Why Does the Price of a Used Shipping Container Vary from City to City?

Used shipping container prices fluctuate from city to city because containers are commodities whose value is driven by geography, transportation costs, supply and demand, and changing global trade conditions.

    Nike shoes and boxes on top of a newspaper

    Vail Duggan

    |

    May 27, 2026

    Nike shoes and boxes on top of a newspaper
    Sometimes to answer a question, it’s best to start with one…What’s the difference between a pair of new cross trainers from Nike and a [20ft shipping container](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/used-20ft-shipping-container) from Eveon. A ton, well actually several tons, but one of the biggest comes down to how it is made, manufactured, moved across the country and priced. When Nike drops a new shoe, the price is the same in New York as it is in Los Angeles. The cost to manufacture it is fixed. The margin is controlled. Whether you’re buying it in Miami or Minneapolis, you’ll pay the same at the register. That’s because a sneaker is a manufactured consumer product its value doesn’t shift based on where it lands at any given time. Shoes are not a vessel for another product, unlike the Corten Steel box, that has been trusted for decades to move items (like Nike shoes) during oceanic transport. Other products that do not fluctuate based on location: a can of Coca-Cola, an Apple iPhone, a gallon of Tide detergent, the McDonald's Big Mac. A [used shipping container](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/shipping-container-for-sale) is something else entirely. It’s a commodity. ## What is a Commodity? A commodity is a raw or standardized good whose value is shaped by supply, demand, and the cost of moving it from one place to another not by branding or a fixed manufacturer’s price. Oil, wheat, lumber, and steel are commodities. So are used shipping containers. When something is a commodity, geography matters. A lot.
    Man working in a container and writing on a notepad
    ## The Same Container, Two Very Different Prices A used 20ft shipping container averages $1,305 in [Chicago](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-chicago) and $2,481 in [Denver](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-denver) — a $1,200 swing for the exact same product. That’s not a pricing error. That’s not a vendor trying to take advantage of you. That’s the market working exactly as it’s designed to in our industry. Used shipping containers move along the same global logistics network that moves international trade. Depots sitting near major ports with healthy inventory and consistent inbound supply will be available for a lower price lower. Depots hundreds of miles inland, where every single container has been trucked in from the coast, bake that freight cost into the retail price. You’re not just buying a box. You’re buying the box plus the journey it took to get to you.

    What Actually Drives the Price You’re Quoted

    [Used container pricing](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/news/market-insights/how-much-does-a-shipping-container-cost) reflects a complex system, not a single lever. At Eveon, we track these movements daily through our [Market Monitor](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/market-monitor) and these are the factors that move the number most. ### Geography and Proximity to Port Coastal hubs receive new imports continuously and accumulate retired containers in large volumes. Cities like [Charleston](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-charleston), [Los Angeles](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-los-angeles), [Houston](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-houston), and [Savannah](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-savannah) benefit from proximity to active shipping lanes. Inland metros like [Denver](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-denver), [Kansas City](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-kansas-city), [Salt Lake City](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/locations/shipping-container-salt-lake-city) pay a freight premium to bring those containers into a regional depot, and that cost flows directly into the price you see. ### Local Import vs. Export Balance Not every port operates in perfect equilibrium. When a port is exporting more than it’s receiving, containers get pulled out of the local pool for outbound use tightening supply and pushing prices up. The reverse creates a softer market with more favorable pricing for buyers. This balance shifts constantly, and it’s rarely covered in a standard container quote. ### Geopolitical Events and Shipping Route Disruptions The global container fleet is sensitive to world events in ways most buyers don’t anticipate. Re-routing around the [Red Sea](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/news/market-insights/red-sea-crisis-effects-on-container-market), drought-driven restrictions at the Panama Canal, or new [tariff regimes](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/news/market-insights/shipping-container-market-disrupted-by-tariffs) all alter how containers circulate through the global network. When fleet efficiency drops, fewer containers are decommissioned and used inventory tightens. We covered the downstream effects of the [Middle East conflict](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/news/market-insights/middle-east-conflict-and-tariff-turmoil) in a recent piece, and the pricing impact was significant and measurable. No one articulates this dynamic quite like the YouTube channel [What's Going on With Shipping](https://www.youtube.com/@wgowshipping). ### Seasonality and Sector Demand [Agriculture](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/industries/shipping-containers-for-the-farming--agriculture-industry), [construction](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/industries/shipping-containers-for-construction), and retail each have predictable seasonal demand windows and they all pull from the same pool of decommissioned containers. Pre-harvest, pre-build-season, and pre-holiday buying spikes show up clearly in the data. Timing your purchase outside of peak demand for your industry can meaningfully reduce what you pay. Also always good to follow the weather for patterns that may disrupt harvest. ### Container Size and Grade A [20ft](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/used-20ft-shipping-container), [40ft](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/used-40ft-shipping-container), and [40ft High Cube](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/used-40ft-high-cube-shipping-container) each have their own distinct supply curve. Every container Eveon sells is a [Wind & Watertight (WWT)](https://www.eveoncontainers.com/en-US/about/eveon-guarantee) unit, decommissioned from active shipping duty and inspected to meet that standard. WWT is the most common, most affordable, and most practical condition tier for storage, commercial conversion, and job site use. It’s the sweet spot for buyers who want a proven steel structure without paying for cosmetic perfection. ![Screenshot 2026-05-22 at 1.22.39 PM.png](https://static.eveoncontainers.com/strapi/assets/Screenshot_2026_05_22_at_1_22_39_PM_01c3bf9974.png)
    Smarter Buying Starts Here
    ## The Smart-Buyer Takeaway In a market this dynamic, the wrong instinct is to chase the lowest sticker price you can find on any given day. The right instinct is to compare what you’re being quoted against a transparent regional benchmark and to time your purchase when local and global conditions are working in your favor. That’s exactly what Eveon built the Market Monitor to do. It’s free, it’s available 24/7, and it shows you in real time whether the price you’ve been quoted is fair for your container size in your ZIP code. No guesswork. No middlemen. Just the data. Because in a commodity market, knowledge isn’t just helpful. It’s the difference between a smart buy and an expensive one. <br> <br>

    Discover Used Shipping Container Prices Near You

    20ft Shipping Container

    20ft Used Container

    Dimensions

    • Length

      20'

    • Width

      8'

    • Height

      8' 6"

    Can Fit

    • Contents of a 3-bedroom house

    • 4000 pairs of shoes

    • 200 bales of hay

    • 10 pallets (each carrying 60 boxes)

    See Container Price
    40ft Shipping Container

    40ft Used Container

    Dimensions

    • Length

      40'

    • Width

      8'

    • Height

      8' 6"

    Can Fit

    • Contents of a 5-bedroom house

    • Large farm machinery

    • 450-500 bales of hay

    • 20 pallets (each carrying 120 boxes)

    See Container Price
    40ft High Cube Shipping Container

    40ft Used High Cube Container

    Dimensions

    • Length

      40'

    • Width

      8'

    • Height

      9' 6"

    Can Fit

    • Contents of a 5-bedroom house

    • 1 to 2 tractors

    • Roughly 80-120 granite countertops (5ft x 10ft)

    • 20 pallets (each carrying 120 boxes)

    See Container Price