Lagos, Nigeria → Antwerp, Belgium
The Lagos, Nigeria to Antwerp, Belgium container service is one of the workhorse port-pairs of the Africa-Europe trade. The full sea-leg distance measures roughly 4,700 nautical miles, and a typical container vessel covers it in 18 calendar days port-to-port — a sustained average of approximately 6,267 nautical miles per 24-hour period including pilotage, terminal calls and trans-shipment dwell. Sailings depart on weekly schedules, which gives shippers strong flexibility on cut-off dates and a meaningful choice of operating carrier.
This corridor is operated by 4 ocean carriers under various joint services and alliance arrangements. The mix of mega-vessels, regional feeders and trans-shipment routings means that the visible "transit time" you book against is rarely a single vessel rotation — most cargo on this lane discharges and reloads at one or more hub ports. The figures we publish below reflect the standard expedited routing as advertised by the listed carriers.
Carriers serving Lagos, Nigeria → Antwerp, Belgium
The following ocean carriers actively call both Lagos, Nigeria and Antwerp, Belgium in their published service rotations. Service strings, vessel sizes and partner-vessel arrangements change quarterly — confirm the active sailing schedule directly with the carrier before booking.
- Maersk Line (SCAC MAEU) — Copenhagen, Denmark; alliance member of Gemini Cooperation.
- MSC (SCAC MSCU) — Geneva, Switzerland; alliance member of MSC Standalone Network.
- CMA CGM (SCAC CMDU) — Marseille, France; alliance member of Ocean Alliance.
- Grimaldi Group (SCAC GRIU) — Naples, Italy; operates as an independent / non-aligned line.
Booking Lagos, Nigeria → Antwerp, Belgium container shipments
Most freight forwarders book this corridor 7 to 14 days before the cargo cut-off (CY cut-off) at Lagos, Nigeria. Spot rates for this lane are quoted per container — most commonly per 40' high-cube — and quoted as "ocean freight all-in" or as a base ocean rate plus surcharges (BAF, CAF, terminal handling charge at both ends, and any temporary peak season surcharge). On the Africa-Europe trade, capacity tightens around the Lunar New Year window each January–February and the autumn pre-holiday rush in August–October, so booking earlier is prudent in those periods.
Container equipment availability at Lagos, Nigeria is generally strong year-round for standard 20' GP and 40' HC boxes. Reefer (refrigerated) equipment is more limited and should be booked at least three weeks in advance. Out-of-gauge cargo on flat racks or open tops typically requires a separate quote and a one-week longer booking lead time. Once your container is loaded onto the vessel, you can track its progress against any of the carrier's tracking portals — every operating carrier on this corridor exposes a public tracking endpoint that accepts the bill of lading number or the container number.
Alternative Africa-Europe corridors
If schedule integrity at Lagos, Nigeria or Antwerp, Belgium is a concern, similar lane economics are available on these adjacent port-pairs:
- Cape Town, South Africa → Rotterdam, Netherlands — 19-day transit, Weekly.