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Maersk Lifts Inland Peak Surcharge as European Port Congestion Eases

By MGN Maritime JournalistMarch 26, 2026 at 04:02 PM

Maersk is discontinuing its Inland Peak Surcharge for inland routes via Rotterdam and Antwerp effective April 1, 2026, citing improved port conditions and reduced congestion after introducing the fee less than a year ago.

Maersk announced on March 25 that it will remove its Inland Peak Surcharge (IPE/IPI) effective April 1, 2026, signaling a notable shift in supply chain conditions at two of Europe's largest container gateways. The surcharge, which covered routes from Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, and Poland to and from the deep-sea terminals of Rotterdam and Antwerp, was introduced just under a year ago on May 1, 2025. The carrier attributed its discontinuation to eased congestion and improved operational conditions at both ports. ## Context and Industry Implications The removal of the surcharge marks a significant reversal from the market conditions that prompted its introduction. Peak season surcharges—temporary fees imposed during periods of high demand and capacity constraints—are standard industry practice when ports face acute congestion. By introducing the IPE/IPI charge, Maersk signaled severe operational strain at Rotterdam and Antwerp, which collectively handle roughly 60 percent of containerized trade entering Northern Europe. For shippers and logistics operators, the discontinuation of this fee—which could amount to several hundred dollars per container depending on inland route specifics—represents a meaningful reduction in landed costs for European-destined cargo. This is particularly significant for time-sensitive freight moving via inland waterway networks, as these routes rely heavily on deep-sea terminal capacity at gateway ports. The timing is noteworthy. Maersk's decision comes amid broader cooling in container demand following the volatile post-pandemic period that created widespread port backlogs across global trade lanes. The easing of congestion at Rotterdam and Antwerp specifically suggests that inland waterway capacity—a critical element of the Northern European supply chain—has returned to manageable levels. ## Broader Port Dynamics Rotterdam and Antwerp have been under sustained pressure as primary discharge points for Asia-Europe services. Both ports have invested heavily in capacity expansion, but infrastructure improvements typically lag behind demand spikes. The fact that Maersk can now discontinue an emergency surcharge after less than one year suggests either a material decline in inland-bound volumes or successful operational adjustments by the ports themselves. The move could also influence pricing across competing carriers. Maersk's decision to eliminate the surcharge may prompt other major container lines to review similar charges, potentially creating competitive pressure in the inland Europe market segment. ## What It Means For supply chain professionals managing European sourcing and distribution, the removal of this surcharge streamlines landed costs for import cargo and reduces the complexity of calculating inland freight expenses. For the ports themselves, the eased congestion demonstrates improved terminal productivity—a critical metric for their ongoing competitiveness against alternative gateways in Hamburg, Bremerhaven, and France. Shippers should anticipate the surcharge removal to take effect in their April freight invoices, though they should confirm the removal with local Maersk representatives given the company's stated availability for customer consultation.

Source: Maersk

#Maersk#Rotterdam#Antwerp#surcharges#inland waterway#container shipping#Europe#port congestion

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