Trade Show Shipping: Timing, Labels, Freight vs UPS, and Avoiding Fees
Trade show shipping isn’t like shipping to an office. You’re not just trying to get boxes from Point A to Point B—you’re trying to hit a very specific delivery window, in a very specific building, with a very specific set of rules… while hundreds (or thousands) of other exhibitors are doing the exact same thing.
And here’s the part that catches people off guard: even if your carrier delivers “on time,” you can still get charged extra if your shipment arrives early, arrives late, isn’t labeled correctly, or requires special handling once it hits the dock.
This guide breaks down the real-world playbook: timing, labels, freight vs UPS/FedEx, and how to avoid the most common (and expensive) trade show fees.
Why trade show shipping is different (and why fees happen)
At most shows, shipping is a two-part story:
That second part—material handling/drayage—is where many surprise charges live, and it’s why trade show shipping needs its own plan. (Also: different shows and venues have different rules and deadlines, so your first step should always be the exhibitor kit/manual for that specific event.)
Step 1: Start with the Exhibitor Manual (your “avoid fees” blueprint)
Before you print a single label, open the exhibitor manual and locate:
If you only do one thing from this article: build your shipping plan around the exhibitor manual deadlines. Many costly problems are simply deadline problems.
Step 2: Timing—use a simple timeline that gives you margin
A reliable, low-stress timing approach looks like this:
4–6 weeks out
2–3 weeks out
7–10 days out
1–3 days before move-in
Advance warehouse vs direct to show site: which is better?
Advance warehouse usually means your freight arrives days (or weeks) before the event and is then delivered to your booth during move-in.
Direct to show site means your carrier delivers during a tight window at the venue—often alongside heavy dock traffic.
When advance warehouse is often the smarter choice
When direct-to-show-site can work well
One practical warning: shipping direct can create bottlenecks at the loading dock, and delays can cascade into overtime or added costs.
Freight vs UPS/FedEx: how to pick the right method
Here’s the easiest way to decide:
Use UPS/FedEx (small parcel) when:
Watch-outs with small parcel:
Convention centers often have strict receiving rules and may only accept shipments close to move-in; for example, some venues state they’ll only accept shipments one day prior to move-in and warn about fees or refusals for early deliveries. (Greater Tacoma Convention Center)
So “UPS delivered successfully” doesn’t always mean “your boxes are where you need them.”
Use freight (LTL/FTL) when:
Freight wins on control (BOLs, piece counts, scheduled delivery appointments(for Truckload)) and is the standard for larger booths. But it also raises the stakes: incorrect classification, wrong weights, or missing paperwork can trigger charges.
Labels: what to put on every box, crate, and pallet
Trade show labels aren’t “nice to have.” They’re how your shipment gets routed correctly when dozens of events may be loading in at the same venue.
A strong label typically includes:
Many exhibitor shipping label templates follow this same structure (company + booth, event, venue, and piece ID). (Greater Tacoma Convention Center)
Pro tips that prevent chaos
The fees that surprise exhibitors (and how to avoid them)
These are the “gotchas” that hit budgets hardest:
1) Drayage/material handling shock
Material handling is separate from transportation and covers movement from dock/warehouse to booth (and related show-site handling/storage).
Avoid it by: estimating it early using the show’s rate sheet and keeping shipments consolidated (fewer pieces, fewer partial deliveries).
2) Waiting time and dock congestion
If your freight arrives during peak congestion, trucks can wait—and you may pay.
Avoid it by: using advance warehouse when possible, or scheduling direct deliveries at lower-traffic times per the manual.
3) Early/late delivery penalties or refusals
Some advance warehouses won’t accept early shipments.
Some venues limit how early they’ll accept inbound shipments and can charge storage fees.
Avoid it by: shipping to the correct address within the accepted window—not earlier.
4) “Special handling” add-ons
Common triggers: loose (non-palletized) items, mixed piece types, uncrated awkward shapes, or shipments that require extra labor/equipment.
Avoid it by: palletizing cleanly, shrink-wrapping, and labeling clearly. If it’s heavy or awkward, crate it.
5) Outbound pickup problems at close
If your carrier misses pickup, some shows may reroute shipments per the BOL or apply additional handling/storage steps.
Avoid it by: arranging pickup early, having outbound labels ready, and confirming the driver check-in process.
A reusable trade show shipping checklist
Before you ship
Day you ship
Onsite
FAQs
What is drayage/material handling?
It’s the show-site handling that moves your freight from the dock/warehouse to your booth (and often includes storage and movement of empty containers), separate from the carrier transportation.
Should I ship direct to the venue the day before the show?
Sometimes—but it can backfire if docks are congested. Planning around the official delivery window (or using advance warehouse) often reduces risk of delays and extra costs.
Do I really need booth number on every label?
Yes. Labels are how contractors and docks sort freight at scale, and many venues/templates explicitly include company + booth + event + destination information. (Greater Tacoma Convention Center)
Where Push Social Agency fits (so you’re not doing everything at once)
Shipping week can be chaotic: freight, booth builds, staffing, lead capture, travel, last-minute print runs. If you want one major plate taken off your hands, Push Social Agency can run your pre-show content plan, on-site coverage, and post-show follow-up—so while you’re tracking pallets and deadlines, your audience is still seeing momentum.