Calculate shipping volume, container fit, and freight weight instantly
The CBM calculator (Cubic Meter Calculator) is an indispensable tool for anyone involved in international shipping, logistics, freight forwarding, or e-commerce. CBM — short for Cubic Meter — is the universal standard measurement for shipping volume. Every time goods are transported by sea freight or air freight, the space they occupy in a container or aircraft determines a significant portion of the shipping cost. Whether you are a small business owner sourcing products from overseas, a freight forwarder quoting a client, or a warehouse manager planning container loads, knowing your shipment's total CBM is the first step in calculating costs and making informed logistics decisions. Calculating CBM manually for a single box is straightforward — multiply the length by the width by the height — but real shipments rarely consist of just one item. Most commercial shipments involve multiple SKUs with different dimensions, quantities, and weights. Doing all of that math by hand, converting between units, summing totals, and then cross-referencing container specifications is tedious and error-prone. That's where this multi-item CBM calculator adds real value: you can enter as many line items as you need, mix different unit systems (centimeters, inches, feet, meters), and get an instant total. Beyond raw volume, this calculator computes everything you need to plan your freight. The volumetric weight for air freight (also called dimensional weight) divides the total CBM by 6 to convert cubic decimeters into kilograms — airlines charge whichever is greater, the actual weight or the volumetric weight. For ocean freight, carriers use a different convention: 1 CBM equals 1,000 kg for calculating the freight ton. The chargeable weight shown is the maximum of your actual weight versus the air volumetric weight, which is what your air freight invoice will be based on. Container fit is another critical output. Ocean freight is divided into LCL (Less than Container Load) and FCL (Full Container Load) shipments. LCL is economical for small shipments where you share container space with other shippers. Once your cargo reaches roughly 15 CBM or more, it usually becomes cost-competitive to book an entire container (FCL). This calculator shows you what percentage of a standard 20-foot container, 40-foot container, and 40-foot High Cube container your shipment would fill, giving you an immediate visual of where you stand on the LCL vs FCL decision. The three most common ocean containers have the following usable internal volumes: a 20-foot standard container holds approximately 31.2 m³, a 40-foot standard container holds approximately 67.0 m³, and a 40-foot High Cube container — which has an extra 30 cm of height — holds approximately 76.1 m³. In practice, you should aim to fill no more than 85–90% of theoretical volume to account for irregular stacking, packaging, and cargo securing requirements. The per-item breakdown section of this calculator is particularly useful for shipments with diverse cargo. By seeing each item's individual CBM contribution as a proportional bar, you can quickly identify which products are the biggest space consumers and consider packaging optimizations. Even small changes to box dimensions — such as reducing height by a few centimeters — can add up to meaningful savings when multiplied across hundreds or thousands of units. For e-commerce sellers using Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) or similar third-party logistics (3PL) services, knowing your CBM is also necessary for booking inbound shipments and estimating storage fees, which are often calculated per cubic foot or cubic meter per month. This tool's CBF (Cubic Feet) output makes it easy to cross-reference with US-standard warehouse pricing. Exporting your item list to CSV makes it straightforward to attach the volume breakdown to a freight quote request or share it with your customs broker or logistics partner. The print function lets you produce a clean shipment summary for your records.
Understanding CBM and Shipping Calculations
What Is CBM?
CBM stands for Cubic Meter, the standard unit of volume measurement used in international shipping and logistics. It represents a cube that is one meter long, one meter wide, and one meter tall — equaling 1,000 liters. In ocean freight, container space is priced and allocated in CBM. A 20-foot shipping container has approximately 31.2 m³ of usable internal space, and freight rates for LCL (Less than Container Load) shipments are typically quoted per CBM. Knowing your total CBM allows you to compare shipping quotes accurately, determine whether LCL or FCL is more economical, and plan how many containers you will need for a large shipment. CBM is also used in warehousing to calculate storage costs, in trucking to determine how many pallets fit on a trailer, and in air cargo as the basis for dimensional weight calculations.
How Are CBM and Freight Weights Calculated?
CBM is calculated by multiplying the three dimensions of a box or package in meters: CBM = Length (m) × Width (m) × Height (m). To convert from other units, divide centimeters by 100, millimeters by 1,000, or multiply inches by 0.0254 and feet by 0.3048. For multiple units of the same item, multiply the single-unit CBM by the quantity. Volumetric weight for air freight is calculated as: total volume in cm³ ÷ 6,000, which is equivalent to total CBM × 1000 ÷ 6 (approximately 166.67 kg per CBM). For sea freight, the freight ton convention equates 1 CBM to 1,000 kg. The chargeable weight for air freight is the greater of the actual gross weight and the volumetric weight — airlines will bill you for whichever is higher. Container fill percentage is simply your total CBM divided by the container's internal volume, multiplied by 100.
Why Do CBM Calculations Matter?
Accurate CBM calculations directly affect your shipping costs. Underestimating your volume leads to surprise surcharges or cargo being bumped from a shipment. Overestimating means you pay for unused space or book a container too large for your needs. For air freight, the dimensional weight rule means bulky but lightweight items — like pillows or foam products — are charged based on volume rather than weight. Understanding your volumetric weight upfront lets you choose the most cost-effective shipping method and sometimes redesign packaging to reduce costs. For sea freight, the 15 CBM threshold is a useful rule of thumb: below that, LCL is usually cheaper; above it, FCL often becomes competitive when you factor in the handling charges and transit time differences.
限制和实用说明
This calculator uses the theoretical internal volumes of containers as published by major shipping lines. In practice, usable volume is slightly less due to the container structure, door clearance, and the physical impossibility of perfectly stacking irregular cargo. As a practical rule, plan to use no more than 85–90% of the stated container volume. Volumetric weight divisors can vary by carrier: most international air freight uses a divisor of 6,000 cm³/kg (equivalent to 166.67 kg/m³), but some carriers — particularly for express shipments — use 5,000 cm³/kg. The sea freight ton convention of 1 CBM = 1,000 kg is widely used but may vary by commodity and trade lane. Always verify the exact divisors and rate bases with your specific carrier or freight forwarder before finalizing cost estimates.
公式
Multiply the three dimensions in meters to get the volume in cubic meters. For centimeters, divide each by 100 first; for inches, multiply each by 0.0254.
Divide the total volume in cubic centimeters by 6,000 to get the dimensional weight for air freight. Equivalent to CBM x 166.67 kg.
Airlines charge whichever is greater: the actual gross weight on the scale or the volumetric weight calculated from dimensions.
Divide your shipment's total CBM by the container's internal volume and multiply by 100 to see utilization percentage.
Reference Tables
Standard Shipping Container Dimensions
| Container Type | Internal L x W x H (m) | Usable Volume (m3) | Max Payload (kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20ft Standard | 5.90 x 2.35 x 2.39 | 31.2 | 28,200 |
| 40ft Standard | 12.03 x 2.35 x 2.39 | 67.0 | 26,680 |
| 40ft High Cube | 12.03 x 2.35 x 2.70 | 76.1 | 26,470 |
| 45ft High Cube | 13.56 x 2.35 x 2.70 | 86.0 | 25,600 |
| 20ft Reefer | 5.44 x 2.29 x 2.27 | 28.3 | 27,400 |
| 40ft Reefer | 11.56 x 2.29 x 2.50 | 66.2 | 26,280 |
Volumetric Weight Divisors by Carrier Type
| Carrier Type | Divisor (cm3/kg) | Equivalent (kg/m3) | 备注 |
|---|---|---|---|
| IATA Air Freight | 6,000 | 166.67 | Standard for international air cargo |
| Express Couriers (DHL, FedEx, UPS) | 5,000 | 200.00 | Higher rate for express shipments |
| Sea Freight (Freight Ton) | 不适用 | 1,000.00 | 1 CBM = 1 freight ton (1,000 kg) |
| Trucking (US) | 不适用 | Varies | Density-based freight class system |
| Postal Services | 5,000-6,000 | 166.67-200 | Varies by national carrier |
Worked Examples
Calculating CBM for a Multi-Item Shipment
Item 1: CBM per box = (60/100) x (40/100) x (30/100) = 0.6 x 0.4 x 0.3 = 0.072 m3
Item 1 total: 0.072 x 50 = 3.60 m3
Item 2: CBM per box = (80/100) x (50/100) x (40/100) = 0.8 x 0.5 x 0.4 = 0.160 m3
Item 2 total: 0.160 x 20 = 3.20 m3
Grand total: 3.60 + 3.20 = 6.80 m3
Determining Chargeable Weight for Air Freight
Calculate volumetric weight: (120 x 100 x 150) / 6,000 = 1,800,000 / 6,000 = 300 kg
Compare actual vs volumetric: Actual = 180 kg, Volumetric = 300 kg
Chargeable weight = MAX(180, 300) = 300 kg
Container Selection: LCL vs FCL
Check volume fit: 18 CBM / 31.2 m3 (20ft capacity) = 57.7% utilization
Check weight fit: 4,200 kg / 28,200 kg (20ft max payload) = 14.9% of weight limit
Since 18 CBM exceeds the 15 CBM threshold, FCL pricing is likely competitive
At 57.7% fill, a 20ft container has room to spare but avoids LCL handling fees
How to Use the CBM Calculator
Enter Item Dimensions
For each item in your shipment, enter the length, width, and height. Select the appropriate unit from the dropdown (mm, cm, m, in, ft, or yd). You can mix units across different rows — each item is converted to meters independently.
Add Quantity and Weight
Enter the number of units in the Qty field. If you need volumetric and chargeable weight calculations, also enter the weight per single unit in the Weight/unit column. Toggle the weight unit between kg and lbs at the top right.
Add More Items
Click the '+ Add Item' button to add another row for a different product or package type. You can remove any row using the trash icon on the right. The calculator updates in real time as you type.
查看结果并导出
Check the total CBM, container fill bars, and shipping recommendation in the results panel. Use the Download button to export your item list with CBM values to CSV for sharing with your freight forwarder or filing with your shipment records.
常见问题
What is CBM and why is it used in shipping?
CBM stands for Cubic Meter and is the standard unit for measuring cargo volume in international shipping. Freight carriers use CBM to determine how much space your goods occupy in a container or aircraft hold. For ocean freight, LCL (Less than Container Load) rates are typically quoted per CBM because multiple shippers share container space and each pays for the volume they use. For air freight, CBM feeds into the dimensional weight calculation — airlines charge the higher of actual weight or volumetric weight to ensure they are compensated fairly for bulky, lightweight cargo. Using CBM as the common unit makes it possible to compare quotes from different carriers and to plan container loads efficiently.
What is the difference between LCL and FCL?
LCL (Less than Container Load) means your cargo is consolidated with other shippers' goods in a shared container. You pay only for the space your cargo uses, typically billed per CBM with a minimum charge. LCL is cost-effective for small shipments but involves more handling — cargo is loaded and unloaded at a consolidation warehouse, which can add time and slightly increase the risk of damage. FCL (Full Container Load) means you book an entire container exclusively for your cargo. You pay a flat rate for the container regardless of how full it is. FCL is generally more economical once your shipment reaches roughly 15 CBM, and it offers faster transit times and less handling risk.
How is volumetric weight calculated for air freight?
Volumetric weight for air freight is calculated by dividing the total volume of your shipment (in cubic centimeters) by 6,000. This gives you a weight in kilograms that reflects the dimensional space your cargo occupies. The formula is: Volumetric Weight (kg) = (L cm × W cm × H cm) / 6,000, which is equivalent to CBM × 1,000 / 6 ≈ CBM × 166.67. Airlines charge whichever is greater — the actual gross weight or the volumetric weight — so if you are shipping bulky but light goods such as foam, pillows, or large plastic items, you will likely be charged on volumetric weight. This is important to know when comparing air vs sea freight costs.
What is chargeable weight?
Chargeable weight is the weight your air freight carrier will actually invoice you for. It is the higher of two figures: your shipment's actual gross weight (the physical weight on a scale) and its volumetric weight (calculated from dimensions). If your cargo is dense and heavy, the actual weight is likely higher and that is what you pay for. If your cargo is bulky but light — for example, furniture, clothing, or large empty boxes — the volumetric weight will be higher. Carriers apply this rule to ensure they are fairly compensated for the physical space a shipment occupies in their aircraft, regardless of how heavy or light it is.
How full can I actually fill a shipping container?
The volumes shown in this calculator (31.2 m³ for a 20ft, 67.0 m³ for a 40ft, 76.1 m³ for a 40ft High Cube) represent the theoretical internal usable space. In practice, you should plan to use no more than 85–90% of this volume. Reasons include: the container door and wall structure reduce usable depth slightly; cargo must be properly braced and secured, which uses some space; irregular carton sizes mean there will always be some void space between stacks; and goods often cannot be stacked all the way to the ceiling due to weight limits or fragility. A practical rule of thumb is to multiply the container's stated volume by 0.85 to get your safe planning volume.
Can I use different units for different items?
Yes — this calculator converts all dimensions to meters independently for each row before calculating CBM. This means you can enter one item in centimeters, another in inches, and a third in feet all in the same calculation, and the totals will be correct. This is especially useful when your supplier provides dimensions in centimeters but your own packaging spec sheet uses inches. Simply select the correct unit from the dropdown on each row and the conversion is handled automatically. The total CBM and CBF displayed at the top always reflect the sum of all items converted to the same base unit.