Campeche to Masaya
Masaya → CampecheFTL freight transportation service between Campeche and Masaya. Reliable logistics solutions for your business.
Route Description
Everything you need to know about the corridor Campeche - Masaya
The Campeche-Masaya corridor represents a vital north-south logistics artery connecting the southeastern coast of Mexico with the heart of Nicaragua. Spanning approximately 995 kilometers, this cross-border route is strategically essential for facilitating trade between North and Central America, enabling the efficient movement of goods across multiple jurisdictions. Economically, the corridor serves dynamic regions with complementary industrial bases. In Mexico's Campeche state, the economy is historically anchored by petroleum extraction and processing, alongside growing agriculture (citrus, henequen) and a significant tourism sector. Nicaragua's Masaya department, and the broader region, is a hub for light manufacturing, particularly textiles and apparel, as well as agricultural production including coffee, beans, and livestock. Key industries utilizing this corridor include agribusiness exporting perishables, manufacturers shipping consumer goods, and companies involved in the energy sector's supply chain.
Transportation infrastructure along the route is a mix of major highways and critical border crossings. The primary Mexican highway network includes Federal Highway 180 and 186, which funnel traffic southward toward the Guatemala-Mexico border. After transiting Guatemala, the route converges onto Nicaragua's Pan-American Highway (Highway 1), the nation's primary north-south artery, providing direct access to Masaya and the capital, Managua. The principal international border crossing for this corridor is between Guatemala and Nicaragua at Peñas Blancas/San Antonio, a bustling port of entry that requires meticulous customs coordination. Successfully navigating this corridor demands expertise in the customs regulations of three countries, adherence to varying safety and documentation standards, and reliable partnerships at each border point to prevent delays.
Control Terrestre facilitates seamless operations on the Campeche-Masaya corridor through our alliance of certified transportation providers. We manage the full scope of cross-border complexity, leveraging our partners' C-TPAT, FAST, and BASC certifications to ensure compliant and secure transit. Our focus on exclusive full truckload (FTL) services means we provide dedicated capacity for your entire shipment, from door in Campeche to door in Masaya, without consolidation. We coordinate all border crossing procedures, documentation, and transfers, offering you a single point of contact. Whether you require standard dry van transport for manufactured goods, refrigerated units for agricultural exports, or specialized equipment for oversized cargo, our network provides the appropriate assets and local expertise to optimize your supply chain across this strategic corridor.
Services for this Route
Available services for the corridor Campeche - Masaya
Origin
Campeche, located on Mexico's Gulf Coast, offers a strategic logistics origin point with direct access to maritime export routes via the Port of Campeche. Its economic landscape is defined by three pillars: the robust oil and gas industry (both extraction and petrochemicals), a diversified agricultural sector producing citrus, rice, and tropical fruits, and a thriving tourism economy centered on the UNESCO World Heritage city. This creates consistent demand for outbound freight, including industrial equipment, bulk agricultural commodities, and consumer goods. The state's transportation infrastructure is well-developed for ground freight, featuring a network of federal highways. Key routes include Federal Highway 180, which runs along the coast and connects to major population centers, and Federal Highway 186, a critical inland artery that provides the most direct southern link toward the Guatemala border. This highway infrastructure supports efficient aggregation of cargo from throughout the Yucatán Peninsula for southbound international transit.
Destination
Masaya, Nicaragua, serves as a crucial logistics hub in Central America, strategically situated just south of the capital, Managua, and along the Pan-American Highway. Its economy is a powerhouse of manufacturing and agriculture. The region is famously known as Nicaragua's 'City of Flowers' and a major center for the textile and apparel industry, exporting significant volumes of garments. Furthermore, the surrounding fertile lands produce coffee, beans, corn, and livestock, driving demand for both inbound inputs (fertilizers, packaging) and outbound perishable goods. The primary transportation artery is the Pan-American Highway (Nicaragua's Highway 1), which offers uninterrupted, paved connectivity from the Costa Rican border in the south to the Honduran border in the north, passing directly through Masaya. This makes it an ideal distribution point for goods destined for Nicaragua and southern Central America. The highway facilitates rapid transit from the primary border crossing with Guatemala, ensuring efficient last-mile delivery within the country.






