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Intl Shipping
Most customers choose "PacMe Preferred: Best Price" as their carrier option and then we will ship your package by the least expensive way.
Our shipping partners include the big three private carriers - UPS, FedEx, as well as USPS (aka The Post Office). You will be able to choose the carrier of your choice and delivery speed when you place a consolidation order. You can also select "best price" at any given service speed, and we will select the carrier for you once we get a final quote. You will have the option whether or not to include the USPS in the "best price" selection.
Transit times:
Check out our shipping calculator for real time quotes. We get substantial discounts, particularly for packages weighing more than 15kg.
UPS
FedEx
USPS
We ship to addresses worldwide except where prohibited by the US government or restricted by our shipping partners (Fedex, UPS, USPS). From time to time, we might shut down a country if we are having a lot of problems shipping there.
The private carriers will often not ship to certain countries, but their blacklist changes often. You can research your country on the carrier websites.
The UPS Country List has lots of information.
The US Postal Service has the best coverage worldwide and often has an easier customs process, but again, you will know best about the handoff to your own country's postal service.
It might be a good idea to do a small consolidation as a test run before trying to ship through more expensive items.
We can get a package to you in 3-4 days (Express) or 5-6 days (Economy). Weekends don't count, but sometimes they help. Learn more here.
Check out our shipping calculator for realtime quotes for the two services.
To guarantee the quickest service - same day turnaround at PacMe - here's the procedure you should follow:
Some important notes:
The shipping day doesn't count in the transit days because all packages depart Oregon on a late night flight, regardless when the carrier collects the package.
The carriers don't technically work on the weekends so they don't count those days in the "5-6 day" service (or any other). But they often actually fly the planes 24/7 and throughout the weekend.
They use these extra weekend days to load-balance their routes. You might see your package sitting in a US carrier hub for a few days, say Thursday and Friday, and then it flies over the weekend. Conversely, it might fly during the week and then sit in an international hub over the weekend.
It might appear that the 5-6 day service took up to 7-8 days if you shipped it over a weekend. They actually call it a 5-6 "business" day service.
You can have an unlimited number of boxes in an outgoing shipment, but each box must be smaller than these limits:
*Length + Girth = (L + 2W + 2H), where L is the longest side and then take the circumference of the rest of the box
We can pack and ship large items, such as furniture and gym equipment, but we have a few guidelines that we like to follow so that the process goes smoothly. Send us a message in your "My Account" chat box once you have the actual weight and measurements of either the actual boxes or the item itself, then we can get you an exact quote. It's also helpful to send us links if the items are online.
Is it worth it? It's all about dimensional weight. The actual weight of furniture almost never matters. Most furniture triggers dim weight by about 2-4x the actual weight. The trick is whether or not we can pack the empty space with other stuff, because you are paying for that space anyway (think of an empty suitcase or see this logic). Of course, if the furniture is flat-packed (think Ikea), then it usually doesn't trigger dim weight.
Of all the research and quotes we do for customers, the ones who actually go through with it are buying lots of rugs (up to 8 feet wide, 2.4m), the ocasional BBQ Grill, and dense items such as table tops and nightstands. We even sent a gym weight set to Singapore once - with shipping, it was still cheaper than buying it there. Those dense items are often worth it.
What's usually not worth it? Mattresses, bunk beds (unless simple, dense wood), couches, patio/assembled furniture.
Here is an example of how we will calculate the shipping cost. For large items it is usually about $3.00/lb to Singapore and Hong Kong, slightly more to Europe. This is admittedly not a great rate since it is not our core business.
It seems like every piece of furniture we ship costs more than $1k.
Here are some other notes:
We can ship lithium ion batteries - usually 2 per package. The restrictions are at the carrier level, but based on country regulations as well.
As a guide, however, FedEx and UPS will allow:
A typical 9-cell battery for a big Dell XPS laptop is 97Whr so makes it under the limit.
Nickel-Metal Hydride (NiMH) batteries must be shipped "loose." We will need to remove them from the electrical appliance or gadget. This might require us to open retail packaging.
Iphone-size battery chargers are usually ok as-is. We can include 3-4 of them in a shipment as long as we label the shipment.
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