There are basically three options:
1. Check excess baggage on the flight(s) you are taking.
2. Use a plain-old courier service to send the baggage.
3. Use a “Baggage Service”.
Of course, there are pros and cons to each mainly with respect to cost and convenience.
The cost of checking excess baggage is usually dramatically less expensive than using a courier or baggage service. There is some evidence of this in forum chat. You can also get a good sense simply by comparing shipping costs using a courier estimator (like Fedex’s) with the cost of excess baggage on your flight(s) (like WestJet’s).
As a concrete real-world example, on a recent trip from YVR to OGG I checked an additional item which cost me $20 CAD. The $20 CAD + tax permitted the item to weigh up to 50 pounds or $0.40 per pound. I also took that same additional item on a regional flight to YVR. That leg cost me $0.65 CAD +tax per pound for a total of $1.18 per pound.
On the same trip I also couriered an item from the same originating town to the same destination town where I was travelling – this is an apples-to-apples comparison. The item weighed 40 pounds and cost $219.09 CAD taxes included for a cost of $5.48 per pound. There were no duties incurred as the item was imported as unaccompanied baggage (see customs and duties below).
So, in concrete numbers, the cost of couriering an item in this case was between 4x and 5x the cost of checking baggage.
I don’t have concrete experience with a “Baggage Service”, but the one estimate I was able to produce was approximately 20% less than the final Fedex cost. Another site for Canada to the USA offers $4.25 per pound + tax + $50 pick up fee, currency unknown. These estimates, however, are not quotations, so I can only assume that the estimates are optimistic.
There is one case where couriering excess baggage can cost less: Multi-destination journeys. For example, suppose you are going golfing in St. Bart’s (do people golf there?) from London. But first, you are visiting family in Quebec, doing some business in Chicago, and going to a wedding in Florida, before going to your final destination. Your golf clubs might cost you a baggage fee on each of the four or five legs of that journey, so it could work out cheaper to just courier them to St. Bart’s.
Checking excess baggage requires no pre-planning but you have to physically handle your baggage for much of the trip. This can become a pain in the following circumstances:
Shipping via courier or excess baggage service avoids baggage complications while traveling, but requires organization and logistics before and after the trip. Generally, this involves a bunch of paperwork/online form filling, scheduling a pickup or dropping off the baggage, then picking up the baggage near your destination. Altogether, takes a significant amount more time time than checking bags.
There are certain circumstances that rule out one option or another.
When you courier excess baggage you need to import your baggage as Unaccompanied Personal Effects. Make sure you fill out and attach to your shipment all the necessary paperwork otherwise you will almost certainly be charged taxes, duties, and brokerage fees.
Edit: The Fedex Baggage Free Service is unavailable (at least in Canada). This is a moot point, however, as your baggage can be couriered with plain-old courier service and the right customs forms. (See this answer)
There is the Fedex Baggage Free Service.
The Baggage Free page points you to the normal Fedex rate and transit time calculator which you can use to get a shipping cost for your luggage. Presumably, if you or your company has special discounted terms with Fedex, you can benefit from those if you use the account.
It is not clear from the Baggage Free page how customs duties are handled. That questions is here.
There’s these guys: Excess Baggage
I’m in the process of using them to send some stuff internationally, and have friends who have used them with no problems. It appears they do most countries, and DO offer a sea-freight option.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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