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Settlement standard
International Shipping | Carrier Processing Fee | |||
First Weight Price | Continued Weight Price | Operation Fee | Fuel Charge | |
{{shipping.fee.firstfee | currency}} | {{shipping.fee.continuefee | currency}} | {{shipping.fee.customsfee | currency}} | {{shipping.fee.fuelfee | currency}} | {{shipping.fee.serverfee | currency}} |
Settlement standard
First Weight Price | Continued Weight Price |
{{shipping.firstfee | currency}}/{{shipping.firstweight}}g | {{shipping.continuefee | currency}}/{{shipping.continueweight}}g |
Line characteristics
Express restrictions
The first weight refers to the minimum billing weight. If the package weight is within the first weight range, the cost is calculated based on the first weight price. The continued weight refers to the excess part of the first weight.
Each express delivery route has a weight limit. If the items exceeds the weight limit, you will be prompted that the package cannot be submitted and you will need to remove some items and submit them in some separate shipments.
The advice for shipping goods is based on our experience in conventional transportation. We are not responsible for any customs detainment. Due to customs restrictions, tobacco, alcohol, medicine, and contraband are not accepted for shipment. According to air transportation requirements, food, liquids, granules, and creams require non-hazardous product identification. We recommend that you do not ship these types of goods in bulk. If you have a small amount of sensitive goods, you can include common goods (clothes, shoes, etc.) such as cosmetics in single bottles of no more than 100ml and individual packages of no more than 200ml.
The volumetric weight is mainly reflected in the freight transport link of logistics. When an item is too large in volume but too light in weight, its volume will be converted into weight for charging during transportation. The volumetric weight calculation formula for air cargo is: volume of the goods (length (cm) × width (cm) × height (cm)) / 6000 = volumetric weight (kg), that is to say, 6000 cubic centimeters of goods are equivalent to 1 kilogram in weight for calculating freight. In other words, 1 cubic meter of goods should be calculated as 167 kilograms for freight.