TOC Europe 2026 Review

TOC Europe is where port and terminal operations people go when they want real signal, not theory. In Hamburg, the mix of container supply chain leaders, technology vendors, and port and terminal executives makes it easy to pressure test automation roadmaps, equipment upgrades, and throughput plans with the people who actually have to deliver performance.

TOC Europe 2026 — Event Snapshot

Dates
May 19 to 21, 2026
City and venue
Hamburg Messe, Hamburg, Germany
Opening times
May 19: 10:00 to 18:00 • May 20: 10:00 to 18:00 • May 21: 10:00 to 15:00 (registration opens daily at 08:00)
Core audience
Port and terminal executives, carriers, cargo owners, forwarders, technology providers, equipment OEMs, and service partners across the container supply chain
What it covers
Port and terminal operations, equipment and automation, digital platforms, capacity planning, safety, and performance improvement across the container ecosystem
Official site
Attend
Venue map
Hamburg Messe is central and walkable to St. Pauli, Sternschanze, Planten un Blomen, and the Alster lakefront.

What TOC Europe is built to do

TOC is designed for operators who live inside berth windows, yard congestion, crane productivity, safety, and service reliability. The show works best when you arrive with one operational priority and leave with two or three implementable next steps.

Recent scale (from TOC Europe reporting)
4,500+
global attendees
982
port and terminal executives
100
speakers
100+
countries represented
The value is the concentration: operations leaders, technical buyers, and solution providers in one hall.
A simple way to work the show
  1. Pick one constraint you must improve (truck turn times, crane moves, yard density, incidents, schedule recovery).
  2. Shortlist 6 booths that touch that constraint (OEM, TOS, automation, safety, analytics, maintenance).
  3. Use sessions to validate what is real and what is marketing.
  4. Leave with a pilot plan (scope, timeline, data needs, success metric, owner).

How TOC Europe earns its time

🏗️

Operators, OEMs, and software in one loop

You can compare equipment capability, automation approach, and system integration in a single visit, then validate it with the people who run terminals every day.

Questions that cut through noise
  • What did implementation disrupt and for how long?
  • What data do you need on day one to get value?
  • Which KPI moved first, and what moved last?
📦

Port centric container supply chain focus

TOC stays close to terminal performance and reliability. That makes it useful for teams that need throughput gains, safer operations, and more predictable gate flows.

Common buyer priorities
  • Automation and remote operations readiness
  • Maintenance, uptime, and parts strategy
  • Safety improvements tied to measurable exposure reduction
🎤

Conference plus expo, not separate worlds

TOC positions the conference as a place to compare real constraints and workable fixes, then you can walk the floor and evaluate vendors with that context.

Fast path to value
  • Attend one session, then validate the idea with two suppliers
  • Ask one operator how they deployed it in production
  • Convert it into a pilot scope while the context is fresh
📱

Built in meeting and navigation support

The TOC GO event app is positioned as the hub for exhibitor browsing, meeting setup, agenda building, and floorplan navigation.

Best use
  • Build a day plan the night before
  • Cluster meetings by hall zone to save time
  • Keep a short note after each booth visit
🎟️

Registration and planning

If registration is not yet fully open, the official site provides a “register your interest” path. Show hours are posted, and registration opens daily at 08:00.

High impact prep list
  • One operational KPI you need to move in 2026
  • Your current baseline (weekly or monthly) for that KPI
  • Two constraints that block improvement (data, labor, layout, maintenance, traffic)
  • A rough budget range and implementation window
On site game plan
  • Day 1: walk the floor and create a shortlist
  • Day 2: deep dives with your top 5 vendors
  • Day 3: confirm next steps and pilot structure
The show ends earlier on May 21, so book critical meetings before lunchtime.
Hours: May 19 and 20 (10:00 to 18:00) • May 21 (10:00 to 15:00) • Registration opens daily at 08:00

Practical notes for Hamburg

🧭 Essentials

  • Show hours: plan for early starts; registration is listed as opening at 08:00.
  • What to bring: a one page KPI baseline and your constraints list (data, layout, labor, maintenance).
  • Best meetings: book vendor deep dives for Day 2 and keep Day 3 for decision mapping and next steps.

🚇 Getting around

  • From the airport: S Bahn into the central rail corridors is usually the simplest path into the city core.
  • Local transit: U Bahn and S Bahn make it easy to stay near the venue and still reach HafenCity, St. Pauli, and the Alster areas.
  • Taxi and rides: good for early mornings if you are carrying gear or have a tight first meeting.

🏨 Hotels (areas)

  • Closest and walkable: St. Pauli and around the Messe and Congress districts.
  • Good balance for dinners: Sternschanze for casual spots and quick transit access.
  • Client meeting feel: Innenstadt and Jungfernstieg for central hotels and quieter meeting spaces.
  • Modern waterfront: HafenCity for a newer build vibe, with a bit more transit time.

🍴 Dining and sights

  • Quick reset near the venue: Planten un Blomen park for a short walk between sessions.
  • Harbor energy: Landungsbrücken and St. Pauli for waterfront views and easy evening options.
  • Classic Hamburg: Speicherstadt and the Elbphilharmonie area if you have one open evening.
A simple rhythm: early registration, focused sessions, 2 to 3 supplier meetings, then a short walk and a dinner where you can actually talk.
By the ShipUniverse Editorial Team — About Us | Contact