For decades, the default answer was trucking to move freight across the U.S.-Mexico border. Cross-border trucking infrastructure is well-established, and for many shippers, it's simply what they've always done. But that default is changing, and for good reason.
Intermodal is becoming a mainstream choice for northbound and southbound cross-border freight, offering significant savings over long-haul trucking.
For cross-border freight, intermodal isn't just a good option - it's the superior option. The obstacles involved with using trucks across the border are difficult to overcome, while intermodal offers a streamlined, predictable alternative - with cost savings representing the cherry on top.
This article breaks down exactly why cross-border intermodal outperforms trucking on nearly every metric that matters to shippers: cost, transit time, predictability, security, capacity, and sustainability - serving as a complete guide to shipping between the U.S. and Mexico.
It's important to understand the roadblocks shippers are dealing with when they use trucks to move freight across the U.S.-Mexico border before discussing why intermodal is superior:
The U.S.-Mexico border has a limited number of commercial crossings, and they're heavily trafficked. Laredo alone handles over 16,000 truck crossings per day. During peak periods, wait times can stretch to 4-8 hours and that's on a good day. During holiday surges, weather events, or when staffing is short at customs, delays can extend to 12-24 hours or more.
That's not transit time. That's just waiting in line.
Here's something many shippers don't fully appreciate: In most cases, Mexican truck drivers cannot operate beyond the commercial zone on the US side of the border (typically 20-25 miles). The same is true in reverse for US drivers entering Mexico.
That means cross-border truck shipments require a driver handoff at or near the border. The Mexican driver delivers to a transfer yard. The trailer sits. A US driver picks it up and continues the journey.
Every handoff introduces delay, coordination complexity, and risk.
US drivers are subject to strict hours-of-service (HOS) regulations. After 11 hours of driving (within a 14-hour window), they must take a 10-hour break. On a long-haul move from Monterrey to Chicago (roughly 1,100 miles from the border) that's at least one mandatory reset, possibly two depending on traffic and loading times.
Each reset adds 10+ hours to the transit.
US law prohibits foreign drivers from making pickups and deliveries within the United States (with limited exceptions in border commercial zones). This regulation, known as cabotage, means that even if a Mexican carrier could theoretically run the full route, they're legally prohibited from doing so.
This creates inefficiency by design.
Trucks sitting in border queues, transfer yards, or overnight parking lots are vulnerable. Cargo theft is a real and persistent problem along the US-Mexico corridor, particularly for high-value goods. The longer freight sits stationary, the higher the risk.
The trucking industry on both sides of the border faces chronic driver shortages. In Mexico, qualified long-haul drivers are in short supply. In the US, the driver shortage has been a headline issue for years. When demand spikes, trucking capacity tightens quickly—and rates follow.
Intermodal addresses each of the challenges facing cross-border trucking, leading it to become the preferred solution for shippers who move significant volume across the U.S.-Mexico border. How does it address those challenges?
Intermodal containers move across the border on rail, not on trucks waiting in line at commercial crossings.
Rail crossings operate on dedicated infrastructure with pre-scheduled movements. Containers don't sit in queue behind thousands of trucks. They move on trains that cross at specific times through rail-dedicated ports of entry.
The result: Hours or days of border delay are eliminated entirely.
Cross-border intermodal shipments are pre-cleared by customs before arrival. Documentation is submitted electronically, and containers are cleared while still in transit.
When the train arrives at the border, there's no stop-and-wait for inspection (in most cases). The freight continues moving.
The result: Containers stay in constant motion instead of sitting idle while paperwork is processed.
Rail doesn't have HOS restrictions. Trains run continuously, with crew changes happening at scheduled points along the route without stopping the freight.
A container moving from Monterrey to Chicago doesn't care about 11-hour driving limits or 10-hour resets. It just keeps moving.
The result: Transit times are faster and more predictable because there are no mandatory rest periods interrupting the journey.
With trucking, cross-border moves require a handoff...Mexican driver to US driver (or vice versa). That handoff requires coordination, trailer repositioning, and time.
With intermodal, the container stays on the train for the entire linehaul. The only truck involvement is drayage at origin and destination...both of which happen domestically, with local drivers who know their markets.
The result: The complexity of cross-border driver logistics is eliminated for the long-haul portion of the move.
Because the rail linehaul doesn't involve foreign drivers operating on US soil (or US drivers operating in Mexico), cabotage regulations don't apply to the intermodal movement.
Drayage on each end is handled by domestic carriers operating within their own country's regulations. The cross-border complexity is handled by rail.
The result: Shippers avoid the regulatory maze that constrains cross-border trucking.
Cargo theft is a significant concern on the US-Mexico corridor. Trucks are vulnerable when they're stationary - in border queues, transfer yards, truck stops, or overnight lots.
Intermodal containers on rail are far less accessible. They're moving on trains, in rail yards with security infrastructure, or stacked in secure terminal facilities. The opportunities for theft are dramatically reduced.
The result: Lower risk of cargo loss, fewer insurance claims, and better peace of mind for high-value shipments.
When you add up border delays, driver changeovers, HOS resets, and the general variability of cross-border trucking, transit time predictability suffers. A shipment that should take 3 days might take 4 or 5 depending on what goes wrong.
Intermodal removes most of those variables. Pre-clearance, continuous rail movement, and scheduled train departures create a more consistent, repeatable transit profile.
The result: Shippers can plan their supply chains with greater confidence, reducing safety stock and improving inventory turns.
Sustainability matters to shippers, to their customers, and increasingly to regulators and investors. Rail produces approximately
75% fewer greenhouse gas emissions than trucking on a ton-mile basis. For shippers with ESG commitments or customers demanding greener supply chains, cross-border intermodal is the clear choice.
The result: Significant emissions reductions that support corporate sustainability goals and reporting requirements.
When demand surges, whether from seasonal peaks, nearshoring growth, or supply chain disruptions, trucking capacity tightens quickly. Driver shortages on both sides of the border make it difficult to scale up truck capacity rapidly.
Intermodal offers more scalable capacity. Railroads can add cars to trains and increase train frequency more easily than trucking companies can hire and onboard new drivers.
The result: Shippers have a more reliable capacity solution during peak periods and growth phases.
Cross-border intermodal service has expanded significantly in recent years. Today, there are well-established, high-frequency lanes connecting major Mexican manufacturing and distribution centers with U.S. markets.
Key corridors include:
These lanes offer daily or near-daily service, competitive transit times, and pricing that significantly undercuts long-haul trucking.
In spite of its challenges, there are situations where trucking remains the right choice for cross-border freight:
But for the vast majority of cross-border freight - particularly consistent, high-volume lanes between manufacturing centers and major US distribution markets - intermodal is the superior solution.
Cost savings vary by lane, volume, and specific circumstances, but shippers converting from cross-border trucking to intermodal typically see:
The savings are real and they compound over time as shippers build intermodal into their standard operating procedures.
If you're currently moving freight between the US and Mexico via truck and want to explore intermodal, here's a practical path forward:
Look for lanes with consistent weekly volume, origins near Mexican rail terminals, and destinations in major US markets with strong intermodal infrastructure.
Intermodal transit times are competitive with trucking on most long-haul lanes and often faster when you factor in border delays and HOS resets. But make sure your supply chain can accommodate the intermodal schedule.
Cross-border intermodal has nuances in customs documentation, Mexican drayage relationships, terminal procedures, and more. An IMC with deep cross-border experience makes the complexity invisible.
Start with 2-5 lanes. Measure transit time, cost, and service quality. Compare against your trucking baseline. Let the data speak.
Once you've proven the model on pilot lanes, expand to additional corridors. Build intermodal into your routing guide as the default for qualifying lanes.
For shippers moving freight between the US and Mexico, the question isn't whether intermodal can work—it's why you're still defaulting to truck.
Cross-border intermodal offers:
The obstacles that make cross-border trucking difficult don't exist in intermodal. The mode was designed to move freight across borders efficiently.
Trade between the United States and Mexico has never been stronger. Mexico is now the largest trading partner of the United States, surpassing China and Canada. In 2024, bilateral trade exceeded $800 billion, and that number continues to grow as nearshoring accelerates and North American supply chains become more integrated. That means there's plenty of cross-border shipping to do.
For shippers moving freight between the U.S. and Mexico, intermodal should be the default, not the alternative.
InTek Intermodal Logistics has extensive experience helping shippers convert cross-border trucking lanes to intermodal. We understand the nuances of US-Mexico freight movement and have the relationships - on both sides of the border - to deliver reliable, cost-effective service.
If you're ready to explore how intermodal can improve your cross-border supply chain, tell us about your needs for a lane analysis or visit our home page to learn more.
About InTek Intermodal Logistics
InTek Intermodal Logistics has been helping shippers simplify, save, and increase freight capacity with intermodal since 2007. With roughly 95% of our business dedicated to delivering intermodal solutions across North America, we're not a truckload company that dabbles in intermodal—intermodal is who we are.
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