Korean Used Car Export Ports: Pyeongtaek, Masan, Busan & Incheon Complete Guide (2026)

Published: April 27, 2026 | Last Updated: April 27, 2026 | By SH GLOBAL

Korean used car export ports are the six gateways through which all Korean used vehicles physically leave the country: Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, Ulsan, Busan New Port, and Gunsan. According to Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (KAMA) export-channel data, Korea exported 687,000 used vehicles in 2025, of which Pyeongtaek loaded the largest share by total tonnage and Masan loaded the largest share of pure used-car volume. Picking the right Korean used car export port directly affects your inland trucking cost (USD 80–250 per car), port handling fee (USD 70–180), RoRo carrier availability, and sail-date flexibility. This guide compares all six Korean used car export ports — by 2026 throughput, used-car share, carrier networks, fee schedules, and the regional sourcing that feeds each one — so buyers can verify their exporter's port routing line by line.

Quick answer: Most Korean used cars sail from Pyeongtaek (1.1 million vehicles per year, all major RoRo carriers, dominant for northern-Korea sourcing) or Masan (~280,000 used vehicles per year, southern-Korea sourcing). Incheon handles ~150,000 used-car exports with strong Africa frequency. Ulsan ships 410,000 mostly new Hyundais but accepts used-car RoRo. Busan New Port (~50,000 used) is dominated by container shipping. Gunsan (~30,000) is a minor specialized port. Confirm port of loading on your B/L before paying.

6Korean Used Car Export Ports
1.1MPyeongtaek Annual Vehicles
$70-180Port Handling Per Car
687K2025 Used Car Exports

This guide is the dedicated port-of-loading deep dive for our complete shipping logistics guide from Korea. For the channel decision (RoRo vs container) once your port is chosen, see the Korean used car RoRo shipping guide and the container shipping guide. For documents that the port issues at sail time, see the B/L complete guide and the export documents guide.

Korean used car export ports — Hyundai inventory ready for loading at Pyeongtaek and Masan for global RoRo and container shipment

1. What Are Korean Used Car Export Ports?

A Korean used car export port is a designated maritime terminal where used vehicles registered in Korea are processed for international export — including yard staging, customs export filing, pre-shipment inspection (PSI), Bill of Lading issuance, and Roll-on/Roll-off or container loading onto an outbound vessel. Korean Customs Service (관세청) recognizes six such ports, each operated by the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries through a regional port authority and supplemented by private terminal operators (Hyundai Glovis, Eukor, KMTC).

Every Korean used car export port shares the same regulatory backbone:

  • Customs export declaration (수출신고) filed via UNI-PASS before the vehicle physically enters the port yard
  • De-registration certificate (말소등록증) verifying the car has been removed from Korean Vehicle Registration Authority records
  • Pre-shipment inspection (PSI) by SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, JEVIC, or KOTI — depending on the destination's compliance regime (SONCAP, KEBS, SABER, JEVIC)
  • Yard custody intake with VIN cross-check, fuel drain to 10–15 percent, and condition photos
  • B/L or Sea Waybill issuance after the vessel sails, listing the port of loading explicitly

What differs across the six Korean used car export ports is throughput, used-car share, carrier network density, fee schedule, and the regional auction or dealer channels that feed each one. SH GLOBAL books across all six and routes each order to the port that minimizes inland trucking and matches the destination's RoRo schedule.

2. The Six Korean Ports That Export Used Cars

Below is the geographic map of Korea's used car export ports, west coast to east coast, north to south. The throughput figures combine Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (KAMA), Korean Customs Service, and Pyeongtaek-Dangjin Port Authority 2025 data.

Pyeongtaek

West coast · Asan Bay

Korea's largest car export port. ~1.1M vehicles/year. Default loading point for northern-Korea sourcing.

All carriersRoRoContainer

Masan

South coast · Gyeongsangnam-do

Korea's #2 pure used-car port. ~280,000 used vehicles/year. Southern-Korea sourcing dominant.

EukorGlovis

Incheon

West coast · Yellow Sea

~150,000 used-car exports/year. Closest to Seoul auctions. Strong Africa frequency.

Multi-carrierRoRo

Ulsan

Southeast coast · Hyundai home

~410,000 vehicles/year (mostly new Hyundai). Accepts used-car RoRo.

GlovisEukor

Busan New Port

South coast · Korea's container hub

~50,000 used cars/year. Dominant for containerized used-car export.

ContainerLimited RoRo

Gunsan

West coast · Jeolla-do

~30,000 vehicles/year. Smaller specialized RoRo for Southwest-Korea sourcing.

Niche

According to Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association (KAMA) and Korea Customs Service data, these six Korean used car export ports together processed all 687,000 used vehicles Korea exported in 2025. The next sections profile each port in detail.

3. Pyeongtaek Port — Korea's Largest Car Export Port

Pyeongtaek (평택항) on Asan Bay is the dominant Korean used car export port. Combined new-and-used vehicle throughput reached approximately 1.1 million vehicles per year in 2025 according to Pyeongtaek-Dangjin Port Authority — the largest of any Korean port. It is the primary export base for Hyundai Motor's Asan plant (Sonata, Grandeur production), KG Mobility's Pyeongtaek plant (formerly SsangYong), and used-car flow sourced from northern Korea: Seoul, Gyeonggi-do, Incheon, and Chungcheong-do.

Pyeongtaek port at a glance

  • Annual vehicle throughput: ~1.1 million (combined new + used)
  • Used-car share: Approximately 320,000 used vehicles per year
  • Major RoRo carriers calling: Eukor Car Carriers, Hyundai Glovis, NYK Line, "K" Line (ONE Auto Logistics), MOL ACE, Höegh Autoliners, Wallenius Wilhelmsen
  • RoRo frequency: Multiple weekly sailings to Middle East, Africa, Europe, North America
  • Port handling charge: USD 80–150 per used car
  • Yard storage: USD 4–7 per car per day
  • Inland trucking from Seoul auctions: USD 80–150 (60–80 km)
  • Container service: Yes (limited; Busan handles most container)

Pyeongtaek is the right Korean used car export port for the majority of orders heading to Jebel Ali, Hamad Port, Aqaba, Mombasa, Lagos, Tema, Dar es Salaam, Walvis Bay, Durban, and Vladivostok. It offers the most RoRo carrier options of any Korean port and the deepest sail-frequency choice — meaning a buyer who needs to ship within seven days has the highest chance of finding a vessel slot at Pyeongtaek. SH GLOBAL routes the majority of its Hyundai inventory through Pyeongtaek; browse SH GLOBAL's Hyundai inventory to see units already cleared for this routing.

4. Masan Port — The Used-Car Specialist

Masan (마산항) on the south coast in Gyeongsangnam-do is Korea's #2 pure used car export port and arguably the most used-car-specialized facility in the country. Annual throughput is approximately 280,000 used vehicles per year with a used-car share above 90 percent, compared to Pyeongtaek's mixed new/used split.

Masan port at a glance

  • Annual used-car throughput: ~280,000 vehicles
  • Used-car share: 90 percent plus
  • Major RoRo carriers calling: Eukor, Hyundai Glovis (some Höegh)
  • RoRo frequency: Multiple weekly Middle East and Africa sailings
  • Port handling charge: USD 70–130 per used car (lowest of major ports)
  • Yard storage: USD 3–6 per car per day (lowest)
  • Inland trucking from Busan/Daegu auctions: USD 60–110
  • Container service: Limited; mostly RoRo

Masan is the default Korean used car export port for vehicles sourced from the southern dealer network — Busan metro, Daegu, Ulsan, Gyeongsangnam-do, Gyeongsangbuk-do. Because Masan specializes in used-car operations, the yard staff and port handlers know how to manage individual-vehicle export workflows quickly: B/L issuance is typically faster than at mixed-traffic ports, and lashing crews are dedicated to PCTC operations. SH GLOBAL routes southern-Korea sourced Kia inventory through Masan to minimize both inland trucking and yard-storage cost; browse SH GLOBAL's Kia inventory.

5. Incheon Port — Seoul's Gateway

Incheon (인천항) is Korea's third major used car export port. Annual used-vehicle exports reach approximately 150,000 vehicles per year. Incheon is the closest port to Seoul-area auction houses (Glovis Auto Auction, Lotte Auto Auction, AJ Cell, KB Cha-Cha-Cha) and to the Gyeonggi dealer network, which means inland trucking from a Seoul-area sourcing point to Incheon is shorter and cheaper than to Pyeongtaek.

Incheon port at a glance

  • Annual used-car throughput: ~150,000 vehicles
  • Used-car share: High (~80 percent for vehicle terminal)
  • Major RoRo carriers calling: Eukor, Hyundai Glovis, NYK, KMTC
  • RoRo frequency: Strong Africa and Middle East schedule
  • Port handling charge: USD 100–170 per used car
  • Yard storage: USD 5–8 per car per day
  • Inland trucking from Seoul auctions: USD 50–90 (40–60 km)
  • Container service: Yes, established

Incheon's special advantage is tide-locked dock scheduling — Incheon's massive tidal range requires vessel sailings to be timed with tide windows, which means missing your sail window can add 1–2 days. Port handling is slightly more expensive than Pyeongtaek or Masan, but the inland trucking savings from Seoul-area sourcing usually offset the difference. Incheon is particularly strong for Africa-bound RoRo: Hyundai Glovis runs dedicated Korea-East Africa loops with weekly Incheon calls. For Africa-bound buyers, see our Africa export guide for destination-specific routing decisions.

6. Ulsan, Busan New Port & Gunsan

Ulsan Port

Ulsan is Hyundai Motor's home port, exporting approximately 410,000 vehicles per year — but the vast majority are new cars rolling directly off Hyundai's adjacent Ulsan factory. Used-car volume is modest (~25,000 per year) but Ulsan accepts used-car RoRo from Hyundai Glovis and occasionally Eukor. Useful when the source vehicle is a Hyundai already located near the Ulsan plant or when a buyer specifically wants Hyundai-direct routing. Port handling USD 90–140; yard storage USD 4–7 per day.

Busan New Port

Busan New Port (부산신항) is Korea's largest container port and a major export gateway by total cargo tonnage — but its used-car export volume is modest at roughly 50,000 used vehicles per year. Busan dominates new car export plus general containerized freight; for used cars, Busan is typically used only when the shipment is loaded into a container (FCL) or a multi-vehicle consolidation rather than RoRo. Port handling USD 110–180 (highest of the major ports for used-car RoRo, lower for container). Container infrastructure is excellent. For container-route specifics, see our Korean used car container shipping guide.

Gunsan Port

Gunsan on the Jeolla-do west coast handles approximately 30,000 vehicles per year, used and new combined. It is a niche port useful when sourcing in southwestern Korea (Gwangju, Jeolla-do) where Pyeongtaek and Masan are both 200+ km away. RoRo carrier coverage is thinner — primarily Hyundai Glovis with occasional Eukor — and sail frequency is weekly to bi-weekly. Port handling USD 80–130. Used by a small subset of exporters; SH GLOBAL uses Gunsan only when southwestern-Korea sourcing makes the inland-trucking math beat Pyeongtaek and Masan.

7. 2026 Korean Used Car Export Ports Comparison Matrix

The master comparison table for all six Korean used car export ports. Use this to verify your exporter's port choice against the destination, sourcing region, and budget priorities for your order.

PortAnnual VehiclesUsed Car ShareHandling FeeStorage/DayBest For
Pyeongtaek1,100,000Mixed (~30%)USD 80–150USD 4–7Northern-Korea sourcing, all carriers, all routes
Masan280,00090%+USD 70–130USD 3–6Southern-Korea sourcing, used-car specialist, lowest cost
Incheon180,000~80%USD 100–170USD 5–8Seoul-area auctions, Africa frequency
Ulsan410,000Low (mostly new)USD 90–140USD 4–7Hyundai-source, southeastern Korea
Busan New Port~50,000 usedContainer-ledUSD 110–180USD 6–9Containerized FCL, multi-vehicle loads
Gunsan30,000MixedUSD 80–130USD 3–6Southwestern-Korea sourcing only

2025 Korean Used Car Export Volume by Port

Pyeongtaek
~320,000 used vehicles
320K
Masan
~280,000 used vehicles (90%+ used)
280K
Incheon
~150,000 used vehicles
150K
Busan New Port
~50,000 used vehicles
50K
Gunsan
~30,000 vehicles
30K
Ulsan
~25,000 used (mostly new)
25K

Pyeongtaek and Masan together account for roughly 87 percent of pure Korean used car export ports volume. The remaining 13 percent is split across Incheon, Busan, Ulsan, and Gunsan. For comparative export-volume context, see our Korea automobile export volume 2026 analysis.

8. How Sourcing Region Determines Korean Port Choice

The single biggest factor in picking a Korean used car export port is where the car is sourced. Inland trucking from auction yard or dealer lot to the port costs USD 80–250 per car depending on distance — and the wrong port choice can add USD 200–300 of unnecessary trucking. The map below summarizes the ideal port routing by sourcing region.

Sourcing RegionPrimary PortBackup PortInland Cost
Seoul / Gyeonggi / IncheonIncheonPyeongtaekUSD 50–150
Chungcheong (Asan, Cheonan, Daejeon)PyeongtaekIncheonUSD 80–180
Gangwon (East coast)PyeongtaekUlsanUSD 150–250
Daegu / Gyeongsangbuk-doMasanUlsan / PyeongtaekUSD 90–170
Busan / Gyeongsangnam-doMasanBusan New PortUSD 60–120
UlsanUlsanMasanUSD 40–90
Gwangju / JeollaGunsanPyeongtaekUSD 80–180
JejuPyeongtaek (via ferry)MasanUSD 200–400

Three reminders. First, the auction houses cluster around Seoul (Glovis, Lotte, KB, AJ Cell), so most auction-sourced inventory naturally flows to Incheon or Pyeongtaek. Second, dealer-sourced inventory in southern Korea is heavily Masan-biased. Third, Hyundai factory-fresh used demonstrators or trade-ins from Hyundai dealerships often originate near Ulsan, making Ulsan-direct loading sensible for that subset. For a deeper view of how auction sourcing connects to port routing, see our Korean used car sourcing guide.

9. Korean Used Car Export Port Cost Breakdown

Every Korean used car export port adds the same five line-items to your FOB-to-port cost. The 2026 rates differ by port but the structure is identical, so this lets you compare exporter quotes apples-to-apples.

The five port-side line items

  1. Inland trucking — auction yard or dealer to port. USD 80–250 per car. Distance-based.
  2. Port handling charge — terminal use, harbor master, lashing crew. USD 70–180 per car. Pyeongtaek 80–150, Masan 70–130 (cheapest), Incheon 100–170, Busan 110–180.
  3. Yard storage — only if the car arrives more than 24 hours before vessel sail. USD 3–9 per car per day. SH GLOBAL targets 0–48 hours of yard storage.
  4. Documentation fees — Korean customs export filing, B/L issuance, terminal charges. USD 50–80 per shipment.
  5. Pre-shipment inspection — SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, JEVIC, KOTI as required by destination. USD 95–250 per car. Covered in our PSI complete guide.

Total port-side line-items typically run USD 350–750 per car on top of the FOB vehicle price and before ocean freight. SH GLOBAL itemizes every line on every quote — buyers see exactly how much each port adds rather than receiving a bundled "port fee" black-box number.

Red flag: An exporter quoting a single bundled "port fee" of USD 1,000+ without itemizing handling, storage, documentation, and inland trucking is hiding margin. Demand line-by-line breakdown — every legitimate Korean exporter has the data because Korean Customs Service itself requires itemization on the export declaration.

10. The 6-Step Korean Used Car Port Loading Process

Every Korean used car export port follows the same six-step loading sequence. Knowing each step helps buyers verify the exporter's progress and spot delays.

1
Inland Truck
Auction yard or dealer to port — USD 80–250
2
Yard Intake
VIN scan, fuel drain to 10–15%, condition photos
3
Customs & PSI
Export declaration filed, PSI inspection completed
4
Vessel Booking
Slot confirmed on PCTC vessel 7–14 days pre-sail
5
Loading
Drive-on RoRo or container stuffing — same day
6
B/L Issuance
B/L or Sea Waybill issued post-sail with port stamp

Step 1 — Inland trucking. The vehicle is moved by auto-transport truck (or driven by a port driver for short distances) from the sourcing point to the export port. Cost USD 80–250.

Step 2 — Yard intake. On arrival, the vehicle is photographed (8–12 angles), the 17-digit VIN is verified against the export declaration, fuel is drained to 10–15 percent (Korean carrier safety rule for any car loaded RoRo), and the keys are tagged with VIN plus B/L number. The car parks in the export yard awaiting vessel call.

Step 3 — Customs export filing & PSI. The exporter files the Korean export declaration (수출신고서) via UNI-PASS — the Korea Customs Service electronic clearance system — and the de-registration certificate (말소등록증) is uploaded. If the destination requires PSI (Nigeria SONCAP, Kenya KEBS PVoC, Saudi SABER, Tanzania TBS PVoC, Uganda UNBS PVoC, Ghana CoC), the inspection is performed at this stage by SGS, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, or JEVIC.

Step 4 — Vessel booking. Carrier confirms vessel slot 7–14 days before sail. Booking slip lists vessel name, voyage number, sail date, and discharge port.

Step 5 — Loading. On vessel arrival day, RoRo cars are driven up the stern ramp by the port crew and lashed to the deck (60–90 seconds per car); container loads are stuffed in the CFS (Container Freight Station) inside the port and the container is craned aboard the feeder or mainline vessel. A 6,500-CEU PCTC loads in 18–24 hours.

Step 6 — B/L issuance. Once the vessel sails, the carrier issues the Bill of Lading or Sea Waybill listing port of loading explicitly. SH GLOBAL releases the B/L to buyers immediately upon issuance. Detailed B/L field structure is in our Korean used car B/L complete guide.

11. Decision Framework: Picking the Right Korean Used Car Export Port

The decision rule for Korean used car export ports collapses to a four-question test. Run it in order.

  1. Where is the car sourced? Northern Korea (Seoul/Gyeonggi/Chungcheong) → Pyeongtaek or Incheon. Southern Korea (Busan/Daegu/Gyeongsang) → Masan. Hyundai-direct → Ulsan. Southwestern (Gwangju/Jeolla) → Gunsan.
  2. RoRo or container? Single vehicle → RoRo, which means Pyeongtaek, Masan, or Incheon. Multi-vehicle FCL container → Pyeongtaek or Busan New Port.
  3. What is the destination region? Middle East (UAE, Saudi, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Jordan) → Pyeongtaek or Masan (best frequency). East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda) → Pyeongtaek or Incheon. West Africa (Nigeria, Ghana) → Pyeongtaek. Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan via Vladivostok rail) → Pyeongtaek container.
  4. Does sail urgency matter? If you need the next vessel out, Pyeongtaek wins on frequency every time — the highest weekly carrier-call density of any Korean port.

Run those four questions and the right port is usually obvious. SH GLOBAL applies this same matrix per order rather than defaulting to one port; on a typical week the company books shipments from at least three of the six Korean used car export ports. For region-specific routing context see our Africa export guide for African destinations and our Central Asia guide for Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan routes. For the broader buying workflow that culminates in port loading, the step-by-step buying process guide walks through every prior step.

If you are sourcing a Genesis luxury sedan and want it routed through Pyeongtaek with Hyundai Glovis carrier service, explore SH GLOBAL's Genesis inventory. For broader real-time inventory across all Korean used car export ports SH GLOBAL routes through, view available vehicles.

12. Conclusion: Verifying Your Port Routing

Picking the right Korean used car export port is one of the few decisions in international car buying that quietly costs USD 100–300 if it is wrong and USD 0 if it is right. The wrong port adds inland-trucking distance, exposes your car to extra yard-storage days, narrows your RoRo carrier choice, and can delay your sail date by a week. The right port — matched to where your car is sourced, where it is going, and how it is shipped — keeps your FOB-to-port costs minimal and your sail schedule tight.

The four-question test is the buyer's checklist: (1) Where is the car sourced? (2) RoRo or container? (3) What is the destination region? (4) Does sail urgency matter? Run it on every order, demand the loading port on the B/L matches the answer, and require the exporter to itemize handling, storage, documentation, and inland trucking line-by-line. Any exporter who refuses to disclose port routing or hides it inside a "bundled port fee" is a red flag. SH GLOBAL routes every order through one of the six Korean used car export ports — Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, Ulsan, Busan New Port, or Gunsan — and shows the buyer which one and why before payment.

Ready to Get a Port-Specific FOB Quote?

Get a personalized quotation for your Korean used car including loading port recommendation, RoRo carrier selection, inland trucking from auction yard, full port handling fee breakdown, and PSI scheduling. SH GLOBAL routes through Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, Ulsan, Busan New Port, and Gunsan — picking the right port per order to minimize your total landed cost. Our logistics team responds within 24 hours.

Request a Free FOB Quote

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Korean used car export ports handle the most volume?
Korea exports used cars through six ports — Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, Ulsan, Busan, and Gunsan. Pyeongtaek is the largest with approximately 1.1 million vehicles per year (combined new and used) according to Pyeongtaek-Dangjin Port Authority 2025 data. Masan is the dominant pure used-car port at 280,000 vehicles per year. Incheon handles roughly 150,000 used-vehicle exports yearly, Ulsan 410,000 (mostly new Hyundai), Busan New Port around 50,000 used cars, and Gunsan a smaller specialized 30,000.
Where does my Korean used car actually load — Pyeongtaek or Busan?
Most Korean used cars load at Pyeongtaek or Masan, not Busan. Pyeongtaek serves cars sourced from Seoul, Gyeonggi, Incheon, and Chungcheong (northern Korea) plus Hyundai Asan plant inventory. Masan serves cars sourced from Daegu, Gyeongsangnam-do, and the southern dealer network. Incheon handles Seoul-area auction sourcing with strong Africa frequency. Busan New Port loads small volumes of used cars and is dominated by new car and container exports. Confirm port of loading with your exporter before paying — port choice affects pre-shipment storage cost and inland trucking fees.
How much do Korean port handling fees cost in 2026?
Korean port handling charges range USD 70 to USD 170 per used vehicle in 2026. Specific port rates: Pyeongtaek USD 80–150, Masan USD 70–130, Incheon USD 100–170, Ulsan USD 90–140, Busan New Port USD 110–180, Gunsan USD 80–130. The fee covers terminal handling, lashing supervision, port equipment use, and harbor master charges. Yard storage runs an additional USD 3–7 per car per day before sail. Documentation (B/L issuance, customs export filing) adds USD 50–80. SH GLOBAL itemizes every port-side charge on the FOB-to-port quote line by line.
Why does Korean port choice matter for buyers?
Port choice affects four things buyers pay for. First, inland trucking — sourcing in Seoul shipped from Masan adds USD 200–300 in inland fees versus Pyeongtaek. Second, RoRo carrier availability — not every carrier calls every Korean port weekly, which affects sail date. Third, port handling rates vary USD 70–180 per car. Fourth, customs and PSI staging differ slightly between ports. Picking the port closest to your sourcing region usually saves USD 100–300 per car. SH GLOBAL routes northern-Korea sourced cars through Pyeongtaek/Incheon and southern-Korea cars through Masan to optimize this.
Is Busan New Port used for Korean used car export?
Busan New Port handles a small used-car export volume of roughly 50,000 vehicles per year — modest compared to Pyeongtaek (1.1M total) and Masan (280K used). Busan is Korea's largest container port and dominates new car export plus general freight; used-car RoRo capacity at Busan is limited and often more expensive than Pyeongtaek or Masan. Busan is more relevant for container shipping of used cars, especially multi-vehicle FCL loads heading to ports without RoRo service. For single-unit RoRo, Pyeongtaek and Masan are almost always the right choice.
Which Korean port is best for export to Africa?
Pyeongtaek and Incheon are the most frequent Korean RoRo loading ports for Africa. Hyundai Glovis runs dedicated Korea-Africa loops calling Pyeongtaek with stops at Mombasa, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, and Tema. Eukor Car Carriers also runs frequent Africa service from Pyeongtaek. Incheon adds Africa frequency for Seoul-area sourcing. Masan can serve Africa via transshipment but direct service is less common. SH GLOBAL routes Africa-bound shipments primarily through Pyeongtaek for the best Glovis/Eukor schedule access. See our Africa export guide for destination-specific routing.
How do I confirm which Korean port loaded my car?
The Bill of Lading lists the Korean port of loading explicitly — look for fields labeled Port of Loading, Place of Receipt, or Port of Departure. The Korean export declaration (수출신고필증) also lists the loading port. SH GLOBAL provides both documents to every buyer. Cross-check the B/L port name against the carrier vessel schedule to confirm the vessel actually called that port on the sail date. Common Korean RoRo loading port names you will see: Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, Ulsan, Busan New Port, Gunsan.
Does SH GLOBAL ship from all Korean used car export ports?
Yes. SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. routinely loads used cars through Pyeongtaek, Masan, Incheon, and Ulsan, with occasional consolidations through Busan New Port for multi-vehicle container loads. Port choice is decided per order based on sourcing region, destination route, and RoRo carrier schedule. Every SH GLOBAL FOB quote includes the loading port, the inland trucking cost from auction yard, the port handling charge, and the booked carrier — fully itemized so buyers can verify the routing decision.
💬 WhatsApp 📞 +82-10-5804-8504