with underperforming drayage companies typically do so because the cost leakage is gradual. No single shipment triggers a change. The pattern only becomes clear when total accessorial spend is reviewed across a quarter.

The five signs below do not require a data analysis to recognize. They show up in how day-to-day drayage operations feel to manage.

Related reading: Understanding what drayage actually covers and where costs originate

Sign 1: Demurrage Appears After the Fact, Never Before

Demurrage is the fee charged when a container stays at the terminal beyond the ocean carrier's free days, typically four to six days. When demurrage charges appear on invoices with no prior warning from your drayage company, that is not a port problem. It is a visibility problem.

The best drayage companies in the United States monitor Last Free Day countdowns continuously and alert logistics teams when a pickup is at risk of missing the window. Average providers learn about the missed free time the same way you do: when the invoice arrives.

Ask yourself: in the last six months, how many demurrage charges came with advance notice versus arriving as a surprise on the invoice? The answer reveals whether your current provider is structured for prevention or for post-event explanation.

What prevention looks like

  • LFD tracked automatically across every active container
  • Alert fired at 48 hours remaining if no pickup is scheduled
  • Exception escalated to the operations team, not left in a dashboard
  • Pickup prioritized and confirmed before free time expires

Related reading: Why visibility timing determines whether demurrage is prevented or just documented

Sign 2: Your Team Is Managing Their Exceptions

When a drayage exception occurs, such as a terminal hold, a missed appointment, or a chassis unavailability, who handles the follow-up? If the answer is your logistics team, your operations manager, or your freight forwarder, your drayage company has transferred its execution responsibility to you.

This is one of the most common and most accepted failures in drayage relationships. It becomes normalized over time. Teams build workflows around chasing their drayage provider for updates, manually tracking terminal holds, and following up on appointments that should have been managed automatically.

A reliable drayage company owns exception management as part of the service. When a hold appears, the drayage company identifies it, contacts the relevant party, and resolves it before the driver is dispatched. Your team receives an update. It does not generate one.

Questions to ask yourself

  • How many times per week does your team chase the drayage company for updates?
  • Who finds out first when a terminal hold appears on an active container?
  • Who escalates when an appointment is at risk of missing?

Related reading: How execution-grade drayage companies manage exceptions before they become cost

Sign 3: Performance Changes When the Port Changes

Many drayage companies in the U.S. have a strong market, usually the port closest to their headquarters or where they built their original carrier relationships. Performance at that port is consistent. Appointments are managed. Exceptions are caught. Invoices are clean.

The same provider at a secondary port often behaves like a different company. Appointments roll more frequently. Demurrage appears on shipments that move cleanly at the primary gateway. Escalations increase. Your team absorbs the difference.

If your drayage company performs well at Los Angeles but inconsistently at Houston, or well at New York but weakly at Savannah, that is not a temporary problem. It is a structural one. The provider does not have a unified execution framework across its network. It has a strong market and extended coverage.

How to test for this

  • Compare demurrage frequency by port across the last two quarters
  • Compare missed appointment rates at primary versus secondary gateways
  • Compare how quickly exceptions are surfaced at each location

Related reading: Port drayage services with consistent execution across all major U.S. gateways

Sign 4: Appointments Miss and Explanations Are Vague

A missed terminal appointment is not always avoidable. Terminals change conditions. Congestion spikes. Labor issues arise. The question is not whether appointments occasionally fail. It is how the drayage company responds when they do and whether the explanation tells you anything actionable.

Vague explanations, such as "the terminal was busy" or "there was congestion," without specifics about what was monitored, when the risk was detected, and what was done to recover, indicate a reactive provider. The explanation is not designed to prevent recurrence. It is designed to close the conversation.

The best drayage companies in the U.S. explain missed appointments in operational terms. What signal changed. When it was detected. What replanning was triggered. What the recovery timeline looks like. That level of explanation is only possible from a provider that was actually monitoring the move.

The pattern to watch for

  • Appointments miss more than once per month across your account
  • Explanations reference port conditions but not internal monitoring
  • Recovery scheduling is left to your team to follow up on
  • The same terminal generates recurring appointment issues without process change

Related reading: Top 5 drayage problems that repeat when execution structure is absent

Sign 5: The Same Documentation Problem Keeps Happening

Documentation failures in drayage have a specific fingerprint. They stop containers at predictable points: the terminal gate, the customs clearance step, the rail transfer, or the cross-border entry. When the same type of documentation problem appears more than once in the same move type, the provider has not fixed the root cause. It has handled the incident.

Common repeating documentation failures include steamship line releases confirmed late, ACI or ACE filings misaligned with dispatch timing, and billing holds on containers that repeat the same carrier or route. Each of these has a structural solution. Each is preventable with a documentation workflow aligned to physical movement rather than handled separately from it.

If your team regularly receives calls about documentation issues after a truck is already staged, your current drayage company is treating documentation as a parallel process rather than a prerequisite for dispatch.

What documentation alignment looks like

  • Release confirmation completed before dispatch authorization
  • Compliance filings validated before cross-border moves are committed
  • Billing holds identified and resolved before the driver is en route
  • Repeat documentation patterns flagged and process-adjusted, not just re-handled

Related reading: What you are actually paying for in drayage services and where documentation fits

What to Do When These Signs Are Present

Recognizing these patterns is the first step. Acting on them requires separating two questions: whether the current provider can fix the structural issues, and whether the cost and disruption of switching is justified. This evaluation often becomes clearer when organizations apply structured criteria commonly used when assessing and switching drayage providers.

Not every drayage company showing one of these signs needs to be replaced immediately. Some providers can improve when execution gaps are surfaced clearly. The test is whether the conversation produces a specific operational change or simply reassurance that things will improve. Many importers and NVOCCs find that reviewing what defines the best drayage companies in the USA helps clarify whether those improvements are realistic.

When the same issues repeat after that conversation, the provider's execution structure cannot support the improvements being promised. That is the point at which evaluating alternatives becomes the more cost effective path. At this stage, a structured drayage decision framework similar to those used by BCOs, NVOCCs, and freight forwarders can help organizations transition without operational disruption.

Key Takeaways

The five signs covered in this guide are not isolated incidents. They are patterns that indicate how a drayage company is structured, not just how it performs on a given day.

Demurrage that arrives without advance warning points to a provider built for reporting, not prevention. Exception management absorbed by your team points to a provider that has transferred operational responsibility. Performance inconsistency across ports points to a provider without a unified execution framework. Vague appointment explanations point to a provider that was not monitoring actively. Recurring documentation failures point to a provider that treats documentation as separate from physical movement.

Any one of these is worth addressing. All five together indicate that the drayage relationship is creating more overhead and cost than it is absorbing.

Book Your Cargo is a drayage company that has operated across the United States and Canada for more than a decade. With 3,000+ vetted carrier partners covering 800,000+ ZIP code routes, automated LFD and ERD monitoring, exception management built into every active shipment, and consistent execution across all major U.S. and Canadian ports and rail ramps, BYC is built to prevent the patterns described in this guide rather than explain them after they occur.

Schedule a call with BYC Drayage Team: bookyourcargo.com/contact

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What are the most common signs that a drayage company is costing you too much?
The five most common signs are: demurrage charges that appear on invoices without prior warning from the provider; exception management that is absorbed by your team rather than handled by the drayage company; performance that degrades at secondary ports compared to the primary gateway; appointment failures accompanied by vague explanations that do not describe what was being monitored; and the same documentation problem repeating on the same move types without a structural fix being applied.
2. How do I know if my drayage company is preventing demurrage or just disputing it?
Ask whether your team receives alerts before free time expires or learns about missed free days from the invoice. A drayage company that prevents demurrage monitors Last Free Day countdowns continuously and flags risk early enough to act. One that disputes demurrage after the fact has visibility infrastructure built for records, not prevention.
3. Why does drayage performance differ by port for the same provider?
Performance differs by port when a provider does not apply a unified execution framework across its network. Most drayage companies build strong operations at their primary market, typically near their headquarters or core carrier relationships, and extend coverage to secondary ports with less rigorous carrier vetting, appointment oversight, and visibility infrastructure. The result is consistent execution in one geography and reactive execution in others.
4. When should an importer consider switching drayage companies?
Consider switching when the same operational failures repeat after a direct conversation about them, when exception management continues to be absorbed by your team rather than the provider, or when demurrage and detention charges remain a recurring line item despite the provider being aware of the pattern. These are structural indicators, not isolated incidents, and structural issues rarely resolve without structural change in the provider's operations.
5. Is Book Your Cargo a better alternative for importers experiencing these issues?
Book Your Cargo is structured to address all five signs covered in this guide. LFD and ERD monitoring is automated across every active container. Exception management is handled by BYC's operations team, not transferred to the shipper. Execution standards are applied consistently across U.S. and Canadian gateways. Appointment oversight is active, not reactive. And documentation is confirmed before dispatch, not corrected after a driver is staged. Importers, freight forwarders, and NVOCCs experiencing any of these patterns are welcome to speak with BYC's drayage team about a structured transition.

Talk With BYC's Drayage Team

See how automated free-time monitoring, built-in exception management, and execution standards across North American gateways can stop cost leakage before it hits your invoice.

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