How Long Does Shipping from Europe to Thailand Take? A Route-by-Route Guide
If you are planning a move from Europe to Thailand, the question “how long will my shipment take?” is one of the first things you ask and one of the hardest to get a straight answer on. Carrier websites quote port-to-port times that are often two or three years out of date. Freight forwarders give ranges wide enough to be almost useless. And almost nobody mentions the things that actually determine whether your belongings arrive in six weeks or twelve.

This guide gives you the real numbers — broken down by European origin, shipping mode, and the parts of the journey that most timelines leave out.
Why Quoted Transit Times Are Often Wrong
Two things have changed the Europe-Thailand timeline significantly since 2023, and most published information has not caught up with either of them.
The first is Red Sea rerouting. Since late 2023, Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea have caused most major ocean carriers to reroute Europe-Asia voyages via the Cape of Good Hope — adding the southern tip of Africa to a route that previously transited the Suez Canal. This adds 10–14 days to Europe-Thailand sea freight transit times. A voyage quoted as 25 days via Suez is now typically 35–42 days via the Cape. Many carrier websites, freight calculators, and online guides still quote Suez transit times. They are out of date.
The second is the door-to-door vs port-to-port distinction. Ocean transit time — vessel departure to vessel arrival — is only one part of the total journey. Before the vessel sails, there is origin packing, collection, export customs clearance, and the cut-off window at the port. After the vessel arrives at Laem Chabang, there is port discharge, Thai customs clearance, and domestic delivery to your address. These stages add 20–30 days in total. A relocation that is quoted as “28 days ocean transit” is rarely under 55 days door to door.
Ocean Transit Times: Europe to Thailand by Origin Region
Europe is not one origin. Where you are shipping from matters significantly. All times below are via Cape of Good Hope (current routing for most services).
Northwest Europe (UK, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany)
These are the highest-volume European origins for Thailand shipping, with frequent direct services and good LCL consolidation options.
- Port-to-port (sea): 35–42 days via Cape of Good Hope
- Door-to-door (sea, FCL): 50–62 days
- Door-to-door (sea, LCL): 55–70 days (consolidation cut-off adds 5–10 days at origin; deconsolidation adds 3–5 days at destination)
- Door-to-door (air): 6–9 days
- Main transshipment ports: Singapore, Port Klang (Malaysia), Tanjung Pelepas (Malaysia)
Southern Europe (France, Spain, Italy)
Southern European ports (Marseille, Barcelona, Valencia, Genoa, La Spezia, Livorno) are closer to the Cape route than northwest European ports — the ocean leg is marginally shorter.
- Port-to-port (sea): 32–40 days via Cape of Good Hope
- Door-to-door (sea, FCL): 47–60 days
- Door-to-door (sea, LCL): 52–68 days
- Door-to-door (air): 6–9 days
- Main transshipment ports: Singapore, Port Klang, Colombo (Sri Lanka)
Scandinavia and Northern Europe (Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland)
Shipments from Scandinavian origins typically truck or feeder-vessel to Rotterdam or Hamburg first, adding 2–5 days before the main ocean leg.
- Port-to-port (sea, from main hub): 37–45 days via Cape of Good Hope
- Door-to-door (sea, FCL): 55–68 days
- Door-to-door (sea, LCL): 60–75 days
- Door-to-door (air): 7–10 days
Central and Eastern Europe (Poland, Czech Republic, Austria, Hungary)
No direct container port access — all freight moves by road to Hamburg, Rotterdam, Gdansk, or Trieste before the ocean leg. Add 3–7 days for the inland transport leg.
- Port-to-port (sea, from gateway port): 35–43 days via Cape of Good Hope
- Door-to-door (sea, FCL): 52–68 days
- Door-to-door (sea, LCL): 58–75 days
- Door-to-door (air): 7–11 days
The Full Door-to-Door Breakdown
The ocean transit is the stage most people focus on. It is not the variable that determines whether your move goes smoothly. Here is what the complete timeline actually looks like, stage by stage.
Stage 1: Packing, Collection, and Origin Handling (3–7 days)
A professional packing crew packs and wraps your household goods. The container or LCL shipment is collected and moved to the port or CFS (container freight station). Export customs documentation is prepared and lodged. This stage takes 3–7 days from your agreed packing date to cargo reaching the port. It can stretch to 10 days if documentation is not ready when packing begins — the most common cause of avoidable origin delay.
Stage 2: Port Cut-Off and Vessel Departure (3–10 days)
Once cargo is at the port, it must be loaded before the vessel’s cut-off date. For FCL (full container load), the container is sealed at collection and rolled onto the vessel. For LCL (shared container), your cargo sits at the CFS until enough freight from multiple shippers has accumulated to fill a consolidation container — this consolidation cycle adds 5–10 days at origin before the vessel sails. The vessel then sails on a fixed schedule; if you miss the cut-off, the next sailing is typically 7–14 days away.
Stage 3: Ocean Transit (32–45 days, Cape-routed)
The vessel travels from Europe to Laem Chabang (the main deep-water container port near Bangkok) via the Cape of Good Hope. Most services make one or two transshipment stops — most commonly Singapore or Port Klang — where your container is transferred to a feeder vessel for the final leg to Thailand. Each transshipment adds a port call of 1–3 days. The total ocean leg, including transshipment, is 32–45 days depending on origin and specific service.
Stage 4: Port Arrival and Discharge at Laem Chabang (2–4 days)
After the vessel berths, containers are unloaded and moved to the terminal yard. LCL shipments are moved to a CFS for deconsolidation — your cargo is separated from the other shippers’ freight in the same container. This deconsolidation adds 2–5 days compared to FCL, which can move directly from the terminal to customs. Port congestion during peak periods can add additional yard dwell time.
Stage 5: Thai Customs Clearance (3–21 days)
This is the most variable stage of the entire journey — and the one that most people underestimate.
For commercial cargo, Thai customs clearance under standard procedures takes 3–7 days when all documentation is correct and complete. Incomplete or inconsistent documentation — values that do not match the commercial invoice, packing lists that do not match the physical cargo, missing origin certificates — can trigger a customs hold that extends this to 2–4 weeks.
For household goods relocations claiming the personal effects duty-free exemption under Thai Customs Department regulations, the clearance process requires a Customs Form 130/1 (the personal effects declaration) supported by evidence of foreign residence — typically a foreign passport with entry/exit stamps, a residence cancellation certificate from your home country, and evidence of employment or property in Thailand. When all documentation is in order and submitted in advance, clearance takes 5–10 days. When documentation is incomplete, Thai customs can request additional evidence and hold the shipment for 10–21 days while the importer obtains the missing documents from overseas.
The single most effective intervention for reducing clearance time is pre-arrival documentation review by your Thai customs broker — done before the vessel arrives, not after it berths.
Timing also matters. Shipments arriving at Thai customs during Songkran (Thai New Year, 13–15 April and surrounding days) face reduced clearance throughput due to government holiday staffing. Clearance that normally takes 5–7 days can extend to 14–21 days for shipments that arrive in the Songkran window. Plan vessel arrival dates to avoid early-to-mid April at Laem Chabang.
Stage 6: Domestic Delivery in Thailand (1–3 days)
Once customs releases the cargo, it is transported from Laem Chabang to your delivery address. Bangkok and the greater Bangkok metropolitan area: 1 day. Chiang Mai, Phuket, Pattaya, Hua Hin: 1–2 days by road. Remote or island destinations: 2–5 days, with additional ferry or local logistics required for island deliveries.
Total Door-to-Door Summary
| Origin Region | Sea (FCL) | Sea (LCL) | Air |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northwest Europe (UK, NL, BE, DE) | 50–62 days | 55–70 days | 6–9 days |
| Southern Europe (FR, ES, IT) | 47–60 days | 52–68 days | 6–9 days |
| Scandinavia (SE, DK, NO, FI) | 55–68 days | 60–75 days | 7–10 days |
| Central/Eastern Europe (PL, CZ, AT, HU) | 52–68 days | 58–75 days | 7–11 days |
All sea times via Cape of Good Hope (current routing). Times assume Thai customs clearance proceeds without document delays. Songkran window (mid-April) adds 7–14 days to Thai clearance.
The Planning Timeline: Working Backwards from Move-In Date
The most common mistake European relocators make is starting the logistics process too late. This is not a criticism — the timeline is counterintuitive. Eight weeks feels like a long time in almost every other context. In Europe-to-Thailand freight, eight weeks is cutting it fine.
Here is the backwards planning framework for a sea freight household goods relocation from northwest or southern Europe:
- Move-in date in Thailand — your anchor
- Minus 1–3 days — domestic delivery from Laem Chabang
- Minus 7–14 days — Thai customs clearance (use 14 days as your planning buffer)
- Minus 2–4 days — port discharge and deconsolidation at Laem Chabang
- Minus 35–45 days — ocean transit via Cape of Good Hope
- Minus 5–10 days — port cut-off window and LCL consolidation at origin
- Minus 5–7 days — packing, collection, and export customs at origin
Total planning lead time from origin packing to Thailand delivery: 55–83 days.
For a move-in date of 1 September, packing should begin no later than 20 June. For a move-in date of 1 April, factor in the Songkran clearance delay and extend the Thai clearance buffer to 21 days — which pushes the packing start to late January.
Air freight reduces the ocean and cut-off stages to approximately 5–7 days total, bringing door-to-door to 15–22 days. Air is the correct mode for time-critical items — documents, electronics, essential personal effects — but the cost per kilogram is 5–10 times higher than sea, making it unsuitable for household goods volumes.
The Transshipment Variable
Direct vessel services from Europe to Thailand do not exist in the way that direct China-Thailand services do. Every European-origin shipment transships — typically at Singapore, Port Klang, or Colombo. The transshipment port is where your container is physically transferred from the main-haul vessel to a feeder vessel for the final leg to Laem Chabang.
What matters about transshipment for timing:
- Each transshipment adds 1–3 days of port time, during which the container is handled, positioned, and reloaded
- If a vessel is delayed on the main haul and misses the feeder connection at the transshipment port, the next feeder may be 5–10 days away — adding that delay to your total
- Transshipment is the point of highest cargo handling intensity and the highest damage risk in the entire journey — relevant for fragile household items and high-value electronics
When choosing a freight forwarder for a European-origin relocation to Thailand, ask specifically which transshipment port and which feeder service your shipment will use, and what the connection window is. A forwarder who cannot answer this question in detail does not have the route expertise you need.
What Slows Down European Shipments Specifically
Beyond the universal causes of delay (documentation issues, port congestion, customs holds), European-origin shipments to Thailand have two specific delay risks worth planning around.
Export customs in Europe. European Union export clearance requires an Export Accompanying Document (EAD) and, for household goods relocations, often requires proof of residence change — the same evidence that Thai customs will later require for the duty-free exemption. Getting this documentation in order before packing begins, rather than scrambling to assemble it after the shipment has left, prevents both European export delays and Thai import delays.
ISPM 15 phytosanitary requirements. Thailand requires all wooden packaging materials — pallets, crates, wooden frames used in packing — to be ISPM 15 treated (heat-treated or fumigated) and marked with the internationally recognised treatment mark. Professional removal companies use ISPM 15-compliant materials as standard. If you arrange your own packing or use materials sourced outside a professional removal context, verify ISPM 15 compliance before the shipment departs. A shipment arriving at Laem Chabang with non-compliant wooden packaging faces on-arrival treatment (cost and 5–10 days) or destruction of the packaging material.
Air Freight from Europe to Thailand
For items that cannot wait 55–75 days, air freight from European airports to Suvarnabhumi Airport (Bangkok) takes 2–3 days flight time. Door-to-door, including origin handling, airline cut-off, Thai customs clearance at Suvarnabhumi, and domestic delivery, is typically 8–14 days.
Thai customs clearance for air freight operates through the Cargo Clearance Centre at Suvarnabhumi. Standard clearance for commercial goods takes 2–5 days; personal effects clearance takes 3–7 days. Prohibited items (restricted under Thai Customs Act and the Narcotics Act B.E. 2522) are subject to longer hold or confiscation — confirm the admissibility of any borderline items before shipping by air, as the handling speed of air freight makes customs examination faster in both directions.
The cost of air freight from Europe is typically USD 4–8 per kilogram all-in, versus USD 0.50–1.20 per kilogram for LCL sea freight. For a 500kg household effects shipment, air is approximately AUD 4,000–8,000 more expensive than sea — but delivers in 10 days rather than 60. The calculation depends entirely on what those 50 days of delay cost you.
Getting the Timeline Right from the Start
The most important thing to understand about Europe-to-Thailand freight timing is that the number you most need — the date your belongings arrive at your door — is determined primarily by three things: when you start, how complete your documentation is, and whether your Thai clearance avoids the Songkran window. The ocean transit is the longest single stage but also the most predictable. It is the stages on either side — origin handling, documentation, Thai customs — where the time variation is greatest and where early preparation has the highest return.
For the full picture of what shipping from Europe to Thailand costs, see our breakdown of shipping costs to Thailand. For the step-by-step household goods process that feeds into this timeline, see our guide to shipping household goods to Thailand. For how to read the Thai customs duty-free rules that determine your clearance process, see our guide to how long shipping takes to Thailand from all origins.
Ready to Plan Your Move from Europe to Thailand?
Swift Cargo handles sea and air freight from all major European origins to Thailand, including customs broker coordination at both ends, ISPM 15-compliant packing materials, and Songkran-aware scheduling. Contact us at swiftcargo.solutions/contact to get a route-specific timeline and quote for your move.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does sea freight from the UK to Thailand take in 2025?
Door-to-door, UK to Thailand by sea freight currently takes 50–70 days. The ocean transit via Cape of Good Hope (the current routing for most services) is 35–42 days. Origin packing, export customs, and port cut-off add 8–17 days at the UK end. Thai customs clearance and domestic delivery add 7–14 days at the Thailand end. Quoted times of 25–28 days typically refer to port-to-port via Suez, which is no longer the standard routing.
Does freight still go through the Suez Canal from Europe to Thailand?
Most major carriers rerouted away from the Suez Canal in late 2023 due to Houthi attacks on commercial shipping in the Red Sea. The majority of Europe-to-Thailand services currently sail via the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10–14 days versus the Suez route. Some carriers have returned to Suez routing with additional security measures; confirm the current routing with your freight forwarder at the time of booking, as the situation continues to evolve.
What is the fastest way to ship from Europe to Thailand?
Air freight is the fastest option, with door-to-door times of 8–14 days from major European airports to Bangkok. Sea freight via the Cape of Good Hope is 47–75 days door-to-door depending on European origin. Air freight costs approximately 5–10 times more per kilogram than sea freight — it is practical for urgent documents, electronics, or small high-value items but not for household goods volumes.
Does Songkran affect how long my shipment takes to clear customs in Thailand?
Yes. Songkran (Thai New Year, 13–15 April with surrounding public holidays) reduces Thai customs throughput significantly. Shipments arriving at Laem Chabang during the Songkran window — roughly 10–20 April — commonly experience customs clearance delays of 7–14 additional days. For household goods relocations planning an April move-in date, schedule your vessel arrival before 8 April or after 22 April to avoid the clearance backlog.
Do I need an ISPM 15 certificate for shipping household goods from Europe to Thailand?
Thailand requires all wooden packaging materials (pallets, crates, wooden frames) to comply with ISPM 15 phytosanitary standards — heat-treated or fumigated and marked with the official treatment mark. Professional removal companies use ISPM 15-compliant materials as standard. If any wooden packaging in your shipment is not ISPM 15 compliant, Thai customs can require on-arrival treatment (cost and 5–10 day delay) or destruction of the non-compliant material. Verify compliance with your removal company before departure.
