Sea Freight From China to Nigeria — Done Right
Sea freight from China to Nigeria is the most cost-effective way to move commercial cargo — and Foon Chaser Express makes it reliable. LCL from $35/CBM · 20ft & 40ft FCL containers · DDP door-to-door delivery · Full customs clearance support, operated from our Guangzhou hub with dedicated Nigeria specialists.
What Is Sea Freight From China to Nigeria?
Sea freight from China to Nigeria is the most popular shipping method for Nigerian importers. It costs far less per kilogram than air freight. In addition, it scales from one CBM to a full 40ft container. As a result, it works for nearly every cargo type — from electronics and fashion to machinery and building materials. Whether you source from Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Yiwu, or Ningbo, sea freight almost always offers the cheapest route to Apapa Port or Tincan Island Port in Lagos.
How Sea Freight From China to Nigeria Works
Your goods start at your supplier’s factory or warehouse — anywhere from Guangzhou to Shenzhen, Yiwu, Dongguan, Foshan, Qingdao, Xiamen, or Ningbo. From there, we truck them to a container terminal. At the terminal, two things can happen: your cargo is either consolidated with other shippers (LCL) or loaded into its own dedicated container (FCL). After that, the vessel departs on a scheduled liner service. It then arrives at Apapa Port or Tincan Island Port in Lagos after 22 to 35 days at sea. Finally, Nigerian customs clearance takes place before final delivery to your door.
Because Foon Chaser Express runs its China operations from Guangzhou, we reach suppliers directly across the Pearl River Delta. Consequently, inland transit costs stay low, and multi-vendor collection becomes simple.
What Our Sea Freight Service Includes
- Factory pickup and origin trucking in China
- Export customs clearance and full documentation
- Ocean freight on major liners (COSCO, MSC, Evergreen, Hapag-Lloyd)
- Nigeria port handling and customs clearance
- Inland delivery to Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, Enugu, or anywhere in Nigeria
The China-to-Nigeria Shipping Route at a Glance
The typical journey covers 11,000+ nautical miles. It passes through the South China Sea, the Strait of Malacca, the Indian Ocean, and around the Cape of Good Hope. Vessels usually make one or two transhipment stops — often at Singapore, Colombo, or Durban. As a result, total transit varies based on routing. Direct services from South China ports now offer the shortest sailings. For example, vessels from Shenzhen can reach Apapa in as little as 22 days under ideal conditions.
Who Should Use Sea Freight?
Sea freight is the right choice when you meet most of the criteria below:
- Your cargo exceeds 0.5 CBM or 150 kg — the point where air freight becomes too costly
- You ship goods with a long shelf life — fashion, electronics, machinery, building materials, homeware, or auto parts
- You need to move large volumes on a regular basis
- You have at least 20 to 45 days of lead time before goods are needed
- You want the lowest cost per kg or per unit shipped
Most Nigerian importers who source from Alibaba, 1688, or directly from Chinese factories rely on sea freight as their main shipping method. To compare all options, see our sea vs air freight guide.
For global standards on ocean freight and Incoterms, the International Chamber of Commerce and the World Customs Organization are excellent references.
Main Advantages of Sea Freight
- Lowest cost per kg of any shipping mode
- Handles all cargo types and sizes
- FCL provides tamper-proof, secure delivery
- Suitable for hazardous, oversized, or bulk goods
Key Limitations to Consider
- Slower than air freight — not ideal for urgent orders
- LCL carries higher handling risk than FCL
- Nigeria port delays can add 7 to 21 days to transit
Most shipping guides skip the Nigeria-side realities — port congestion, PAAR timelines, and customs delays. However, knowing these in advance helps you plan inventory properly. In turn, you avoid stock-outs and never pay premium air freight rates because sea cargo was delayed. As a result, Foon Chaser briefs every client on Nigerian port realities before departure so there are no surprises.
Sea Freight From China to Nigeria — Cost Guide 2026
What does sea freight from China to Nigeria actually cost in 2026? Below is a transparent breakdown of ocean freight rates, surcharges, and destination charges that every Nigerian importer should budget for before booking a shipment.
LCL Sea Freight Rates (China to Nigeria)
| CBM Range | Estimated Rate | Typical Weight | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 to 2 CBM | $35 to $55/CBM | ~300 to 1,200 kg | Sample orders, small stock |
| 2 to 5 CBM | $38 to $58/CBM | 1,200 to 3,000 kg | SME importers, regular restocking |
| 5 to 10 CBM | $40 to $62/CBM | 3,000 to 6,000 kg | Growing businesses |
| 10 to 15 CBM | $42 to $65/CBM | 6,000 to 9,000 kg | Consider FCL at this volume |
FCL Container Rates (China to Nigeria)
| Container Type | Capacity | Estimated Ocean Freight | Max Payload |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20ft Standard | 25 to 28 CBM | $1,200 to $2,500 | ~21,700 kg |
| 40ft Standard | 55 to 67 CBM | $2,000 to $4,000 | ~26,480 kg |
| 40ft High Cube | 60 to 76 CBM | $2,200 to $4,500 | ~26,460 kg |
| 20ft Reefer | 25 CBM | $3,500 to $6,000+ | ~22,000 kg |
Additional Sea Freight Charges to Budget For
Origin Charges (China Side)
- Origin inland trucking: $50 to $300 depending on location
- Export customs declaration: $30 to $80
- Container stuffing / warehouse handling: $20 to $60/CBM (LCL)
- Documentation fee (B/L): $40 to $80
- Origin Port Surcharge (OPS)
Destination Charges (Nigeria Side)
- Destination handling charge (THC): $150 to $350/container
- Bill of Lading surrender: $50 to $100
- Port storage/demurrage (if delayed): $50 to $200/day
- Nigeria Customs import duty: 5 to 35% of CIF value
- PAAR processing: agent fee applies
- Inland delivery (Lagos to Abuja): $200 to $800
* All rates are indicative market estimates for 2026. Actual rates depend on origin port, commodity, shipping line, surcharges active at time of booking, and cargo dimensions. Port fee structures are published by the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA). Request a current, accurate quote.
Hidden destination charges are the number one reason Nigerian importers overpay or face cash flow shocks on arrival. Unlike competitors who quote only ocean freight, Foon Chaser provides all-in cost estimates covering origin, ocean, and Nigeria-side charges. As a result, you plan your margins correctly before a single item leaves China.
Sea Freight Transit Times From China to Nigeria
How long does sea freight from China to Nigeria actually take? The answer depends on three things: your origin port, your shipping line, and seasonal demand. Below is a realistic breakdown for 2026.
Realistic Transit Times by Origin Port
| Origin Port (China) | Destination Port | Port-to-Port | With Customs Clearance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Guangzhou / Shenzhen | Apapa, Lagos | 22 to 28 days | 30 to 42 days |
| Ningbo / Shanghai | Apapa, Lagos | 25 to 32 days | 33 to 46 days |
| Qingdao | Apapa, Lagos | 28 to 35 days | 36 to 50 days |
| Xiamen | Tincan Island | 24 to 30 days | 32 to 44 days |
| Yiwu (via Ningbo) | Apapa, Lagos | 27 to 34 days | 35 to 48 days |
What “Port-to-Port” vs “Door-to-Door” Really Means
The two transit figures above represent very different things. Port-to-port measures only the time your cargo spends on the vessel. In contrast, door-to-door covers the full journey — from factory pickup in China to final delivery in Nigeria. The difference is usually 13 to 20 days. This extra time comes from export clearance, inland trucking, port handling, customs examination, and last-mile delivery. Therefore, when you plan inventory, always budget for the door-to-door figure.
Common Factors That Cause Sea Freight Delays
🚢 Apapa Port Congestion
Apapa Port is one of West Africa’s busiest terminals. Consequently, congestion, vessel scheduling conflicts, and limited berth availability can add 7 to 21 days to clearance times. This is most common from December through February, and during ECOWAS trade peaks.
📋 Documentation Gaps
Missing or incorrect Form M, PAAR errors, HS Code mismatches, or NAFDAC/SONCAP issues all cause customs holds. Fortunately, these are preventable with proper pre-shipment documentation checks. Learn about the clearance process →
🏮 China Public Holidays
Chinese New Year (January to February), Golden Week (October), and Labour Day all create factory and shipping backlogs. Therefore, plan 2 to 3 weeks ahead of these dates. Contact our Guangzhou team for the 2026 holiday schedule.
How Seasonal Demand Affects Transit Times
Shipping from China to Nigeria follows a predictable seasonal pattern. From October to December, demand spikes ahead of the Chinese New Year shutdown. As a result, vessel space becomes scarce, and rates rise 30 to 80%. Similarly, July to September sees another peak as Nigerian importers stock up for the holiday season. Conversely, February to April and June to early July are quieter months. During these windows, you typically get faster bookings, lower rates, and more reliable ETAs.
A 22-day port-to-port transit can stretch to 55 days door-to-door if documentation is wrong and port congestion hits at the same time. Consequently, importers lose sales, pay demurrage, and sometimes resort to expensive air freight top-ups. Foon Chaser tracks every shipment and flags documentation issues before your vessel departs China — not after it arrives in Lagos.
LCL vs FCL: Choosing the Right Sea Freight Option From China to Nigeria
The most important decision in sea freight from China to Nigeria is whether to ship LCL or FCL. Get this wrong and you overpay, face delays, or put your cargo at unnecessary risk.
| Factor | LCL (Shared Container) | FCL 20ft Container | FCL 40ft Container |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum Volume | 0.5 CBM | Any — you pay fixed | Any — you pay fixed |
| Ideal Volume | 0.5 to 12 CBM | 13 to 25 CBM | 26 to 67 CBM |
| Cost Structure | Pay per CBM | Fixed container rate | Fixed container rate |
| Transit Time | Slightly longer | Faster (direct) | Fastest (direct) |
| Cargo Security | Shared handling | Sealed, dedicated | Sealed, dedicated |
| Customs Complexity | Higher (mixed cargo) | Straightforward | Straightforward |
| Risk of Damage | Moderate | Low | Low |
| Flexibility | High — ship any volume | Fixed container | Fixed container |
| Best For | SMEs, trial orders, regular small restocks | Growing businesses, medium volume | High-volume importers |
✅ Choose LCL if…
Your cargo is under 15 CBM, you ship frequently in smaller quantities, you’re testing a new product, or you can’t fill a full container. LCL lets you ship anything from 0.5 CBM. Explore LCL options →
✅ Choose FCL if…
Your cargo exceeds 12 to 15 CBM, you need maximum security, you want faster port clearance, or you’re shipping fragile / high-value goods that need tamper-proof transit. Explore FCL options →
Get Your Sea Freight Quote
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How Sea Freight From China to Nigeria Works — Step by Step
From placing your order in China to receiving goods at your warehouse in Nigeria, here is the complete operational journey for sea freight with Foon Chaser Express.
Phase 1: China-Side Operations
Cargo Collection & Origin Trucking
Your goods start at your supplier’s factory or warehouse — anywhere in Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan, Foshan, Yiwu, Ningbo, Shanghai, or Qingdao. We arrange door-to-port trucking and inspect the cargo before departure. Moreover, we can collect from multiple suppliers and combine everything into a single shipment. As a result, you avoid the hassle of coordinating several pickups yourself.
China Export Customs Clearance
At this stage, we prepare and submit all export documents. These include the Commercial Invoice, Packing List, HS Code classification, and Certificate of Origin. We also verify regulated products against SONCAP requirements and NAFDAC pre-approval lists. Finally, export clearance is completed at the origin port — typically Guangzhou, Yantian, Shekou, Ningbo, or Shanghai.
Container Loading & Vessel Booking
For LCL cargo, your goods enter our consolidation warehouse and are co-loaded with other shippers’ cargo. For FCL shipments, we stuff and seal your dedicated 20ft or 40ft container at origin. Meanwhile, we book the vessel on a scheduled liner service operating the Asia to West Africa trade lane. The Bill of Lading (B/L) is then issued once your cargo is loaded.
Ocean Transit (22 to 35 Days)
Your shipment is now at sea. Foon Chaser provides vessel tracking so you can monitor the real-time position. In parallel, our Nigeria team begins preparing your PAAR (Pre-Arrival Assessment Report). As a result, customs processing can start as soon as the vessel arrives at Apapa or Tincan Island Port.
Phase 2: Nigeria-Side Clearance & Delivery
Nigeria Port Arrival & PAAR Submission
Once the vessel arrives in Lagos, we submit the PAAR to Nigeria Customs Service. The PAAR contains your cargo description, HS Code, declared value, and duty assessment. This document is mandatory for all commercial imports. Without an accurate PAAR, your container cannot be examined or released. Learn more about Form M and PAAR →
Customs Examination & Duty Payment
Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) may then conduct a physical examination of your container. This could be a full 100% check or a non-intrusive scanner scan. Import duty is then assessed at 5 to 35% of CIF value, depending on your HS Code. In addition, NAFDAC-regulated goods (food, cosmetics, medical devices) and SON/SONCAP-regulated electronics require extra agency clearances. Full customs clearance guide →
Container Release & Port Exit
After duty payment and NCS release, the container exits the port terminal. However, terminal demurrage charges apply if containers overstay their free-time allocation — typically 5 to 7 days. To prevent this, Foon Chaser monitors demurrage timelines actively. We alert clients before charges start to accumulate.
Inland Delivery to Your Door
Finally, we arrange inland delivery from the port to your warehouse, store, or distribution centre. This applies whether you are in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, Enugu, or any other Nigerian city. For DDP clients, the entire process — from China factory to Nigeria delivery — is managed end-to-end by Foon Chaser. Learn about DDP shipping →
Why Process Visibility Matters for Importers
Most freight forwarders treat the shipping process as a black box. In contrast, Foon Chaser gives you full visibility at every stage. You receive updates when cargo is picked up, when it clears China customs, when it loads the vessel, and at each milestone until delivery. As a result, you can plan your inventory, brief your customers, and avoid surprises. Ultimately, transparency is what separates a professional freight partner from a middleman.
Sea Freight From China to Nigeria vs Air Freight: Which Should You Choose?
This is the most common decision Nigerian importers face. To help you choose the right mode for each shipment, here is a definitive comparison. For full Incoterms definitions, refer to the ICC Incoterms® 2020 guide. Compare full air freight options →
| Factor | Sea Freight | Air Freight | Sea-Air (Combined) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost (per kg) | $0.50 to $2 | $4 to $12 | $2.50 to $5 |
| Transit Time | 30 to 55 days D2D | 5 to 12 days D2D | 18 to 28 days D2D |
| Minimum Volume | 0.5 CBM | 0.1 kg | 0.5 CBM |
| Cargo Security | High (FCL) | Very High | High |
| Weight Limit | No practical limit | 500 kg typical | 2,000 kg |
| Hazardous Goods | Wider acceptance | Heavily restricted | Restricted |
| Best Use Case | Bulk commercial imports | Urgent, high-value, small | Medium urgency, larger volume |
| Customs Process | NCS Port clearance | NAHCO/SKYWAY airport | Mixed |
When Sea Freight Wins
Sea freight is the right choice in most scenarios. Specifically, it wins when cost per unit matters more than speed, when you ship bulk or commercial volumes, and when you have 30+ days of lead time. Furthermore, sea freight handles cargo types that air freight cannot — including machinery, furniture, large electronics, and building materials. For most Nigerian importers, sea freight is the default.
When Air Freight Wins
Air freight is the right choice when speed matters most. For example, you may need to replenish a stock-out, ship samples for a new product launch, or deliver perishable goods. In these cases, paying 5 to 10x more per kg is justified. However, air freight has strict limits on weight, size, and hazardous materials. As a result, it is rarely a true replacement for sea freight — it is a complement.
Decision Framework: Sea vs Air
Choose Sea Freight When:
- Cargo exceeds 150 kg or 0.5 CBM
- You have 30+ days of lead time
- Cost per unit matters most
- You’re shipping machinery, furniture, or building materials
- You import regularly in volume
Choose Air Freight When:
- Cargo is under 100 kg
- You need delivery in under 10 days
- Goods are high-value samples or fashion
- You’re facing a critical stock-out
- Goods are perishable or time-sensitive
Split Strategy (Advanced):
- Air freight 10% of stock for immediate sales
- Sea freight remaining 90% for margin
- Ideal for new product launches
- Reduces risk of full-cargo stockout
- Foon Chaser manages both modes together
The Hidden Costs of Choosing the Wrong Mode
Choosing the wrong mode costs money in two ways. First, paying air freight rates for cargo that could have shipped by sea wastes thousands of dollars per shipment. Second, choosing sea freight when you needed air freight results in lost sales, stock-outs, and disappointed customers. Both mistakes are avoidable. Therefore, the best approach is to plan your shipping calendar ahead of time. Foon Chaser helps you build a mode-by-mode shipping plan that matches your sales cycle — so you never overpay or understock.
Nigeria Customs clearance procedures for both sea and air freight are governed by the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS). Understanding their examination channels in advance helps you plan realistic clearance timelines.
Nigerian importers lose money in two main ways: paying air freight rates for cargo that could have shipped by sea, or running out of stock because sea freight wasn’t planned far enough ahead. Both situations are avoidable. Consequently, Foon Chaser helps you build a shipping calendar that matches your sales cycle — so you’re never overpaying or understocked.
Why Choose Foon Chaser for Sea Freight From China to Nigeria?
Hundreds of freight agents claim to handle sea freight from China to Nigeria. However, only a few operate with real presence on both sides. Here is what genuinely separates Foon Chaser Express Limited from the field.
Guangzhou Operations Hub
We operate physically from Guangzhou — the heart of Chinese manufacturing. Our team speaks Mandarin and holds direct relationships with consolidation warehouses, trucking providers, and customs brokers across the Pearl River Delta. As a result, your cargo gets priority handling from day one.
Nigeria-Deep Expertise
We understand Nigeria Customs Service procedures, Apapa and Tincan Island Port dynamics, Form M requirements, PAAR filing, SONCAP, and NAFDAC compliance — inside out. In other words, we don’t learn on your cargo. We have already navigated the pitfalls many times over.
End-to-End Documentation
From HS Code classification and Commercial Invoice preparation to PAAR filing and duty payment coordination, Foon Chaser handles the paperwork most importers find overwhelming. Consequently, customs holds and clearance delays drop significantly.
What You Get With Every Sea Freight Shipment
Real-Time Cargo Tracking
Every shipment is tracked from the factory gate in China to delivery in Nigeria. You receive vessel position updates, port arrival notifications, customs status, and delivery confirmations. Moreover, there is no chasing and no silence — you always know where your cargo is.
DDP Door-to-Door Available
Our DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) service means you pay one price and your goods arrive at your warehouse in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt, Kano, or Enugu. As a result, there are no airport runs, no agent meetings, and no port surprises to deal with.
Dedicated Support Team
You get direct access to your Foon Chaser account manager via WhatsApp, email, and phone. There are no call centres and no ticket queues. We respond in hours — not days — because your business can’t wait. Call +234 706 380 6846 or email china@dechaser.com.
What This Means for Your Business
Working with Foon Chaser frees you to focus on sourcing, sales, and growth. We handle the operational complexity of moving goods across two continents. In turn, you get predictable shipping costs, faster clearance, and zero guesswork. Ultimately, our role is to make the logistics side of your business disappear — so you can concentrate on the parts that actually grow revenue.
How a Lagos Importer Saved ₦4.2M on Sea Freight From China to Nigeria
The Challenge
A Lagos-based electronics and home appliance importer was sourcing 40ft containers of goods from Guangdong province every quarter. Their previous freight agent — a Nigeria-based intermediary with no China presence — consistently quoted high and delivered late. In addition, recurring customs holds plagued the business because of poor PAAR preparation.
The Foon Chaser Sea Freight Solution
We took over logistics management from factory pickup in Shenzhen. First, we negotiated directly with shipping lines to secure better rates. Then, we consolidated the client’s multi-vendor cargo at our Guangzhou warehouse. Next, we prepared accurate HS Code classifications across 14 product categories. Finally, we pre-filed the PAAR while the vessel was still at sea. As a result, customs could begin processing the shipment immediately upon arrival.
The Outcome
Within one quarter, the client saw dramatic improvements. Their containers cleared Apapa Port in 6 days — versus the previous average of 17 days. Furthermore, total door-to-door transit dropped from 52 to 41 days. Demurrage charges went to zero — previously ₦800,000+ per shipment. Ultimately, the all-in cost per 40ft container fell by ₦1.4M. The client now ships 3 FCL containers per quarter with Foon Chaser and has stopped using their previous agent entirely.
Key Lessons From This Case Study
- Container cleared Apapa Port in 6 days — versus the previous average of 17 days
- Total door-to-door transit reduced from 52 to 41 days
- Demurrage charges: zero (previously ₦800,000+ per shipment)
- All-in cost reduced by ₦1.4M per 40ft container
- Client now ships 3 FCL containers per quarter with Foon Chaser
* Client details anonymised. Results reflect actual operational outcomes and will vary based on cargo type, routing, port conditions, and market rates.
What Nigerian Importers Say About Foon Chaser
Real feedback from importers shipping sea freight from China to Nigeria with Foon Chaser Express.
“Switched from a Lagos-only agent to Foon Chaser 6 months ago. Same Guangzhou factory, same products — but my FCL containers now clear Apapa in 5 days instead of 3 weeks. The PAAR pre-filing is a game changer.”
“I’ve been using Foon Chaser’s DDP service for 12 months. One price, one invoice, goods arrive at my warehouse in Abuja. No more chasing agents, no more demurrage surprises. Exactly what I needed to focus on sales.”
“As a first-time importer, the documentation process scared me. The Foon Chaser team walked me through Form M, PAAR, and HS codes step by step. My first LCL shipment cleared in 4 days. Now I ship monthly.”
Top Questions About Sea Freight From China to Nigeria
Quick answers to the questions Nigerian importers search for most. For deeper detail, see the full FAQ below.
1 Core Questions
2 Safety, Customs & Documentation
Need more detail? See our complete 30-question FAQ below covering costs, transit, containers, documentation, customs, DDP, insurance, sourcing, and Nigeria-specific rules.
Sea Freight From China to Nigeria — Complete FAQ
Thirty detailed answers to the questions Nigerian importers ask most when considering sea freight from China to Nigeria.
What is included in a sea freight quote from China to Nigeria?
A standard ocean freight quote includes the ocean freight charge (port-to-port), bunker adjustment factor (BAF), and peak season surcharges (if applicable). However, it typically excludes: origin trucking, origin warehouse handling, export customs fees, China port charges, destination terminal handling charge (THC), Nigeria port levies, customs duties, PAAR agent fees, demurrage, and inland delivery. Therefore, always request an all-in DDP quote from Foon Chaser to understand your true cost.
Why does the same shipping route have different prices from different agents?
Rate differences reflect different: shipping line contracts (agents with volume commitments get better rates), inclusion/exclusion of surcharges, China-side handling capacity, and Nigeria-side relationships. Furthermore, agents with China offices often secure better freight rates than Nigeria-only intermediaries who re-buy capacity from China agents. Consequently, always compare all-in costs, not just the ocean freight headline figure.
Are there hidden charges in sea freight from China to Nigeria?
Common “surprise” charges include: port storage/demurrage if customs clearance is delayed, SONCAP certificate fees (for regulated goods), PAAR agent fees, NCS examination fees, scanner charges, and delivery order fees. In contrast, Foon Chaser discloses all expected charges before shipment — no surprises on arrival. Therefore, request a full cost breakdown inclusive of Nigerian destination charges.
Does Nigerian currency (Naira) affect my shipping costs?
Ocean freight is invoiced in USD. However, Nigeria Customs duties are assessed in Naira at the CBN official exchange rate at time of assessment. As a result, Naira devaluation can significantly increase your Naira-denominated customs duty liability even when USD freight rates are stable. Consequently, Foon Chaser advises clients to factor current CBN exchange rates when budgeting import costs.
Can I reduce my sea freight cost by using a different China port?
Yes. Guangzhou/Shenzhen (South China) typically offers competitive rates and faster transit to Nigeria than Shanghai or Qingdao (North China). Furthermore, if your suppliers are in Yiwu or Zhejiang province, shipping via Ningbo is usually more efficient than trucking south to Guangdong ports. Therefore, Foon Chaser recommends the optimal China origin port based on your supplier locations.
What is the fastest sea freight option from China to Nigeria?
The fastest regular service is from South China ports (Guangzhou/Shenzhen) via direct or minimal-transhipment routing, with port-to-port transit of 22 to 25 days. Furthermore, FCL shipments clear customs faster than LCL. Consequently, booking with premium shipping lines (COSCO, MSC) on fixed-day-of-week sailings gives more predictable ETAs. Foon Chaser selects the fastest routing for each client’s shipment.
How does Chinese New Year affect sea freight to Nigeria?
Chinese New Year (January to February) causes factory closures of 2 to 4 weeks and a pre-holiday shipping rush. As a result, container space becomes scarce and rates spike 30 to 80% in the weeks before the holiday. Moreover, all shipments are delayed. Therefore, Nigerian importers should book goods arriving before CNY at least 6 to 8 weeks in advance, and plan for a 6 to 10 week shipping gap during the holiday period. Contact Foon Chaser’s Guangzhou team by November each year to plan around CNY.
How often do vessels sail from China to Nigeria?
Multiple shipping lines operate weekly or bi-weekly services on Asia to West Africa routes. Major operators include COSCO, MSC, Evergreen, CMA CGM, and Hapag-Lloyd. As a result, Foon Chaser can book your cargo on the next available sailing, typically within 5 to 10 days of cargo being ready at the China port.
What happens if my container arrives in Lagos before my PAAR is ready?
Port free time begins counting immediately on container discharge from the vessel — typically 5 to 7 free days. If your PAAR is not ready, demurrage charges accumulate daily from day 8 at $50 to $200 per day depending on your port terminal. Consequently, Foon Chaser pre-files your PAAR while the vessel is still at sea so it’s approved before the container even touches the wharf.
Can sea freight from China reach Abuja, Port Harcourt or Kano — not just Lagos?
Yes. All sea freight arrives in Lagos (Apapa or Tincan Island Port) and is then transported inland by road. Furthermore, Foon Chaser arranges door delivery to Abuja (approximately 8 to 12 hours), Port Harcourt (5 to 7 hours), Kano (12 to 16 hours), Enugu (6 to 8 hours), and all major Nigerian cities. Inland haulage costs vary by distance and cargo volume.
What is the maximum weight I can load in a 20ft container?
A standard 20ft container has a maximum payload of approximately 21,700 kg (21.7 tonnes) and a cubic capacity of 25 to 28 CBM. In practice, Nigerian port regulations and road weight limits may restrict effective payload to 18,000 to 20,000 kg for inland delivery. Heavy cargo (machinery, tiles, steel) should be loaded to weight limits, not volume limits.
What is the difference between a 40ft standard and 40ft High Cube container?
A 40ft standard container is 8.5 feet (2.59m) tall internally, providing 55 to 67 CBM capacity. A 40ft High Cube (HC) container is 9.5 feet (2.89m) tall internally, providing 60 to 76 CBM capacity — approximately 12 to 15% more volume. High Cube containers cost slightly more but are better for light, bulky cargo (fashion, plastics, furniture). Both have the same maximum payload.
What is the minimum cargo I can ship by LCL sea freight?
Most LCL services have a minimum of 0.5 CBM or 50 kg. Below this threshold, courier or express parcel services (DHL, FedEx) are usually more practical. LCL becomes cost-effective from approximately 0.5 CBM and remains the most economical option up to about 12 to 15 CBM, at which point FCL pricing becomes competitive.
Can I ship a mix of different products from different suppliers in one LCL shipment?
Yes — Foon Chaser’s Guangzhou warehouse handles multi-supplier consolidation. We collect from your various suppliers across Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan, Foshan, or elsewhere in the Pearl River Delta, inspect and count all cargo, and consolidate under one LCL shipment. This means one B/L, one customs declaration, and one delivery — simplifying everything for you.
What is a Bill of Lading and why is it important?
The Bill of Lading (B/L) is the primary document in ocean freight — it is simultaneously a receipt of goods, a contract of carriage, and a document of title (i.e., whoever holds the original B/L legally owns the cargo). Without surrendering the original B/L (or receiving a Telex Release), your goods cannot be released from the port. Foon Chaser issues and manages your B/L and advises on Original B/L vs Telex Release options based on your payment terms.
What is an HS Code and how do I find the right one for my goods?
HS Codes (Harmonised System Codes) are 6 to 10 digit numbers that classify every type of product for customs purposes. The HS Code on your PAAR determines your duty rate in Nigeria. Using the wrong HS Code causes customs holds and can result in re-assessment with penalties. Foon Chaser performs HS Code classification for all client shipments as part of our documentation service. Request a duty estimate →
What is the SONCAP Certificate and which goods require it?
The SONCAP (Standards Organisation of Nigeria Conformity Assessment Programme) Certificate is mandatory for SON-regulated products entering Nigeria. This includes: electrical and electronic equipment, batteries, tyres, LPG cylinders, pressure vessels, and various consumer goods. SONCAP inspection must be completed in China before shipment. Foon Chaser coordinates SONCAP inspections with approved verification agencies.
Do I need a NAFDAC number to import goods from China to Nigeria by sea?
NAFDAC registration is required for food products, beverages, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, and related consumables. The NAFDAC number must appear on product labelling. Unregistered NAFDAC-regulated goods will be seized at Nigerian customs. Foon Chaser advises on whether your products require NAFDAC registration before shipping begins — not after goods arrive at Apapa Port.
What is the Certificate of Origin and when do I need it?
A Certificate of Origin confirms where goods were manufactured. For Nigeria, a Chinese Certificate of Origin can qualify your goods for ECOWAS CET duty rates and is required for certain preferential trade arrangements. Some product categories also require it for NAFDAC or SON compliance. Foon Chaser secures the appropriate Certificate of Origin from Chinese authorities as part of our export clearance service.
How does Nigeria Customs Service examine sea freight containers?
NCS assigns containers to examination channels based on PAAR risk scoring. Specifically: Green Channel (documentary review only — fastest), Yellow Channel (non-intrusive scanner examination), and Red Channel (100% physical examination — slowest, most disruptive). Consequently, accurate PAAR filings with correct HS Codes and declared values reduce the likelihood of Red Channel assignment and physical examination delays.
What happens if Nigeria Customs finds discrepancies in my shipment?
If customs finds undeclared goods, wrong HS Codes, or value discrepancies, your container may be seized pending investigation. Penalties range from duty surcharges to full cargo forfeiture. Moreover, resolution can take weeks or months. This is precisely why correct documentation from origin — particularly accurate HS Codes, declared values, and complete packing lists — is non-negotiable. As a result, Foon Chaser’s documentation review process is designed specifically to prevent these situations.
What goods are prohibited from import into Nigeria by sea?
Nigeria Customs maintains a prohibited imports list that includes: used vehicles over 15 years (subject to exemptions), used clothing and shoes (for commercial import), certain chemical weapons and precursors, pornographic material, counterfeit currency, firearms and ammunition (without licences), and certain food products. Furthermore, some goods are conditionally prohibited — requiring specific licences. Therefore, Foon Chaser reviews your product list against the current NCS prohibited imports schedule before shipment commences.
How long does customs clearance take at Apapa Port?
With accurate documentation (PAAR pre-filed, correct HS Codes, complete invoices), Green Channel clearance takes 3 to 7 working days. Yellow Channel (scanner) adds 3 to 5 days. In contrast, Red Channel (physical examination) takes 7 to 21 days. Port congestion, NCS staff shortages, or public holidays extend all timelines. Overall, Foon Chaser achieves Green Channel assignment in over 80% of FCL shipments when documentation is correctly prepared.
What is included in DDP sea freight from China to Nigeria?
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) is the most comprehensive Incoterm. Under Foon Chaser’s DDP service: factory pickup in China, export customs clearance, ocean freight, marine insurance, Nigeria import customs clearance, duty payment, port handling, and delivery to your address in Nigeria are all included in one price. As a result, you take no operational responsibility for logistics. This is ideal for importers who want to focus on business, not freight management.
Is DDP sea freight from China to Nigeria more expensive?
DDP costs more per shipment than a basic ocean freight quote — but the total economic cost is usually similar or lower when you factor in: avoiding agent fees for port clearance, preventing demurrage charges, saving management time, and eliminating costly errors. Furthermore, DDP gives importers budget certainty — one price, no surprises. Therefore, for importers without their own customs agent network in Nigeria, DDP is often the smarter economic choice.
Under DDU shipping, what does the importer handle in Nigeria?
Under DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid), the freight agent delivers to a Nigeria port or agreed location. The importer is then responsible for: customs clearance, duty payment, PAAR filing, port handling, and inland delivery. DDU requires the importer to have an established customs agent in Nigeria. However, for most businesses, Foon Chaser recommends DDP for its simplicity and cost predictability.
Do I need marine cargo insurance for sea freight from China to Nigeria?
Marine cargo insurance is not legally mandatory but is strongly recommended — especially for LCL shipments or high-value cargo. A standard All Risks marine policy covers physical loss and damage during transit. On the China to Nigeria route, LCL cargo faces handling risks at the consolidation warehouse and during deconsolidation in Lagos. Furthermore, FCL cargo is lower risk but is not immune to vessel incidents. Accordingly, Foon Chaser arranges marine insurance on request.
What if my sea freight cargo is damaged in transit to Nigeria?
If cargo is damaged in transit, first document the damage immediately at port (before removing goods from the terminal), then notify your freight agent and insurance provider within 3 days. Next, obtain a Survey Report from a marine surveyor, and finally file a claim with supporting photos, B/L, and commercial invoice. Without cargo insurance, recovery from shipping lines is limited and rarely covers full loss. Foon Chaser assists clients through the claims process for all insured shipments.
How do I protect myself from freight agent scams when shipping from China?
Follow this protection checklist: First, verify the agent has a registered physical office in China (request their Chinese business licence). Second, never pay 100% upfront before receiving a B/L. Third, insist on documented shipping contracts. Additionally, confirm vessel booking by verifying your B/L number on the shipping line’s tracking portal. Finally, request references from real Nigerian clients. Foon Chaser provides all verifiable documentation and maintains transparent communication throughout every shipment.
Can Foon Chaser help me verify suppliers in China before shipping?
Yes. Our Guangzhou operations team offers factory visit, inspection, and verification services. Specifically, we check factory registration, production capability, quality control processes, and sample products before any shipment departs. As a result, this prevents the common Nigerian importer nightmare of receiving cargo that doesn’t match the order. Contact china@dechaser.com to arrange a China-side inspection.
What are the best cities in China to source goods for Nigeria?
Key Chinese sourcing cities for Nigeria-bound goods include: Guangzhou (electronics, fashion, homeware, industrial goods), Shenzhen (electronics, tech accessories), Yiwu (small commodities, wholesale markets), Dongguan (furniture, shoes, bags), Foshan (tiles, lighting, building materials), Ningbo (machinery, auto parts), and Qingdao (seafood, tyres, rubber). Furthermore, Foon Chaser can collect from all these cities and consolidate at our Guangzhou hub.
What Nigerian import duties apply to goods from China?
Import duty rates under Nigeria’s Common External Tariff (CET) range from 0% to 35% depending on product HS Code. Consumer electronics are typically 10 to 20%, clothing 20%, vehicles 5 to 35%, building materials 5 to 10%, and agricultural inputs often 0 to 5%. Additionally: 7.5% VAT, 1% CISS levy, 0.5% ETLS levy, and 0.5% NXP levy may apply. Therefore, contact our team for a specific estimate on your cargo.
Can individuals (non-commercial importers) ship goods from China to Nigeria by sea?
Yes, but personal imports still require customs clearance and duty payment. Furthermore, imports above $1,000 USD require a Form M. Personal use imports may benefit from different duty treatment depending on declared intent and value. However, for individuals importing goods regularly for resale, commercial import procedures are required regardless of how goods are described. Foon Chaser handles both personal and commercial import shipments.
Are there restrictions on importing used goods from China to Nigeria by sea?
Nigeria restricts or prohibits certain used goods imports. For example, used clothing (Okrika) for commercial purposes faces heavy restriction. Used vehicles must be within 15 years of manufacture (subject to current NCS guidelines). Moreover, used electronics face SONCAP scrutiny. In contrast, new goods from China generally face fewer import restrictions. Therefore, Foon Chaser confirms import eligibility for all cargo categories before shipping begins.
Not Sure Whether LCL, FCL, or DDP Is Right for Your Shipment?
Our Guangzhou team reviews your cargo details and recommends the most cost-effective shipping option — at no obligation. Most importers save 15 to 30% by optimising their shipping mode.
Every Week You Delay Is Money Left in China
Port demurrage charges, Naira depreciation, missed sales cycles, stock-outs, and customs delays cost Nigerian importers millions every year — most of it avoidable. The difference is working with a freight partner who understands both China and Nigeria from the inside.
Foon Chaser Express Limited operates from Guangzhou with dedicated Nigeria expertise. We don’t subcontract your shipment — we manage it. From your supplier’s factory gate to your warehouse door.
Request Your Quote Today — Avoid Delays, Hidden Charges & Customs ProblemsSea Freight From China to Nigeria — Your Concerns Answered
“What if sea freight is too expensive for me?”
Sea freight is consistently 60 to 80% cheaper than air freight per kg. Furthermore, LCL starts from $35/CBM — accessible for SMEs shipping as little as 0.5 CBM. If total shipping costs feel high, Foon Chaser will analyse whether you’re paying for the right mode, the right container size, and the right port. Often, structural inefficiencies — not the market rate — are the real cost problem. Therefore, let us audit your current shipping spend.
“How do I know my cargo is safe?”
FCL containers are sealed at the China factory or warehouse and not opened until Nigeria Customs examination. Moreover, our Guangzhou team physically inspects and counts cargo before loading. Every shipment is tracked in real time. As a result, in over 95% of Foon Chaser FCL shipments, cargo arrives intact with no quantity discrepancies. We also recommend marine cargo insurance for all high-value shipments.
“What if customs delays my shipment?”
The primary cause of customs delays is poor documentation preparation — wrong HS Codes, incomplete PAARs, missing SONCAP certificates. Consequently, Foon Chaser’s documentation review process, PAAR pre-filing while the vessel is at sea, and NCS liaison work means our clients achieve faster clearance than the industry average. Furthermore, we actively monitor every container from vessel arrival to port exit.
“How do I avoid being scammed by a fake freight agent?”
Foon Chaser Express Limited is fully verifiable. We have a registered physical office in Guangzhou, China — not just a Nigerian phone number and a WeChat account. Furthermore, our clients can verify our B/L numbers on shipping line portals in real time. We provide documented contracts, structured payment terms, and references from established Nigerian importers. In addition, we will never ask for full payment before your cargo is confirmed boarded.