Shipping to APO, FPO, and DPO Addresses
Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)
Shipping to APO / FPO / DPO Addresses
1. Scope and Definitions
APO / FPO / DPO
Military mail destinations. These are handled through USPS regardless of physical overseas location.
- APO – Army / Air Force Post Office
- FPO – Fleet Post Office (Navy / Marines)
- DPO – Diplomatic Post Office
Key Rule:
All APO/FPO/DPO shipments are treated as USPS shipments, not FedEx, UPS, or DHL.
2. Shipment Type Decision
Before quoting or processing, determine shipment type:
A. Small Parcel Shipment (Standard Process)
Use USPS directly when:
- Shipment consists of individual boxes
- Total shipment is manageable (typically < ~10–15 boxes)
- No palletization required
B. Large Shipment (Consolidation Required)
Use consolidation when:
- Shipment is palletized or large volume
- Example:
- 1,000 backers + 5,000 targets
- 20+ boxes
- USPS direct shipment becomes inefficient or cost-prohibitive
3. Small Parcel Workflow (USPS Direct)
Step 1: Prepare Box Data
For each box:
- Measure dimensions (L × W × H)
- Determine weight
- Identify contents (if needed for internal reference)
Important Rules:
- Each box must be processed individually
- USPS does not support multi-box quoting in a single entry
- Even identical boxes must be entered separately (or calculated once and multiplied)
Step 2: Use USPS Rate Calculator
Input:
- Ship From ZIP Code:
55449(Action Target) (confirm if needed) - Ship To:
- City: APO / FPO / DPO
- State: AE / AP / AA (auto-populates)
- ZIP: Provided by customer (e.g., 09439)
Step 3: Enter Package Details
For each box:
- Weight
- Dimensions
- Quantity = 1
Repeat for each box OR:
- If identical boxes:
- Calculate one box
- Multiply cost by total quantity
Step 4: Select Service Type
General guidance:
- USPS Priority Mail → Preferred for APO/FPO/DPO
- USPS Retail Ground / Standard → Rarely used for military mail
Note:
- APO/FPO/DPO is technically treated as domestic mail but behaves like international
- Priority typically offers better reliability
Step 5: Calculate Total Shipping Cost
- Sum all individual box costs
Step 6: Apply Markup
Apply standard margin:
- Typical: 10%–20%
Step 7: Provide Quote
Deliver:
- Total shipping cost (with markup)
- Service type (Priority recommended)
4. Large Shipment Workflow (Consolidation Required)
Step 1: Identify Consolidation Need
Trigger conditions:
- Pallet shipment
- Excessive number of boxes
- High USPS cost or labor burden
Step 2: Contact Customer
Request the following:
“Please provide a stateside consolidation point address and all required routing information for forwarding to your unit.”
Step 3: Required Customer Information
Customer must provide:
- Consolidation point address (U.S.-based)
- Unit information (final destination)
- Required identifiers (if applicable):
- TCN number
- DSN number
- Unit number
- Contact name (e.g., John Doe)
- Any special labeling instructions
Step 4: Create Sales Order
Ship-To Address
- Enter consolidation point address
Order Notes
Include ALL provided routing data:
- Final APO/FPO/DPO destination
- Unit identifiers
- Contact details
- Any special instructions
Principle:
More information is always better for downstream handling.
Step 5: Create Shipment Placard (Required)
Create a document (Word or equivalent) containing:
- Final destination (APO/FPO/DPO)
- Unit information
- TCM / DSN / routing numbers
- Contact name
Step 6: Labeling and Placement
For palletized shipments:
- Print placard
- Attach:
- Front of pallet
- Back of pallet
Step 7: Shipment Execution
- Ship to consolidation point via standard domestic carrier - may be any LTL carrier.
- After delivery:
- Consolidator assumes responsibility
- They route shipment to final APO/FPO/DPO destination
5. How Consolidation Routing Works
The consolidator determines final routing based on:
- Information on placard
- Sales order / packing slip data
- Internal military logistics systems
Key Insight:
You do NOT control final leg routing.
Your responsibility is to provide complete and accurate data.
6. Edge Cases and Exceptions
A. Customer Insists on Direct USPS (Large Order)
- Possible but inefficient
- Requires:
- Manual calculation of every box
- Potentially very high cost (e.g., $8,000+)
- Proceed only with customer approval
B. Customer Does Not Know Consolidation Process
Guide them:
“Please check with your logistics or supply chain contact for a consolidation shipping address and required routing information.”
C. Mixed Box Types
If boxes differ:
- Each must be calculated separately
- No batching allowed
7. Key Rules Summary
- USPS is mandatory for APO/FPO/DPO
- No FedEx, UPS, or DHL
- Each box must be quoted individually
- Large shipments require consolidation
- Always collect routing data from customer
- Always include redundant labeling
8. Quick Decision Flow
- Is shipment small (few boxes)?
- YES → USPS direct
- NO → Go to consolidation
- Is shipment palletized or large volume?
- YES → Request consolidation point
- NO → USPS direct
9. Operational Best Practices
- Always over-communicate shipping constraints
- Avoid underestimating labor for large USPS shipments
- Default to consolidation for anything non-trivial
- Include redundant routing info on:
- Sales order
- Packing slip
- Physical labels
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