Oversize (sobredimensionado) freight exceeds standard legal dimensions or weight and needs special permits, routing, and often escorts in both countries. Cross-border oversize adds a second permit regime and limits which crossings can physically handle the load.
Oversize freight, sobredimensionado in Mexico, is cargo that exceeds standard legal limits for width, height, length, or weight: machinery, transformers, structural steel, wind components, and similar project freight. Everything about it is permitted and planned: route surveys, state-by-state permits and escort requirements in the U.S., and federal special-transport permits with their own escort and schedule rules in Mexico.
Cross-border, the load must satisfy both regimes back to back, and the crossing itself becomes a constraint: bridge geometry, staging space, and port policies mean only certain crossings work, with Colombia Bridge a frequent choice in the Laredo corridor. Equipment runs the specialized deck family: step decks, lowboys, and RGNs.
Oversize cross-border is project freight, so sell and buy it as a project. Lead time is the first honest conversation: permits on two sides, escorts, and crossing coordination make this a planned movement, not a spot posting with a pickup tomorrow. Dimensional accuracy is everything; a few centimeters of error can invalidate permits and strand a load at the border. Expect curfews and daylight-only segments, particularly in Mexico, to stretch transit. The carrier pool that genuinely runs cross-border oversize is small and known, so relationships and verified references matter more than rate shopping. Price it with the humility the freight demands: mistakes are measured in weeks, not hours.
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