Korean Used Car Break Bulk Shipping: The Complete Guide for Oversized Vehicles (2026)
Korean used car break bulk shipping is the method used to move vehicles that are too tall, too long, or too heavy for RoRo or a standard container. Instead of driving the unit onto a car carrier or sealing it in a box, a crane lifts it onto a general-cargo or multipurpose vessel and stevedores lash it down on deck or in the hold. It is how buses, medium and heavy trucks, cranes, and machinery leave Korea when no other method physically fits. Break bulk gives almost unlimited height and weight, at the cost of less frequent sailings, longer transit, and more exposure than RoRo.
This guide is the oversized-cargo companion to the two mainstream methods. If your vehicle is a normal running car, start with our RoRo shipping guide or the container shipping guide instead — they will be cheaper and simpler. This article is for the moment those methods run out of headroom: when a Hyundai County coach, a tall-box Hyundai Mighty, or a wheel loader will not fit a deck or a box, and you need to know how break bulk and flat rack actually work.
The one-line rule. If it drives and fits, ship RoRo. If it is high-value and fits a box, ship container. If it is over-height, over-length, or over-weight, ship it on a flat rack — and if it is too big even for that, ship it break bulk. The method is decided by the tape measure and the weighbridge, not the model name.
Internal Height Limit
Max Payload
OR Measurement
RoRo · Box · Break Bulk
by Crane
Surcharge Applies
Busan · Incheon · +3
Record = Protection
What Korean Used Car Break Bulk Shipping Is
"Break bulk" is one of the oldest ideas in shipping: cargo that travels loose, piece by piece, rather than in a standardised container. In the context of vehicle export, Korean used car break bulk shipping means a bus, truck, or machine is handled as an individual unit — lifted aboard a general-cargo or multipurpose vessel (MPV) by the ship's own crane or a shore crane, positioned on deck or in a hold, and secured with chains, wire lashings, chocks, and timber dunnage.
The defining feature is the crane. Because the unit is lifted on and lifted off (LoLo) instead of driven or forklifted into a box, there is no container wall or deck ceiling to limit height, and no doorway to limit width. A three-metre-tall coach, a crane truck with a folded boom, or an excavator that weighs 30 tonnes can all travel this way. According to KAMA, Korea exports well over a million used vehicles a year, and while the overwhelming majority go RoRo or container, the heavy and oversized slice — buses, commercial trucks, and machinery bound for Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia — is exactly where break bulk earns its place.
The trade-off is exposure and cadence. A RoRo car carrier sails a fixed schedule and keeps your car under a roof the whole way. A break bulk vessel sails less often, may call at fewer ports, and often carries the vehicle as deck cargo in the open air. That is why break bulk is a deliberate choice made for a specific unit, not a default — and why the preparation around it, from lashing to the pre-loading photo record, matters more than on any other method.
Break Bulk vs RoRo vs Container: Which Method for Which Vehicle
Choosing a shipping method is really a process of elimination driven by three numbers — height, length, and weight — and then by value and budget. The table below is the decision most exporters run through for every unit.
| Method | How It Loads | Best For | Main Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| RoRo | Driven / towed onto a car carrier deck | Running cars, vans, most SUVs, drivable trucks | Deck height; must roll |
| Container | Winched / driven into a 20ft or 40ft box | High-value cars, batches, theft-sensitive lanes | ~2.69 m height; ~28 t |
| Flat Rack / Open Top | Craned onto a rack or into an open-top box | Over-height vans, tall trucks, small machinery | Out-of-gauge surcharge |
| Break Bulk | Craned onto a general-cargo / MPV vessel | Buses, heavy trucks, cranes, large machinery | Fewer sailings; exposed |
The pattern is clear. RoRo is cheapest and safest for a standard running car — see our complete shipping logistics guide for how the mainstream lanes work. Container adds weather and theft protection and the option to load spare parts around the car, which is why the container loading guide covers how many cars fit a 40ft box. Flat rack and break bulk only enter the picture when a unit breaks the container's height or weight ceiling. Most oversized Korean vehicles that clear a container by only a little go on a flat rack; the genuinely large or heavy ones — full-size buses, tractor-trailers, big machinery — go break bulk.
Don't assume a big van needs break bulk. A high-roof Hyundai Solati (H350) usually still fits a 40ft high-cube container or a RoRo deck, so it ships the cheap way. It is the taller and heavier units — the Hyundai County minibus and tall-box Hyundai Mighty — that most often force a flat rack or break bulk. Always decide on the measured unit.
When You Need Break Bulk or a Flat Rack
A vehicle is pushed out of standard methods when it breaks one of three ceilings. Knowing the numbers lets you predict the method before you even request a quote.
Height
The internal height of a 40ft high-cube container is about 2.69 m, and a car carrier's usable deck clearance is often similar or a little more. Many buses, box trucks, and specialist bodies stand well over 3 m. Once the roofline clears the box, the unit needs an open-top container, a flat rack, or break bulk.
Length and width
A 40ft container is roughly 12 m of internal length. A rigid coach or a truck-and-trailer combination can exceed that, and anything wider than about 2.35 m internal will not fit a closed box either. Out-of-gauge length or width is classic flat rack or break bulk territory.
Weight
Standard dry containers cap useful payload at roughly 26–28 tonnes, and the flooring and lashing points are designed for evenly spread loads, not a concentrated machine. A heavy truck, tractor unit, or piece of construction equipment can exceed that limit, so it moves as break bulk or on a heavy-duty flat rack rated for the point loads.
Never guess the measurements. Freight on oversized cargo is calculated from the exact height, length, and weight you declare, and ports reweigh and re-measure. A unit booked as "container height" that turns up 30 cm too tall is rolled off, re-quoted, and delayed — often at demurrage rates. Measure the real vehicle, including any raised body, exhaust stack, or mirror, before booking anything.
Flat Rack, Open Top & Out-of-Gauge Explained
Before jumping to full break bulk, most over-height Korean vehicles have a cheaper option: equipment that rides on ordinary container ships but carries out-of-gauge loads. Understanding these three terms saves buyers real money.
Out-of-gauge (OOG) simply means the cargo exceeds a standard container's internal dimensions — too tall, too wide, or too long to fit inside a closed box. OOG is a status, not a piece of equipment; it triggers surcharges and special handling.
A flat rack is a container-footprint steel base with collapsible or fixed ends and no roof or sides. The vehicle sits on the rack and can overhang above and, within limits, beyond it, secured with chains and lashings. Flat racks are rated for heavy point loads, which makes them ideal for trucks and compact machinery.
An open-top container is a standard box with a removable tarpaulin roof instead of a steel one. It suits cargo that is over-height but still within the container's footprint — a van or light truck that is a little too tall for a closed box but not wide or long enough to need a flat rack.
The advantage of flat racks and open-tops is that they move on the same container ships as everything else, so they sail on frequent schedules. True break bulk on an MPV is reserved for the units that are simply too big for any container equipment. In practice, SH GLOBAL will always price the flat rack option first, because for many tall Korean trucks and minibuses it is meaningfully cheaper than chartering break bulk space.
Step-by-Step: How Break Bulk Shipping Works
A break bulk or flat rack shipment follows a clear sequence. The measuring and booking at the front end is where most of the work — and most of the cost control — happens.
weight of unit
rack or break bulk
photo record
position aboard
dunnage
track to port
1. Measure and weigh the exact unit
Everything starts with accurate dimensions and weight, taken from the actual vehicle including any raised body or fittings. These numbers drive the quote, the equipment choice, and the bill of lading.
2. Book the vessel, port, and equipment
The exporter books either a flat rack/open-top slot on a container ship or space on a general-cargo/MPV sailing, from a break-bulk-capable Korean port — Busan, Incheon, Pyeongtaek, Masan, or Ulsan. Because break bulk sailings are less frequent, booking early matters more than on RoRo.
3. Prepare the vehicle and record its condition
The unit is cleaned for biosecurity, fluids and batteries are handled per rules, loose items are secured, and — critically — the vehicle is photographed and filmed in HD from every angle. This pre-loading record is the evidence base for any later claim, exactly as covered in our shipping preparation guide.
4. Lift the vehicle aboard
A crane lifts the unit using proper lifting points or a spreader/cradle and positions it on deck or in the hold. This is the highest-risk moment for handling damage, so it is done by trained stevedores.
5. Lash and secure
The vehicle is chocked, chained, and wedged with timber dunnage so it cannot shift in a seaway. Correct lashing is what stands between an oversized unit and movement damage on a rolling voyage.
6. Issue the bill of lading and sail
The carrier issues a bill of lading describing the exact cargo and stowage, and the shipment sails. You then track the vessel to the destination port as with any sea freight.
What Drives Break Bulk Freight Cost
Break bulk is not priced per car the way RoRo often is. It is charged on the revenue ton (RT), also called the freight ton: the carrier bills the greater of the cargo's weight in tonnes or its volume in cubic metres. This is the W/M — weight or measurement — rule, and it has a counter-intuitive effect: a light but bulky bus is billed on its large volume, so it can cost more than a dense machine of the same weight.
On top of the base freight, an oversized shipment usually carries several add-ons. The chart below shows the rough relative cost of moving a comparable unit by each method — RoRo cheapest, full break bulk most expensive — so you can see where the premium sits.
The typical cost components on a break bulk or flat rack booking are:
- Base ocean freight — charged on the revenue ton (W/M).
- Lift-on/lift-off (LoLo) and stevedoring — the crane handling at both ends.
- Lashing and securing — chains, dunnage, and labour to secure the unit.
- Out-of-gauge / heavy-lift surcharge — a premium for cargo exceeding standard limits.
- Terminal handling charges (THC) at load and discharge ports.
- Bunker and currency adjustments (BAF/CAF) and any port congestion fees.
Because these depend entirely on the exact unit, destination, and vessel availability, no honest exporter quotes a flat rate sight unseen. The only accurate number is a quotation for your specific bus, truck, or machine — which is where a specialist exporter that ships oversized units routinely, like SH GLOBAL, adds value by matching the cheapest method that actually fits.
Documents & Insurance for Break Bulk Cargo
The paperwork for a break bulk shipment is the same family of documents used for any Korean vehicle export, with one crucial difference: the measurements carry legal weight. Freight was charged on them, the carrier's liability is tied to them, and the port will verify them.
Two documents deserve special attention on oversized cargo. First, the Verified Gross Mass (VGM) — under the SOLAS convention the shipper must declare the packed weight, and on a heavy unit an inaccurate figure means it is refused loading; our VGM guide explains the rule in full. Second, marine insurance: because deck cargo is more exposed, all-risks ICC (A) cover is strongly advised, and the claim behind it depends on the pre-loading photo record. Declaring the true value, weight, and dimensions consistently across every document is the single best way to keep an oversized shipment moving.
Risks and How to Protect an Oversized Shipment
Break bulk carries more physical risk than RoRo or a sealed container, and each risk has a specific, well-established control.
- Lift damage. A crane lift concentrates force on the vehicle's lifting points. Control: use rated lifting points or a purpose-built cradle/spreader and trained stevedores — never improvise sling points.
- Movement and chafing. A unit that shifts in a seaway can be badly damaged. Control: professional lashing with chains, chocks, and adequate timber dunnage, checked before departure.
- Weather exposure. Deck cargo faces sea spray, rain, and sun. Control: weatherproof vulnerable openings, protect the interior, and insure against water damage under ICC (A).
- Measurement disputes. Wrong dimensions cause reweighing, re-quoting, and delay. Control: measure the real unit and match every document.
- Longer, less frequent transit. Break bulk schedules are thinner than RoRo. Control: book early and plan the destination-side clearance ahead of arrival.
The protection that matters most. On every oversized shipment, the strongest safeguard is a dated, HD record of the vehicle's exact condition before the crane lifts it. That before-and-after evidence is what any marine insurance claim depends on if the unit arrives damaged. Lashing keeps the car safe physically; the photo record keeps you safe financially.
How SH GLOBAL Ships Oversized Korean Vehicles
SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. ships the buses, trucks, and machinery that other sellers turn away, precisely because oversized cargo is a routine part of exporting Korean commercial vehicles to the Middle East, Africa, and Central Asia. The approach is method-agnostic and cost-first:
- Measure first, then choose the cheapest fit. Every unit is measured and weighed, and SH GLOBAL selects RoRo where the deck allows, a high-cube or open-top container or flat rack for over-height units, and full break bulk on an MPV only when the size or weight truly demands it.
- Book the right vessel and port. Space is secured on the correct sailing from Busan, Incheon, Pyeongtaek, Masan, or Ulsan, with lead time built in for thinner break bulk schedules.
- Handle the lift and lashing professionally. Trained stevedores manage the crane lift and secure the unit with proper lashing and dunnage.
- Build the evidence and the cover in. Each vehicle is recorded in HD before loading, all-risks marine cargo insurance is arranged, and the bill of lading is prepared with accurate out-of-gauge measurements — so the paperwork matches the cargo from quotation to arrival.
To see where oversized logistics fit into the whole purchase, walk through our step-by-step buying process, or browse the commercial range: explore Hyundai inventory for County buses, Mighty trucks, and Solati vans, browse Kia vehicles including Bongo trucks, or view the current stock. Whatever the size of the unit, it ships with the condition record and cover a safe delivery needs.
Shipping Something That Won't Fit a Box?
SH GLOBAL ships oversized Korean buses, trucks, and machinery by RoRo, container, flat rack, or break bulk — measured, secured, recorded in HD, and insured end to end. Send us the unit and destination, and we will quote the cheapest method that actually fits.
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