Savannah's Play. Not Necessarily Yours.
On July 16, the Port of Savannah opens a four-lane highway corridor to move freight faster inland. The Georgia Department of Transportation spent $126 million on the Brampton Road Connector, which links the port to Interstate-16 and routes truck traffic away from Savannah's city streets into Atlanta and the Southeast. It's a straightforward infrastructure bet: remove congestion, pull volume.
For Savannah, it probably works. The port is a major US gateway. Faster dwell clearance means importers can get containers off the dock quicker, cut detention premiums, and move inventory inland without sitting in queue. That saves days and dollars on the US side of a supply chain.
Most Canadian importers don't import through Savannah, and this highway doesn't change whether they should. If you're bringing cargo into Canada, you're looking at Montreal, Vancouver, or Halifax, depending on origin and your inland destination. Those gateways have their own infrastructure, drayage networks, and dock SLAs. Savannah's road project is good news for Savannah logistics. It's not your import decision.
Unless You're Already Using Savannah
There's a caveat. Some importers do use Savannah as a gateway into North America, especially for US-origin freight that feeds a distribution hub in the Midwest or Northeast. For those operations, faster Savannah clearance shaves a day or two off the US dwell clock. But that's the US side of the equation. Once the container crosses the border into Canada, it's our dock-to-stock SLA that matters, not Savannah's road.
At FENGYE LOGISTICS, we run standard dock-to-stock cycles of 48 to 72 hours from gate-in to inventory ready for pick. That means your container cleared CBSA, unloaded, putaway-coded, and in slot before 72 hours expire. Container free time at the Port of Montreal runs five business days. After that, you're paying detention by the day, and it adds up fast in Q4. Drayage from the Port of Montreal to our warehouse typically runs a 24-to-36-hour window depending on appointment availability and 401 corridor traffic.
None of that timeline changes because Savannah built a highway.
What Actually Moves Your Costs
The real competition for Canadian importers isn't between Savannah and Montreal. It's whether your total landed cost and dock-to-stock reliability make importing through Canada worth it versus gating at a US hub and drayaging northbound. Savannah's infrastructure improves that US hub math slightly. It doesn't kill our play in Montreal.
What actually moves the needle: PARS coordination with your broker, dock-door appointment windows, drayage consistency, in/out handling fees, and storage rates. A slow PARS release costs more than a fast port road. A missed drayage appointment window costs more than port infrastructure saves. We see this on our dock weekly—importers who picked the cheaper gateway but didn't buffer for PARS hold or container exam. They land a discounted Savannah route and lose two days in Montreal because the broker's release is stuck in CBSA review or the drayage window was booked out. That two-day buffer is worth thousands in working capital and safety stock.
Savannah's highway is a signal that US authorities are serious about port velocity. For Canadian importers, it's a data point, not a directive. Your import strategy is still driven by origin, inland destination, duty strategy, and the reliability of your 3PL partner—not by road infrastructure in Georgia.
The Real Question
Here's what you should ask your broker and warehouse operator instead: What's our typical end-to-end cycle from gate-in to inventory slot, accounting for PARS wait, exam risk, and drayage queue? What happens when the broker misses a release window? How often does that happen? That's where the savings live, not in Savannah roads.
If your supply chain depends on Savannah, yes, the highway helps. If it doesn't, it's noise. If it does, lock down your inland drayage appointment windows and your warehouse putaway window. The road won't help you if you're stuck at the dock waiting for a slot or your PARS release is pending.
FENGYE LOGISTICS handles inbound-to-inventory for importers across Canada, and we see every gateway strategy. Sometimes Montreal is the move. Sometimes Savannah makes sense. Often it's both—different SKUs gate different ways depending on landed cost and inland destination. The Savannah highway doesn't change that calculation. Your total cost picture does, and that's the one worth auditing.
Originally published at https://www.fywarehouse.com/news/savannahs-new-truck-route-not-your-import-decision-a3b3cc78.
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