When planning to ship a car to Turkey, “transit time” often sounds like a single number—but in reality it is a sequence of steps from pickup in the USA to release in Turkey. Focusing only on ocean days can create unrealistic expectations and costly surprises when customs or documentation add weeks to the schedule.
For shippers comparing routes like New York, Texas, Florida, or California to Istanbul, understanding what each phase includes is essential to planning realistic move dates, registration timelines, and budget. This guide breaks down each stage of transit time, explains where delays usually occur, and clarifies why container shipping is generally the preferred method for cars and motorcycles headed to Turkey.
Transit time for shipping a car to Turkey is best understood as five linked phases, not just the voyage across the Atlantic.
Inland transport from your address to the U.S. export port
Export documentation, U.S. customs export clearance, and port processing
Ocean container shipping to Istanbul or another Turkish port
Arrival handling and Turkish customs clearance
Optional inland delivery inside Turkey after release
For example, West Coast Shipping’s typical container transit times from the USA to Istanbul are about 25 days from New York/New Jersey, 31 days from Texas, 36 days from Florida, and 41 days from California. These figures refer to the ocean leg, not door‑to‑door delivery, so full timelines commonly fall in the 6–11 week range once inland transport and customs are included.
Before your container ever sails, your vehicle must reach one of West Coast Shipping’s export hubs in California, Florida, or New Jersey.
Nearby pickups (within a few hundred miles of a major port) often move in 2–5 business days, depending on carrier availability and season.
Remote locations or cross‑country moves can take closer to a week as carriers coordinate efficient loading routes.
Most cars and motorcycles travel on standard car carriers; enclosed transport is usually reserved for higher‑value or sensitive vehicles but does not change the export rules or the ocean schedule. Planning inland transport early helps ensure your car is at the port in time to meet your target sailing week rather than missing a vessel and waiting for the next shared container departure.
Once at the export facility, your vehicle enters the documentation and U.S. export phase. This is where the single largest share of preventable delays tends to occur.
Under U.S. export regulations, all used self‑propelled vehicles must be filed in AES/EEI, regardless of value, and the filing must be completed at least 72 hours before export. This is stricter than the general $2,500 threshold that applies to other commodities and is non‑negotiable for cars, trucks, and motorcycles leaving the USA.
Shipping specialists handle the AES filing but depend on complete, accurate documents from you:
Original vehicle title and any lien release
Export power of attorney
Seller/owner details and accurate vehicle information
Bill of sale or value declaration where required
If any of these are late or incorrect, shipments can miss their planned vessel and sit until the next available departure.
For most Turkey shipments, West Coast Shipping loads cars and motorcycles into shared ocean containers, which are then sealed and delivered to the terminal for loading.
Shared container loads depart on regular schedules but must be fully built with compatible vehicles before sailing. This consolidation step often adds a few extra days to the process, especially from ports with fewer Turkey‑bound loads.
Port operations then handle container check‑in, security, and loading to the vessel, which typically adds several days before the ship actually departs.
In practical terms, export documentation and port processing together usually account for roughly one to two weeks of the overall timeline, depending on how quickly paperwork is finalized and how the consolidation schedule aligns with the sailing.
The ocean leg is the most visible portion of “transit time” and is often what shippers see quoted in public tables. For shared container shipping to Istanbul, West Coast Shipping’s published sample routes show:
New York / New Jersey to Istanbul – from around $3,950 in about 25 days
Texas to Istanbul – from around $3,900 in about 31 days
Florida to Istanbul – from around $3,975 in about 36 days
California to Istanbul – from around $5,400 in about 41 days
These examples are illustrative shared‑container scenarios, not fixed tariffs, and actual quotes are always based on live conditions, vessel schedules, and available space.
East Coast routes are shorter and more direct, so New York/New Jersey and some Gulf ports deliver the fastest sailing times to Turkey.
East Coast → Turkey: often around 25–35 days, depending on routing and any intermediate stops.
West Coast → Turkey: typically around 40 days or more because vessels must also cross to the Atlantic, often via the Panama Canal.
Weather, port congestion, schedule changes, and canal traffic can each add a few days either side of the “typical” number without changing the underlying route.
From a pure sailing standpoint, RoRo vessels and container ships on the same corridor are broadly similar in ocean transit days. RoRo may save a day or two in port handling because vehicles roll on and off, but in practice those gains are often offset by:
Fewer RoRo sailings to Turkey compared with container departures
Less flexible routes and fewer direct sailings from certain U.S. origins
For most standard passenger vehicles and motorcycles, container shipping offers more frequent departures and predictable schedules, which generally makes it the better choice for balancing speed, protection, and cost on the USA–Turkey lane.
After arrival at Istanbul or another Turkish port, your container is unloaded, moved through the terminal, and passed into the customs process.
Physical discharge from the vessel and placement in the yard typically take a few days, depending on port workload and berth congestion.
Customs then reviews documents, may order inspections, and decides whether the vehicle can be released or must remain in bonded storage.
For well‑prepared personal vehicle imports with complete paperwork and a local customs broker, clearance commonly takes about one to two weeks from arrival, though it can be faster or slower depending on the inspection queue and seasonal backlogs.
Turkey uses different frameworks for temporary (“guest”) vehicles versus permanent imports.
Under current Turkish practice, foreign‑registered vehicles brought in under the Turing “guest” schemes can often stay up to a maximum period that is frequently described as up to 730 days, provided the owner and vehicle satisfy the “185‑day rule”—having spent at least 185 days outside Turkey in the previous 12 months.
These conditions are administered by the Touring and Automobile Union of Turkey (Turing) and Turkish customs, and they apply differently depending on residency status, ownership, and vehicle type.
Crucially, Turkey’s motorcycle and vehicle guides emphasize that temporary entry rules are subject to change, and anyone planning to rely on the 185‑day/730‑day combination should confirm the current requirements with a Turkish customs broker and Turing before shipping.
Permanent imports follow a different path, with full duties and taxes (including ÖTV and VAT) assessed based on vehicle characteristics and value. The documentation and tax position here are more complex, which is why West Coast Shipping consistently recommends working with an experienced Turkey customs broker.
Ports in Turkey typically grant a limited free storage period; once that window closes, daily storage and demurrage fees begin to accrue. Delays triggered by incomplete documentation, valuation questions, or extended inspections can quickly become expensive, so having paperwork ready and a broker engaged before arrival is one of the most effective ways to keep total transit time under control.
After customs release, you can either collect the vehicle directly from the port or have it moved inland within Turkey.
Port pickup is typically fastest, with most owners able to collect within a couple of days of final clearance, depending on local formalities.
Inland delivery adds several days as carriers schedule transport from Istanbul to your destination city.
In many cases, especially for Istanbul‑based relocations, customers opt to pick up in person once their broker confirms that the vehicle is cleared and released.
Putting all five phases together yields realistic door‑to‑door ranges instead of focusing only on the 25–41 day ocean leg.
Inland transport to port: ~2–4 days for many origins in the region
Export documentation, AES filing, consolidation, and port processing: ~1–2 weeks
Ocean container transit: about 25 days
Turkish port handling and customs clearance: ~1–2 weeks for typical cases
Optional inland delivery after release: ~2–5 days if needed
In practice, this often places realistic door‑to‑door expectations in the 6–9 week range for East Coast departures, depending on season and how quickly documents are prepared.
From California, the longer 41‑day ocean segment naturally stretches the total schedule, so door‑to‑door timelines into the 8–11 week band are common, especially if consolidation and clearance each take closer to the upper end of their typical ranges.
While shippers often focus on one published transit number, the factors that most often derail schedules are upstream and downstream of the vessel.
Incomplete or inaccurate export documents can cause vehicles to miss their planned sailing and wait for the next container departure.
Missing or inconsistent Turkish import paperwork can result in extra questions, inspections, or even temporary holds that extend clearance and increase storage costs.
Peak seasons and high‑volume months (especially late summer and Q4) tend to lengthen scheduling, port, and customs steps more than the mid‑ocean sail.
In West Coast Shipping’s experience across multiple routes, a substantial proportion of extended timelines traces back to documentation issues rather than inherent voyage duration. Getting paperwork right at the beginning is one of the most effective ways to keep total transit time close to the typical ranges published on the Turkey country page.
For Turkey, West Coast Shipping positions container shipping as the default and generally better option for cars and motorcycles, while RoRo is used mainly for oversized units and heavy machinery.
Container shipping is the standard method for most passenger vehicles and bikes on the USA–Turkey lane.
It offers frequent departures from multiple U.S. ports, especially via major container hubs.[
Vehicles are protected inside steel containers during ocean transit, shielding them from weather and port exposure.
Shared containers typically provide a more cost‑effective option than booking an entire container or specialized vessel capacity alone.
Because container services are so prevalent, they often deliver a more predictable timeline and smoother integration with inland transport and customs brokerage than trying to match a specific RoRo schedule.
RoRo (roll‑on/roll‑off) is valuable when shipping:
Construction equipment
Agricultural machinery
Oversized trucks or specialty vehicles that cannot fit into standard containers
For these units, RoRo may be the only practical option. However:
RoRo to Turkey generally has fewer sailings and more limited routing than container services.
It is not inherently cheaper or more expensive than container shipping; pricing depends on vessel availability, size/weight of the vehicle, and departure/destination pair.
For everyday cars and motorcycles, container shipping remains the recommended method because it balances protection, frequency, and total timeline more effectively than RoRo on this corridor.
For certain urgent or high‑value shipments, air freight can compress the entire process dramatically compared to ocean container shipping.
Door‑to‑door timelines often fall in the 10–14 day range when everything is prepared correctly, with some routes completing within 1–2 weeks.
This speed comes at a premium: air freight rates commonly start around $8,000 and can run to $15,000 or more for a car, depending on dimensions, origin, and routing.
By contrast, shared container shipping sample scenarios to Turkey start in the mid‑$3,000s from several U.S. origins. Air freight is therefore best reserved for:
Hard deadlines (events, races, media appearances)
Very high‑value vehicles where time and controlled handling outweigh cost
Situations where extended sea transit would be more expensive than the air premium
For most relocations and standard imports, container ocean shipping remains the more practical solution.
To keep your schedule realistic and avoid last‑minute surprises, align your planning with the actual structure of transit time.
This window matches the combined inland, export, ocean, and customs phases for typical container shipments and leaves some buffer for seasonal or documentation delays.
Follow West Coast Shipping’s Turkey guides on moving a vehicle to Turkey and the step‑by‑step import process to understand which titles, permits, and identity documents you need before the vehicle is even picked up.
For cars and motorcycles, container shipping offers the best blend of protection, frequency, and routing flexibility. Reserve RoRo for oversized vehicles or heavy machinery that cannot physically fit into a container.
If you plan to use temporary “guest vehicle” status, review WCS’s Turkey motorcycle customs guide and confirm current 185‑day/730‑day conditions directly with a Turkish customs broker and Turing. Rules and enforcement practices can and do change, so relying on outdated assumptions can create costly complications.
Professional brokers in Turkey typically charge in the low hundreds of dollars, which is modest compared to the cost of extended storage, demurrage, or re‑work if something goes wrong. WCS’s Turkey‑focused content strongly encourages using a broker rather than trying to navigate Turkish customs alone.
Even with perfect paperwork, weather, port congestion, and inspections can still add days to the process. Allowing buffer prevents routine operational variance from disrupting your move date or registration appointment.
If you want a deeper dive into how these phases play out specifically for Turkey, read West Coast Shipping’s main article on how long it takes to ship a car to Turkey alongside this timeline guide. Pair it with the detailed Turkey vehicle logistics and cost breakdown and the complete Turkey import guide to understand both timing and customs rules from end to end.
Ready to see realistic transit time and pricing for your specific route—California, Texas, Florida, New York, or anywhere else in the USA—to Istanbul? Use the button below to launch West Coast Shipping’s car shipping calculator, get live container rates to Turkey, and map out your full timeline from pickup to release.