Guide · Spain → Germany
Dedicated FTL or groupage on the Spain → Germany corridor
Spain → Germany is our second-busiest corridor after Romania. Both FTL and LTL groupage run densely on this lane. Picking between them depends less on distance than on how your volume pattern actually looks.
4 min read
The volume threshold
Below 10 linear meters of trailer (roughly half a trailer), LTL groupage is almost always cheaper per kilogram than FTL. You're sharing the trailer with other Spain-origin loads heading to Germany.
Above 11 linear meters, the picture flips: you're paying for trailer space you're not using, and FTL direct routing saves you transit time.
The frequency factor
If you ship weekly or more often, FTL dedicated on a fixed day/week is predictable and easy to operationalize. Your dispatcher locks a slot; you fill it.
If you ship monthly or ad-hoc, scheduled LTL groupage is the right tool. You slot into the next departure whenever your load is ready, without paying for empty trailer in between.
The industry fit
Automotive Tier 1 to German OEM plants: FTL dedicated, almost without exception. JIT delivery windows don't tolerate consolidation.
Industrial machinery and capital goods: FTL for the main shipment, LTL for spare parts and consumables.
Fashion to German DCs: scheduled LTL for regular replenishment; FTL when a seasonal drop fills a full trailer.
Packaged consumer goods: scheduled LTL — dense departures to Munich, Frankfurt, Hamburg.
The honest comparison table
Typical FTL Barcelona → Munich: 24h express, 36–48h standard. Cost: one flat figure per truck.
Typical LTL groupage Barcelona → Munich: 2–3 days door-to-door. Cost: per linear meter (or per 1000kg, whichever is higher).
For loads around 7–9 meters: FTL lands faster but costs roughly double what LTL would have. Decision is transit time vs budget.
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