UPS and FedEx each announced a 5.9% average General Rate Increase for 2026, but analysts estimate that most shippers end up paying 8–12% more per package once mid-year surcharge adjustments and accessorial fee changes are factored in.
For leaders managing logistics budgets, that gap between headline rate increases and actual spend impact is exactly the problem. Most companies know their costs are rising. Far fewer have a clear picture of why, or where to find the savings.
This guide walks through everything you need to know to reduce parcel shipping costs: what’s driving your spend, where to find savings, and how to make cost reduction an ongoing discipline.
What’s Actually Driving Your Parcel Shipping Costs
Before you can reduce shipping costs, you need to understand what’s driving them. Parcel spend is not a single line item, it’s a stack of compounding charges, each of which requires its own analysis.
Base rates and discounts. Most high-volume shippers receive discounts applied against carrier list rates. But a large discount off a high base rate can net out worse than a smaller discount off a more competitive rate. The math only becomes clear when you model your full rate structure against your actual shipment data.
Surcharges. Surcharges are not fixed costs, and they are among the most variable elements of any invoice. Sifted’s overview of types of shipping surcharges covers the most common fee categories and what drives them.
Dimensional weight pricing. UPS and FedEx charge based on whichever is greater: actual weight or dimensional (DIM) weight. As of August 2025, both carriers round every fractional inch up before applying the DIM formula—meaning a box measuring 11.6 inches is calculated as 12. For shippers with large, lightweight packages, DIM charges can represent the single largest cost variable in an invoice. Sifted’s billable weight explainer and DIM calculator are useful tools for quantifying your exposure.
Invoice errors. According to parcel auditing research, 80% of carrier invoices contain some type of discrepancy. At volume, those errors compound undetected without systematic review.
How to Reduce Cost Per Package
Reducing cost per package requires addressing both the pricing side (what carriers charge you) and the operational side (what your shipment profile actually costs to serve).
Right-size your packaging. Oversized packaging triggers higher DIM weight charges, additional handling fees, and in some cases cubic pricing thresholds. Packaging that matches actual product dimensions eliminates unnecessary cost before a shipment is ever picked up. Packaging optimization strategies targeting DIM weight can reduce related charges by 30–50%, making this one of the highest-return operational changes available to volume shippers.
Audit your service mix. Are you routing shipments through Express or Priority services where Ground would meet your delivery window? Service type is one of the highest-leverage variables in cost per package. A review of service type allocation by origin-destination pair, against actual delivery performance data, can produce measurable savings without any change to carrier agreements.
Review minimum charge thresholds. Carrier contracts typically include per-package minimums that set a floor on what you pay regardless of actual weight or zone. Lightweight, short-zone shipments are often the most affected. Understanding where minimums apply in your shipment profile, and whether those terms are competitive, is a necessary step in any cost-per-package analysis.
Recover refunds on service failures. Carriers offer money-back guarantees on certain services, and credits are available when delivery commitments aren’t met. Without a process for identifying and filing for refunds, those dollars go unclaimed.
How to Reduce Shipping Spend with Carrier Strategy
Beyond shipment-level optimizations, reducing total shipping spend requires a strategic approach to how you structure your carrier relationships.
Understand your shipping profile before any carrier conversation. Zone distribution, service mix, average package weight, DIM weight ratio, and accessorial frequency all factor into how carriers structure pricing agreements. Shippers who arrive at carrier discussions with their own data, at the same level of detail carriers use internally, are positioned to push back on specific cost drivers rather than accept a generalized offer.
Evaluate a multi-carrier strategy. Routing all volume through a single carrier concentrates cost risk and reduces leverage. Regional carriers often offer competitive pricing for short-zone shipments, so a hybrid routing model can usually reduce total spend for shippers who evaluate it against their specific origin-destination profile.
Time carrier discussions strategically. The point of maximum leverage is not when a contract is about to expire. Opening discussions well in advance, with time and viable alternatives on your side, creates a different dynamic than a renewal driven by deadline pressure.
Monitor contract compliance after new terms take effect. Once updated rates are in place, confirm they are applied correctly to every invoice. Contracted discounts are misapplied more often than most shippers expect. Sifted’s guide to auditing FedEx and UPS invoices covers what that review process looks like.
Plan for General Rate Increases before they take effect. UPS and FedEx each announced a 5.9% average GRI for 2026, but the actual cost impact varies significantly by shipment profile. Understanding how announced rate changes translate to your specific shipping profile gives you time to model and plan for the impact. Sifted’s 2026 GRI analysis breaks down what the most recent announcements mean for different shipping profiles.
Make Cost Reduction a Continuous Practice
The most common, and costly, mistake companies make with parcel spend is treating cost reduction as a periodic project rather than an ongoing discipline. Contract terms get updated, then go unmonitored. Surcharge schedules shift mid-cycle. Shipping profiles change as the business grows. Without continuous visibility, those changes accumulate invisibly in spend data.
The companies that see sustained cost reduction over time maintain ongoing visibility into spend, carrier performance, and contract compliance, not just at renewal time. Between contract cycles, that means:
- Monitoring carrier invoices against contracted terms on a rolling basis
- Tracking shifts in service mix, zone distribution, and package profile that affect cost
- Modeling the impact of business changes, new facilities, volume shifts, and new product lines, on shipping costs before they show up in the spend data
- Analyzing the GRI and other rate change announcements against your specific shipment profile, not industry averages
That level of discipline requires more than spreadsheets reviewed once a quarter. It requires tools that surface the right information at the right time. SiftedAI is built to give logistics and finance teams the continuous visibility that makes cost reduction a year-round outcome rather than a one-time effort.
The Bottom Line
Parcel shipping costs are one of the most significant and most actionable cost levers in any logistics operation. The companies reducing their shipping spend year over year are applying a layered strategy: understanding the composition of their costs, optimizing their shipment profile, and managing carrier relationships with precision.
The tools to do this exist. The question is whether your organization is using them.
If you’re ready to see what your parcel spend actually looks like and where the real cost reduction opportunities are, explore SiftedAI to see what shipping intelligence looks like in practice.











