The China–Gulf corridor is one of the most important trade lanes on earth, carrying everything from electronics and machinery to furniture and textiles. If you import into the UAE or wider Middle East, this is the route you will use most.
The Main Ports
On the China side, the big gateways are Shanghai, Ningbo, Shenzhen and Qingdao. On the Gulf side, Jebel Ali (Dubai) is the dominant hub, with Khalifa Port (Abu Dhabi), Dammam and Jeddah also major. Most boxes route through these on direct or transshipment services (often via Singapore or Colombo).
Realistic Transit Times
Port-to-port ocean transit from main China ports to Jebel Ali typically runs around 18–28 days depending on the service, direct vs transshipment, and season. Add origin handling, customs and inland legs at both ends for a true door-to-door figure. Air freight covers the same lane in 1–4 days at a far higher rate.
FCL vs LCL on This Lane
Because volumes are high and rates competitive, this lane has excellent LCL consolidation options — good for smaller importers. As your volume approaches a full container, FCL usually wins on both cost-per-CBM and reliability. (See our FCL vs LCL guide for the break-even maths.)
Documents & Customs
Prepare a clean commercial invoice, packing list, the correct HS codes, and a certificate of origin. Many goods qualify for the GCC 5% tariff; some are duty-free. Pre-clearing before arrival is the single best way to avoid demurrage at Jebel Ali.
Tips to Avoid Delays
- Mind Chinese New Year — factories close and rates spike for weeks; book early.
- Verify HS codes up front to avoid customs holds.
- Use a forwarder with real presence on both ends of the lane.
- Insure the cargo — long transit means more exposure.
- Track milestones and pre-arrange pickup to dodge free-time charges.
Sources & Further Reading
- Carrier sailing schedules (China–Middle East services).
- DP World / Jebel Ali port information.
- UAE Federal Customs Authority — import procedures and tariff.