10.10.1.4Vertical
In-Bond Storage & Distribution
Warehouses storing in-bond freight under customs control.
Market snapshot
These figures describe Bonded & FTZ Warehousing (10.10.1), the segment that In-Bond Storage & Distribution sits within — not In-Bond Storage & Distribution on its own.
FragmentationFragmentedEstimate
Bonded and FTZ warehousing sit within general/other warehousing (NAICS 493110/493190, sized above) and are not separately disclosed, so the segment is not separately sized here.
Business model & economics
Revenue model
Bonded-storage and customs/FTZ-service fees
Key economics
- Recurring revenue
- Moderate–High
- EBITDA margin
- Compliance-expertise-differentiated
- Capex intensity
- Moderate
recurring importer relationships
Characteristics
- Duty deferral/avoidance via bonded and FTZ facilities.
- Tariffs making duty-management strategies more valuable.
- Customs expertise and compliance the differentiators.
M&A deal context
Deal activityModerate
Who’s acquiring
- Bonded/FTZ warehousing operators
- Customs & trade-services strategics
- PE-backed platforms
What’s driving deals
- Tariff and duty-management demand.
- Trade-policy volatility.
- Customs-expertise consolidation.
Find In-Bond Storage & Distribution acquisition targets
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