Coffee Export Logistics From Bean to Port, Perfected
Coffee export logistics — specialized green bean handling, temperature-controlled ocean freight, and end-to-end supply chain management from Brazil's top producing regions to roasters worldwide.
Brazil ships 60 million bags a year — every one needs flawless logistics
As the world's largest coffee producer, Brazil exports over 60 million 60-kg bags annually, worth $9+ billion. From the cerrado farms of Minas Gerais to the port of Santos, every link in the chain must protect quality, meet phytosanitary requirements, and deliver on time. We specialize in moving green coffee from origin to destination with zero quality loss.
Green Bean Handling & Grading
We coordinate with certified warehouses and grading facilities across Minas Gerais, São Paulo, and Espírito Santo. Every lot is tracked by ICO number, screen size, and defect count to ensure traceability from farm to vessel.
Temperature & Humidity Control
Green coffee must travel at 60–70°F (15–21°C) with humidity below 65% to prevent moisture absorption and mold. We specify ventilated containers and monitor conditions throughout transit to protect cup quality.
Port Logistics — Santos & Paranaguá
Santos handles over 70% of Brazil's coffee exports. We manage booking, stuffing, and port scheduling at both Santos and Paranaguá, navigating peak-season congestion and terminal cutoff windows to avoid costly rollovers.
ICO & Phytosanitary Certificates
Every coffee export from Brazil requires an ICO Certificate of Origin and MAPA phytosanitary clearance. We handle all documentation including SISCOMEX registration, fumigation certificates, and destination-country import permits.
FCL Containerization with Liner Bags
Standard 20ft containers hold approximately 250 bags (15 metric tons) of green coffee. We use GrainPro or Ecotact liner bags inside containers to create a hermetic seal that prevents moisture migration and preserves freshness for up to 12 months.
Direct-to-Roaster Delivery Networks
We deliver directly to roasting facilities, co-ops, and specialty importers across the US, Europe, and Asia. Our ground distribution network handles last-mile delivery with appointment scheduling to match roaster production calendars.
Primary trade routes we operate
The global corridors where our partner network has the most repeat shipper history and tuned operations.
Brazil → USA (Santos → Miami / New York)
The largest single-origin corridor for Brazilian coffee. Transit time 15–20 days via direct services. Miami serves Southeast roasters; New York/New Jersey covers the Northeast specialty market. Section 321 de minimis does not apply — full customs clearance with FDA prior notice required.
View laneBrazil → Europe (Santos → Hamburg / Trieste)
Europe imports over 30% of Brazil's coffee output. Hamburg is the primary gateway for Germany (world's #2 importer), while Trieste serves Italy's espresso industry. Transit time 18–25 days. EU phytosanitary controls and EUDR (deforestation regulation) compliance required from 2025.
Brazil → Asia (Santos → Yokohama / Busan)
Growing demand from Japan (3rd wave specialty) and South Korea (café culture boom). Transit time 35–45 days via Cape of Good Hope or Suez Canal routing. Longer transit makes moisture control critical — we use double-layer liner bags and additional desiccant for these routes.
What we prevent for your shipments
Industry-specific risks we neutralize through proactive planning, documentation, and partner coordination.
Moisture Absorption During Ocean Transit
Green coffee is hygroscopic — it absorbs moisture from ambient air. A shipment crossing the equator can experience condensation (container rain) that raises bean moisture from 11% to 13%, causing quality degradation. We mitigate this with liner bags, desiccants, and ventilated container selection.
Harvest Season Congestion (May–September)
Brazil's main coffee harvest runs from May through September, creating a surge in export volumes. Santos port can experience 5–10 day delays during peak weeks. We pre-book vessel space 30–45 days ahead and use Paranaguá as an overflow port to maintain schedule reliability.
Phytosanitary & MAPA Export Requirements
Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture (MAPA) enforces strict phytosanitary controls on all coffee exports. Non-compliant lots face rejection, fumigation orders, or export bans. We ensure every shipment passes MAPA inspection on the first attempt through pre-clearance documentation and warehouse coordination.
Premium vs. Commodity Grade Routing
Specialty coffee (scoring 80+ on the SCA scale) requires different handling than commodity-grade beans. Premium lots need individual lot separation, careful temperature control, and faster transit times. We design routing strategies based on grade, value, and buyer requirements.
Santos Port Delays & Terminal Congestion
Santos is Brazil's busiest port, handling over 4 million TEUs annually. During coffee harvest peak, terminal yards fill quickly and vessel schedules slip. Our partner network has relationships with multiple terminal operators and uses Santos Brasil, BTP, and DP World terminals strategically to minimize dwell time.
End-to-end services for this sector
The transport, compliance, and advisory products we combine into one coordinated operation.
Ocean Freight
FCL and LCL services optimized for agricultural commodities with vessel booking, container tracking, and port-to-port visibility.
View ServiceCustoms Brokerage
Full customs clearance including ICO certificates, MAPA phytosanitary documentation, FDA prior notice, and destination-country import permits.
View ServiceWarehouse Solution
Climate-controlled warehousing for green coffee storage, lot separation, sample management, and order consolidation before delivery to roasters.
View ServiceIndustries with similar logistics challenges
Adjacent verticals where our operational pattern translates directly.
Food & Beverage
Temperature-controlled logistics, FDA compliance, and shelf-life management for food and beverage products.
View industryAgriculture
Bulk agricultural commodity shipping with seasonal planning, phytosanitary compliance, and origin-to-destination traceability.
View industryChocolate & Cocoa
Temperature-sensitive supply chain for cocoa beans and finished chocolate products with similar handling and compliance requirements.
View industryFrequently asked questions about Coffee Export Logistics
What is the ideal container temperature for shipping green coffee?
Green coffee should be shipped at 60–70°F (15–21°C) with relative humidity below 65%. We use ventilated containers and GrainPro liner bags to create a stable microclimate inside the container. For longer routes (35+ days to Asia), we add desiccant packs and double-layer liners to prevent condensation damage.
What is an ICO Certificate of Origin and do I need one?
The International Coffee Organization (ICO) Certificate of Origin is mandatory for all commercial coffee exports from producing countries. It verifies the origin, grade, and weight of the shipment and is required by most importing countries for customs clearance. We handle the ICO certificate application through CECAFÉ along with all supporting MAPA documentation.
Should I ship green coffee FCL or LCL?
FCL is strongly recommended for green coffee. A standard 20ft container holds approximately 250 bags (15 metric tons), and the hermetic liner bag that protects quality works best in a sealed, full container. LCL exposes coffee to mixed cargo odors and more handling, which degrades quality. We recommend FCL for any shipment above 10 metric tons.
What is the transit time from Santos to Miami for coffee?
Direct ocean services from Santos to Miami typically take 15–20 days depending on the carrier and whether the vessel makes intermediate port calls. During peak harvest season (June–August), we recommend booking 30–45 days in advance to secure space on direct services and avoid transshipment delays that can add 5–7 days.
What customs documentation is required for coffee imports into the US?
US coffee imports require an ICO Certificate of Origin, commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, MAPA phytosanitary certificate, and FDA prior notice (submitted 15 days before arrival). If the coffee is organic, you also need USDA NOP certification. We prepare and file all documents electronically to ensure smooth customs clearance.
How do you prevent moisture damage during ocean transit?
We use a three-layer protection system: GrainPro or Ecotact hermetic liner bags inside the container, calcium chloride desiccant strips hung from container ceiling hooks, and ventilated container selection when available. For equatorial crossings, we monitor container temperature data loggers and select vessels with below-deck stowage to minimize thermal cycling.
Get a Coffee Logistics Quote
Tell us your origin region, volume, and destination — we'll provide a detailed proposal with vessel schedules, container specifications, and all-in pricing within 24 hours.