Toluca to Trujillo
Trujillo → TolucaFTL freight transportation service between Toluca and Trujillo. Reliable logistics solutions for your business.
Route Description
Everything you need to know about the corridor Toluca - Trujillo
The Toluca-Trujillo corridor is a vital North American trade artery, connecting the industrial heartland of central Mexico with the Caribbean gateway of Honduras. This strategic cross-border route facilitates the efficient movement of goods across nearly 1,500 kilometers, serving as a critical link for supply chains targeting Central America and the Caribbean. Its importance is underscored by the robust economic integration between Mexico's manufacturing sector and the consumer and agricultural markets of Honduras.
Economically, the corridor bridges two dynamic regions. Toluca, part of Mexico's industrialized Bajío region, is a hub for advanced manufacturing, while Trujillo serves as a major port and distribution center for northern Honduras and beyond. Key industries leveraging this route include automotive and aerospace parts, machinery, consumer goods, and agricultural products. The seamless flow of these commodities depends on reliable, specialized transportation that can navigate the complexities of international freight.
The primary infrastructure backbone consists of Mexico's Federal Highway 15D and subsequent routes through Guatemala to Honduras, culminating at the port of Trujillo. Critical border crossings, such as the Mexico-Guatemala frontier at Ciudad Hidalgo/Tecún Umán and the Guatemala-Honduras border, require meticulous customs coordination. Control Terrestre facilitates these operations by leveraging its alliance of certified providers. Our partners hold key accreditations including C-TPAT and FAST for streamlined U.S. and Canadian border processes (where applicable on connecting routes), BASC for security, and Responsible Care for specialized cargo. We manage the full scope of cross-border documentation and compliance, ensuring your FTL shipment moves efficiently from origin to destination without the delays typical of consolidated freight.
By focusing exclusively on full truckload solutions—including dedicated, expedited, and specialized equipment like tankers or flatbeds—we provide the certainty and control needed for high-value or time-sensitive cargo on this corridor. Our 'human and green' approach means you have a single, responsive point of contact for the entire journey, from Toluca's factories to Trujillo's docks, optimizing your supply chain with transparency and care.
Services for this Route
Available services for the corridor Toluca - Trujillo
Origin
Toluca
Toluca, the capital of the State of Mexico, is a premier logistics origin due to its unparalleled strategic location. Situated just 60 kilometers southwest of Mexico City, it sits at the crossroads of the country's most important economic corridors. The city is a major industrial and automotive manufacturing powerhouse, hosting plants for global brands and a dense network of suppliers. This concentration of industry creates consistent, high-volume demand for outbound freight transportation.
The region's infrastructure is world-class. It is directly served by the Toluca International Airport (AIT) and is seamlessly connected via the Mexico-Querétaro highway (part of the Federal Highway 15D network) to the rest of Mexico and the northern border. This highway is the primary arterial route for our corridor northward. For cross-border shipments, Toluca's proximity to key manufacturing clusters and its direct access to major freight routes make it an exceptionally efficient starting point for exports destined for Central America via land bridges to southern ports.
Destination
Trujillo, located on Honduras's northern Caribbean coast, is a strategic logistics destination and a key port city for Central America. Its primary value lies in the Port of Trujillo, a deep-water facility that handles significant container and bulk cargo traffic, serving as a maritime gateway for Honduras and landlocked neighbors. The city itself is a commercial and agricultural hub for the surrounding Valle del Aguán, a major region for banana and pineapple production, as well as other exports.
Infrastructure supports its role as a distribution nexus. The port facilities provide direct ocean-going connections. Overland, Trujillo is connected to the Honduran interior and neighboring countries via the CA-13 highway, which links to the broader Central American highway network. For freight arriving from Mexico, this means a final, efficient leg to a secure port facility or local distribution center. The presence of industrial parks and warehouse spaces around Trujillo further solidifies its function as an end-point for supply chains targeting the Caribbean and Central American markets.






