Dangriga to La Paz
La Paz → DangrigaFTL freight transportation service between Dangriga and La Paz. Reliable logistics solutions for your business.
Route Description
Everything you need to know about the corridor Dangriga - La Paz
The logistics corridor linking Dangriga in Stann Creek, Belize, to La Paz in Baja California Sur, Mexico, spans roughly 2,431 kilometers and serves as a vital artery for trade between Central America and northwestern Mexico. This cross‑border route connects the Caribbean port region of Belize with the Pacific‑oriented industrial hub of La Paz, enabling efficient movement of goods that support regional supply chains. By linking two distinct economic zones, the corridor helps reduce transit times for exporters and importers seeking reliable full truckload solutions.
The Belizean side of the corridor is anchored by agriculture, citrus and banana production, aquaculture, and a growing tourism sector that generates demand for refrigerated and dry van shipments. On the Mexican side, La Paz’s economy revolves around fisheries, salt mining, renewable energy projects, and manufacturing maquiladoras that rely on consistent inbound raw materials and outbound finished products. The primary highway infrastructure includes Belize’s Hummingbird Highway and Southern Highway connecting to the Benemérito de las Américas border crossing, which links to Mexico’s Federal Highway 1D and the toll road leading south to La Paz via Highway 1 and the Benito Juárez International Airport access roads.
Key border crossings along this corridor consist of the Benemérito de las Américas (Belize‑Mexico) station, where customs procedures involve standard import/export documentation, vehicle inspections, and compliance with C‑TPAT, FAST, and BASC programs that many of our partners hold. Control Terrestre streamlines operations by providing dedicated FTL capacity, coordinating paperwork, offering real‑time tracking, and ensuring that equipment such as 53′ dry vans, reefers, flatbeds, or tankers meets the specific cargo requirements. Our door‑to‑door service, combined with expertise in hazardous materials, oversized loads, and expedited freight, guarantees that shipments move smoothly from origin to destination while adhering to all regulatory standards.
Services for this Route
Available services for the corridor Dangriga - La Paz
Origin
Dangriga
Dangriga, situated on the central coast of Belize in the Stann Creek District, enjoys a strategic position as a gateway between the Caribbean Sea and the country’s interior road network. The town lies near the intersection of the Hummingbird Highway and the Southern Highway, providing direct access to the Benemérito de las Américas border crossing and to the Port of Big Creek, a key facility for bulk and containerized cargo. Economically, Dangriga’s surroundings are dominated by citrus and banana plantations, shrimp and fish farms, and a vibrant cultural tourism sector that drives demand for both dry van and refrigerated transportation. Local industries also include small‑scale manufacturing, timber processing, and artisanal fisheries, all of which rely on reliable full truckload services to move raw materials to processing centers and finished goods to regional markets. Transportation infrastructure in the area consists of well‑maintained two‑lane highways, a municipal airstrip for light cargo flights, and proximity to the deep‑water port at Big Creek, which facilitates intermodal transfers. Control Terrestre leverages this connectivity by offering FTL solutions that pick up cargo directly from farms, processing plants, or warehouses in Dangriga and transport it securely across the border to destinations throughout Mexico and beyond.
Destination
La Paz
La Paz, the capital of Baja California Sur, sits on the southern tip of the Baja California Peninsula, overlooking the Gulf of California. Its location makes it a natural logistics hub for goods moving between mainland Mexico, the Pacific Northwest, and Central American markets via overland routes. The city’s economy is anchored by fisheries and aquaculture, salt extraction, renewable energy projects such as wind and solar farms, and a growing manufacturing sector that includes maquiladoras producing electronics, medical devices, and automotive components. These industries generate steady flows of inbound raw materials—like steel, chemicals, and electronic parts—and outbound finished products that require full truckload shipments. La Paz benefits from a modern transportation network: Federal Highway 1 runs the length of the peninsula, connecting the city to the U.S. border at Tijuana and to the southern terminus at Cabo San Lucas, while Federal Highway 1D provides a toll‑free alternative. The nearby Manuel Márquez de León International Airport handles air cargo, and the Port of La Paz supports bulk and container traffic, enabling intermodal options. Control Terrestre utilizes this infrastructure to provide reliable FTL services, offering door‑to‑door pickup from industrial parks, warehouses, or ports, and ensuring timely delivery across the border with full compliance to customs and security programs.






