Moving from the Philippines

How Much Does It Cost to Ship Your Belongings Overseas from the Philippines?

April 10, 20265 min read

If you’re planning to move or ship personal belongings overseas from the Philippines, one question usually comes up straight away:

“How much is this actually going to cost me?”

It’s a fair question, but also one that’s often answered poorly.

Most guides give you vague ranges or generic advice that doesn’t reflect what people actually end up paying. And that’s where frustration starts, because the price you expect and the price you’re quoted don’t always match.

The reality is, international shipping isn’t one-size-fits-all. But once you understand how it works, the costs become far more predictable.

What People Are Actually Paying

For 1 to 4 boxes, most customers pay between $600 and $1,800 using courier services.

For 5 to 10 boxes, costs vary depending on the method. Using sea freight shared container services, shipments typically range between $800 and $2,000, while faster or more premium options can range between $1,800 and $4,500.

For slightly larger shipments, around 11 to 20 boxes with some furniture, sea freight shared container services become more practical. These typically range between $1,200 and $3,000, offering a balance between cost and efficiency.

When volume increases further, sea freight becomes the most cost-effective option.

For larger moves (3-bedroom homes and above), shared container shipments typically range between $3,100 and $8,000+, while full container (FCL) moves can range between $9,000 and $12,000+, depending on size and destination.

These are realistic ranges based on recent shipments, not headline figures designed to attract attention.

Find out more about our shipping options through our service page.

Why Two People Can Pay Completely Different Prices

The biggest factor is how much you’re shipping.

International shipping is priced based on volume, not just weight. Ten boxes might take up 50 to 70 cubic feet, while even a small apartment can quickly reach 400 cubic feet or more. As volume increases, so does cost, but the cost per unit typically reduces when using sea freight.

The next factor is how you choose to ship.

Air freight is faster, but more expensive. Sea freight takes longer, but becomes significantly more cost-effective for larger shipments. Courier services are ideal for small moves but sit at the higher end on a per-box basis.

Then there’s the destination. Shipping from the Philippines to Singapore is very different to shipping to the USA, UK, or Canada. Even within the same country, final delivery location can influence cost, major cities are always more straightforward than remote areas.

Learn more about our moving service here. You can also check our resources for country guides.

Where Costs Can Go Wrong

This is the part most people aren’t told clearly.

It’s not uncommon to receive a competitive-looking quote, only for additional charges to appear later. This usually comes down to how the shipment is handled behind the scenes.

You may come across services based on LCL (Less than Container Load). While these can appear cost-effective upfront, they often involve multiple handling points at ports and terminals. This can introduce additional charges, handling fees, terminal fees, and port-related costs, that aren’t always fully visible at the start.

By comparison, shared container services (groupage) are handled differently. Shipments are consolidated at origin, loaded together, and delivered through a more controlled process at destination. Because of this, most of the core costs are built into the quote from the outset.

That difference alone is often what separates a predictable cost from one that continues to increase along the way.

Real Examples from Recent Shipments

To make this more tangible, here are a few recent scenarios:

A customer shipping around 15 boxes to the UK paid between $1,200 and $3,000 using sea freight, compared to closer to $1,800 to $4,500 by faster or premium options.

A slightly larger shipment to the USA, around 20 boxes, came in at approximately $1,200 to $3,000 via shared container, whereas faster shipping methods would have been significantly higher.

For smaller moves, such as students shipping 4–5 boxes to Canada, courier services typically range between $600 and $1,800, depending on speed and service level.

These examples aren’t fixed prices, but they give you a realistic sense of what people are actually paying.

How to Keep Your Costs Under Control

Most people don’t need the cheapest option, they need the right option.

In practice, that usually means:

• Being selective about what you ship

• Using sea freight where timing allows

• Packing efficiently to avoid paying for unused volume

• Making sure your quote includes all key handling and delivery elements

A slightly higher upfront quote that includes everything is often far more cost-effective than a cheaper quote that doesn’t.

Explore more tips here.

Planning Your Move Properly

Once you understand the basics, international shipping becomes far less complicated.

The key is looking at your move properly from the start, what you’re shipping, where it’s going, and how quickly you need it there.

From there, everything else becomes clearer.

Let’s Put Real Numbers Around Your Move

If you’re at the stage where you want to understand your costs properly, the next step is simple.

Rather than relying on estimates, we can provide a clear, tailored breakdown based on your shipment, so you know exactly what to expect.

No vague ranges.

No unexpected add-ons.

Just a realistic view of your options.

If you’re ready to move forward, you can find out more about your options, get a clear and accurate price based on your shipment, or simply talk it through with us to better understand what works best for your move.

Back to Blog