Over the past several years, supply chain disruption has been framed through a familiar lens: ocean freight rates, geopolitical risk, and port congestion.
But in 2026, a different – and often less visible – challenge is emerging.
The most significant breakdowns in many logistics networks are no longer happening on the water. They’re happening at the handoff between the port and the warehouse.
For import-heavy shippers, this transition point is becoming one of the most expensive and least coordinated segments of the supply chain.
Congestion Isn’t Gone, It’s Just Less Predictable
Recent global port activity suggests that congestion hasn’t disappeared. It has become more episodic and harder to plan around.
Instead of sustained, system-wide backlogs like those seen during COVID, ports are now experiencing:
Recent data from the National Retail Federation and maritime analysts like Drewry shows that while port congestion has eased from peak-pandemic levels, variability in throughput and timing remains elevated compared to historical norms.
That variability matters.
Because even when vessels arrive on time, what happens next is increasingly inconsistent.
The Real Bottleneck: Port-to-Warehouse Coordination
Once a container is discharged, the assumption is that it will move efficiently inaldn.
In practice, that assumption is breaking down.
Common failure points include:
1. Drayage Capacity MisalignmentThe result is not always obvious, but it is costly.
Where Costs Quietly Accumulate
When port-to-warehouse coordination breaks down, costs don’t always show up as a single line item. They accumulate across multiple categories:
According to the Federal Maritime Commission, demurrage and detention charges remain a persistent concern for shippers, particularly when delays are caused by factors outside their direct control.
At the same time, inventory delays can have downstream effects – missed retail windows, stockouts, or excess safety stock to compensate for uncertainty.
Why This Problem is Getting Worse in 2026
Several current market dynamics are amplifying the issue:
1. Tariff Uncertainty is Driving Volume Swings
Importers are accelerating or delaying shipments based on policy changes, creating uneven arrival patterns at ports. The Supreme Court tariff ruling impacting some implementations has caused a whiplash effect on some imports that will continue to ripple through supply chain strategies.
2. Network Fragmentation Remains the Norm
Many shippers still rely on:
Each handoff introduces risk – and most networks lack a unifying layer of coordination.
3. Operational Visibility is Still Limited
Even with improved tracking tools, many organizations still lack:
In short, the system is more digital, but not always more aligned.
What High-Performing Networks are Doing Differently
Leading supply chain organizations are not eliminating disruption, but they are absorbing it more effectively.
Key shifts include:
1. Integrated Drayage and Warehousing
Rather than treating drayage as a standalone service, they align:
This alignment decreases the risk of wires getting crossed during a handoff.
2. Designing for Flow, Not Just Storage
Facilities are increasingly optimized for:
This reduces dwell time and accelerates inventory availability.
3. Prioritizing Real-Time Coordination
High-performing networks invest in:
Instead of reactivity leading to delays, proactive companies can better anticipate the curveballs and adjust ahead of time.
4. Building Flexibility Into the Network
This includes:
From Weak Link to Competitive Advantage
In a more stable era, the port-to-warehouse transition was often treated as a tactical step.
In 2026, it is becoming a strategic control point.
Organizations that treat this handoff as an integrated system rather than a series of disconnected vendors are seeing:
And in an environment defined by variability, consistency is a competitive advantage.
The Bottom Line
Supply chain disruption hasn’t disappeared. It has evolved.
Today, some of the most meaningful inefficiencies are happening not across oceans, but within a few miles of the port.
For shippers looking to reduce cost, improve speed, and increase reliability, the opportunity is clear: Rethink the connection between port and warehouse.
Upgrade to Source
Source Logistics helps brands design and operate integrated logistics networks – connecting port operations, drayage, warehousing, fulfillment, and transportation into a unified system.
If your network is experiencing delays, rising accessorial costs, or inconsistent inbound flow, we can help identify where coordination is breaking down and how to fix it.
Connect with our team to evaluate your port-to-network strategy.