Paintball Landed Cost: How to Calculate the Real Price of Importing from China
A paintball field owner in Texas calls a Chinese manufacturer. The factory quotes $12 per case FOB Shenzhen. Excellent price. They order 500 cases. When the container finally arrives at their warehouse in Dallas, the total cost is not $6,000. It is closer to $9,500. The difference is landed cost — and it catches almost every first-time importer off guard.
Paintball landed cost is the sum of every expense from the factory floor to your warehouse door. Getting it right is the difference between a healthy margin and a painful surprise. This guide walks through every cost layer with numbers you can apply to your own orders.
STEP 1 Start with the factory price (FOB)
Every landed cost calculation begins with the FOB (Free On Board) price — the cost of the goods loaded onto the vessel at the port of origin. This price includes manufacturing, packaging, quality control testing, and inland transport to the Chinese port.
| Product | FOB Price (per case / unit) | Typical Case Qty |
|---|---|---|
| Standard field-grade paintballs (500 ct) | $10–$18 per case | 500 balls |
| Premium tournament-grade paintballs | $18–$30 per case | 500 balls |
| Custom color paintballs | $15–$28 per case | 500 balls |
| Mechanical paintball markers (entry-level) | $25–$45 per unit | Varies |
| Electronic paintball markers | $60–$150 per unit | Varies |
| Protective masks | $8–$20 per unit | Varies |
STEP 2 Add ocean or air freight
Shipping is the second-largest cost component and the one with the most variability. Your choice between FCL (full container load), LCL (less than container load), and air freight dramatically changes the per-case cost.
| Shipping Method | Cost | Cases per Container | Per-Case Freight |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20-ft FCL container | $2,000–$4,000 | 350–450 cases | $0.50–$1.14 |
| 40-ft FCL container | $3,000–$6,000 | 700–900 cases | $0.43–$0.86 |
| LCL (per cubic meter) | $80–$150 per CBM | Varies | $1.20–$2.50 |
| Air freight (per kg) | $4–$8 per kg | N/A | $6–$20+ per case |
STEP 3 Factor in insurance, port fees, and documentation
These are the costs importers most often underestimate. They typically add $0.50–$1.50 per case and vary by port and carrier.
- Marine insurance: 0.1–0.5% of the cargo value. For a $15,000 shipment, expect $15–$75 total. Do not skip this — one container lost overboard or damaged by water and the uninsured loss wipes out a year of margin.
- Port handling fees (THC / DHC): Terminal handling charges at origin and destination. Typically $150–$400 per container total.
- Customs broker fee: $100–$300 per entry for professional customs clearance. Worth every dollar for accurate HTS classification.
- ISF filing (US only): Importer Security Filing. Filed 24 hours before loading. $25–$50 if your customs broker handles it.
- Documentation fees: Bill of lading amendments, certificate of origin processing. $25–$100 total.
| Fee | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Marine insurance (0.2% of cargo) | $30–$60 |
| Port handling (origin + destination) | $200–$400 |
| Customs broker fee | $150–$300 |
| ISF filing + documentation | $50–$150 |
| Total fixed fees | $430–$910 |
STEP 4 Calculate duties and customs clearance
Duty rates depend on the HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) classification of your specific products. Paintball equipment falls under Chapter 95 (sports equipment), but different items within your shipment may have different rates.
| Product | HTS Code (US) | Duty Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Paintballs (gelatin capsules) | 9506.99.1500 | 3.9% |
| Paintball markers | 9506.99.6080 | 3.9–4.5% |
| Protective masks and goggles | 9506.99.6080 | 3.9–4.5% |
| CO2 / HPA tanks (steel) | 7311.00.0030 | Free |
| CO2 / HPA tanks (aluminum) | 7613.00.0000 | 2.0–3.9% |
| Paintball apparel / clothing | Varies (Ch. 61/62) | 12–20% |
STEP 5 Include inland delivery and warehousing
The container has arrived at the destination port. Your cost journey is not over. Moving goods from the port to your warehouse adds $0.30–$0.80 per case depending on distance.
- Drayage (port to warehouse): $150–$500 for local delivery within 50 miles of the port. Add $50–$100 for each additional 50 miles.
- Warehousing / storage fees: If your inventory sits at a warehouse, typical rates are $1–$3 per pallet per month. A pallet holds 40–60 cases of paintballs, so the per-case cost is minimal (¢0.02–$0.05 per case per month).
- Demurrage and detention: If you do not pick up the container within the free time (typically 3–5 days), the shipping line charges $100–$300 per day. This is entirely avoidable but catches many first-time importers.
WORKED EXAMPLE The complete calculation for 500 cases of paintballs
Here is a real-world calculation using realistic numbers. All figures are in USD.
| Cost Component | Calculation | Total | Per Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| FOB price (500 cases x $14) | 500 x $14 | $7,000 | $14.00 |
| Ocean freight (20-ft FCL) | Flat fee | $3,000 | $6.00 |
| Marine insurance (0.2%) | 0.2% x $10,000 | $20 | $0.04 |
| Port handling (origin + destination) | Flat fee | $350 | $0.70 |
| Customs broker + ISF + docs | Flat fee | $400 | $0.80 |
| Duty (3.9% of CIF value) | 3.9% x ($7,000 + $3,000 + $20) | $391 | $0.78 |
| Drayage (port to warehouse, 40 mi) | Flat fee | $250 | $0.50 |
| Total landed cost | $11,411 | $22.82 |
The FOB price was $14 per case. The landed cost is $22.82 per case — a 63% increase over the factory price. This is typical for paintball imports from China to the US. Budgeting only the FOB price would mean planning for a 39% lower cost than the reality.
SAVE Six ways to reduce your landed cost
? Frequently Asked Questions
Should I use FOB or CIF pricing for my first order?
FOB is more common for paintball imports and gives you control over the shipping provider. CIF can be convenient for first-time importers since the supplier handles freight, but you lose control over shipping costs and timelines. For your first few orders, request both FOB and CIF quotes and compare.
How do I know if my supplier is quoting a fair FOB price?
Get quotes from at least three manufacturers for the same product specification and compare. A significantly lower quote usually means a corner has been cut somewhere — thinner shell walls, lower quality gelatin, or less QC testing. The cheapest FOB price rarely produces the lowest landed cost when you factor in breakage and returns.
What happens if customs holds my shipment?
Customs holds add storage fees ($100-300/day for the container), potential inspection fees ($200-500), and delay cost. Most holds happen because of incorrect HTS classification, missing documentation, or value declaration discrepancies. This is why a good customs broker is worth their fee — they prevent holds before they happen.
Does consolidating paintballs with other products save money?
Yes and no. Consolidating multiple products into one container saves on per-unit shipping cost. However, if the products have different HTS classifications, customs clearance becomes more complex. Apparel (12-20% duty) and markers (3.9%) cannot be cleared under the same HTS entry. Your broker will need to separate them in the filing, which can add $50-100 in broker fees.
+ The short version
Landed cost is the only number that matters when evaluating an import deal. The factory price is a starting point, not a conclusion. For paintball imports from China, freight, duties, and fees typically add 60-75% to the FOB price. A $14 per case paintball becomes $22-25 by the time it reaches your warehouse.
The best way to control landed cost is to plan upfront: consolidate shipments, choose the right port, order off-peak, and work with a manufacturer who understands the full logistics chain. The factory that helps you minimize your total landed cost — not just the FOB price — is the one worth building a long-term relationship with.
Need a detailed landed cost estimate for your next paintball order? Contact CS Paintballs — we provide FOB and CIF quotes with full cost breakdowns.