Jutiapa to Colima
Colima → JutiapaFTL freight transportation service between Jutiapa and Colima. Reliable logistics solutions for your business.
Route Description
Everything you need to know about the corridor Jutiapa - Colima
The Jutiapa, Guatemala to Colima, Mexico corridor represents a vital north-south trade artery connecting Central American production hubs with Mexico's strategic Pacific coast. This approximately 1,574 km route facilitates the efficient movement of goods across borders, serving as a critical link for regional supply chains. The economic context is defined by robust agricultural export flows from Guatemala's southern valleys to Mexico's port of Manzanillo in Colima, a primary gateway for Asian and domestic Mexican trade. Key industries leveraging this corridor include fresh produce (mangoes, pineapples, coffee), sugar, and manufactured goods requiring dedicated truckload capacity. The primary infrastructure backbone comprises Guatemala's CA-1 highway, transitioning through the Tecún Umán/Ciudad Hidalgo border crossing, and then onto Mexico's Federal Highway 200, which runs parallel to the Pacific coast directly into Colima. Navigating the border requires expertise in customs procedures; the Tecún Umán crossing is a major point for commercial traffic, where valid C-TPAT and FAST certifications for carriers, as we maintain through our alliance, significantly streamline clearance. At Control Terrestre, we facilitate seamless operations on this corridor by deploying our specialized alliance of carriers certified in cross-border protocols. We coordinate the entire door-to-door FTL journey, managing customs documentation, leveraging pre-clearance programs, and providing dedicated equipment—from dry vans for general cargo to reefers for temperature-sensitive produce—ensuring a singular point of contact for your full truckload shipment from origin to destination.
Services for this Route
Available services for the corridor Jutiapa - Colima
Origin
Jutiapa, located in Guatemala's southeastern region, is a strategic agricultural and logistics epicenter. Its fertile lands support intensive cultivation of export-oriented crops, most notably sugar cane, coffee, and a variety of tropical fruits. The department serves as a major collection and consolidation point for products destined for international markets. The available transportation infrastructure is anchored by the CA-1 highway, which provides a direct, paved connection from Jutiapa city to the primary border crossing at Tecún Umán. This highway link is essential for moving full truckloads of agricultural commodities to the border efficiently. The region's economy is deeply intertwined with the need for reliable, high-capacity ground transportation to export ports, making consistent FTL service a critical operational requirement for local producers and exporters.
Destination
Colima, on Mexico's central Pacific coast, holds immense strategic logistical importance as the home of the Port of Manzanillo, the country's busiest Pacific port. This makes the state a primary destination for goods entering Mexico from Asia and a crucial distribution hub for the central and western regions of the country. Key industries driving freight demand include agriculture (limes, mangoes, and other tropical fruits), manufacturing, and port-related logistics. The state's infrastructure is defined by Federal Highway 200, which runs along the coast and provides direct access from the border to the port facilities and industrial zones around Manzanillo and Colima City. This highway corridor is designed to handle heavy commercial traffic, including specialized equipment like tankers and flatbeds serving the local industrial base. The constant flow of import/export cargo creates a steady demand for dedicated cross-border and domestic FTL services connecting the port to the interior.






