Drayage · Oregon

Drayage in Oregon

Portland's Terminal 6 swings between active and limited container service. Most Oregon-bound containers now drays from Seattle/Tacoma; outbound ag and forest products remain heavy.

Ports

  • Port of Portland
  • Port of Coos Bay

Intermodal Hubs

  • BNSF Portland
  • UP Portland

Major Corridors

  • I-5
  • I-84
  • I-205

How we run drayage in Oregon

We work Port of Portland and the surrounding terminal complex on appointment systems daily. That means knowing which terminals run TIPS versus eModal versus Voyager, where chassis pools split, and how each ramp prioritizes return windows during congestion.

Major freight in Oregon flows along I-5 and I-84 — corridors we route load planning around, not against. Drayage drops at Portland, Eugene, Salem go out daily, and intermodal moves through BNSF Portland are part of the same lane book.

What you get

Terminal-fluent dispatch

Appointment booking and chassis management at Port of Portland and Port of Coos Bay.

Demurrage & detention defense

Pre-pull strategies, transload options, and dispute filing when the per diem clock starts wrong.

Overweight & specialized

State permitting, tri-axle chassis, and reefer plug coordination as needed.

One operator, one account

You're not bouncing across a call center. The person on the WhatsApp thread is the person dispatching your container.

FAQ

Do you cover all ports in Oregon?

We cover Port of Portland, Port of Coos Bay daily. If you have container freight at a smaller terminal not listed, message us — most secondary terminals in the state are reachable through our carrier network.

How quickly can you turn a container in Oregon?

Standard moves go out same-day or next-day depending on terminal appointment availability and chassis pool status. Pre-pulls and staged drays can compress that further when free time matters.

Need a container moved in Oregon?

Two ways to start — pick whichever's faster. No forms, no funnel.

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