Breakbulk Americas 2026 is Houston’s three-day meet-up for project cargo and breakbulk logistics, built around real routing, capacity, and execution conversations. If you move heavy-lift, OOG, or industrial cargo across the Americas, this is the week where carrier desks, forwarders, ports, EPCs, and service providers tend to be in the same halls at the same time.
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Breakbulk Americas 2026
September 22 to 24, 2026 • Houston
Venue: George R. Brown Convention Center, Halls A and B. Show hours include a Tuesday evening opening, then full daytime hours Wednesday, with an earlier close Thursday.
Event snapshot
Dates
September 22 to 24, 2026
Opening times
Tue: 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm
Wed: 10:00 am to 6:00 pm
Thu: 10:00 am to 2:00 pm
City and venue
George R. Brown Convention Center (Halls A and B), 1001 Avenida de las Americas, Houston, TX 77010
Who shows up
Project cargo and breakbulk shippers, EPCs, forwarders, carriers, ports and terminals, heavy-lift and logistics specialists
What it centers on
Oversize cargo movement across the Americas: routing, charter and schedule conversations, port and terminal execution, lifting and transport services
On-site tools
Networking and schedule management via the official event app once registration is confirmed
Planning move that works: use Tuesday evening to map the floor and confirm who is actually present, then schedule your high-value meetings on Wednesday while everyone is settled.
Venue map
The venue sits in Downtown’s convention district next to Discovery Green, which makes it easy to keep meetings tight and walkable between the show and evening dinners.
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What makes Breakbulk Americas different
Short hours, high conversion
This show works best when you treat it like a deal floor for execution details. The conversations are usually about feasibility, timing, and who can actually deliver.
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Carrier and forwarder reality checks
You can quickly validate which operators and forwarders have capacity and the right corridors for your cargo program, then move from talk to meeting blocks.
Bring: indicative dimensions and weight, laycan windows, preferred load and discharge regions, and one alternate routing.
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Ports, terminals, and heavy-lift execution
The fastest wins come from clarifying berth constraints, crane availability, lifting plans, laydown space, and on-site safety rules with the people running the quay.
Ask: what changes the schedule, what paperwork slows cargo release, and what the terminal wants to see before it will confirm a window.
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Equipment and engineered transport partners
It is a strong week to align SPMTs, rigging, lashing, and route survey assumptions with the parties who actually execute the move.
Quick filter: ask for one comparable job, what went wrong, and how they recovered schedule without breaking the budget.
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A format that forces decisions
The show’s Tuesday evening start and Thursday early finish naturally push serious meetings into a tight mid-week window, which helps teams leave with next steps instead of loose intentions.
Best pattern: Tuesday mapping, Wednesday deep dives, Thursday confirmations and follow-ups.
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Is it working in practice?
A quick reality check
Breakbulk is valuable when it compresses weeks of outreach into two focused days of meetings. The best indicator is density: how many shippers, EPCs, and execution partners are actually in the halls.
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Attendance scale (recent edition)
Reported stats from the most recent published edition point to a large attendance base with broad international participation.
Practical meaning: if your meeting list is thin here, it is usually a planning problem, not a “no one is there” problem.
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Shipper density is a known draw
The organizer highlights hundreds of global shippers and a broad supplier base (carriers, ports, terminals, heavy-lift, forwarders).
Practical meaning: come with cargo specs and windows. The floor is strongest when conversations are specific.
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The schedule format forces focus
Tuesday evening opening, full Wednesday, short Thursday. It naturally pushes serious meetings into a tight mid-week window.
Play it right: scout Tuesday, deep dives Wednesday, confirmations Thursday morning.
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A simple “working” benchmark
Target 12–18 qualified meetings per attendee across the show, with at least 4 deep-dive blocks (20–30 minutes).
If you cannot hit those numbers, tighten your target list and pre-book earlier. The show window is short.
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Breakbulk meeting ROI calculator
Cost, break-even, and expected upside
This estimates whether your week is likely to pay for itself based on meeting volume and realistic conversion rates. Adjust assumptions to match your lane.
Your cost inputs
Tip: include the true “time cost” if your team is pulling away from ops. It makes the break-even math honest.
Meeting and conversion inputs
Use gross profit, not revenue. If you only know revenue, apply your typical margin first.
Results
Total trip cost
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Total meetings
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Expected opportunities
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Expected wins
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Expected gross profit
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Expected ROI
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Break-even wins
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Profit needed per meeting
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If ROI looks weak, do not cancel first. Tighten the meeting list and raise meeting quality. The fastest lift usually comes from pre-booking and bringing specific cargo parameters.
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Quick sanity checks
If you are a carrier, forwarder, or heavy-lift provider, set “wins” to your expected gross profit from one booked move, not lifetime value.
If you are a shipper or EPC, use gross profit as cost avoided (routing savings, fewer delays, fewer re-handles) if direct revenue is not the right metric.
If conversion rates are uncertain, run three scenarios: conservative, expected, aggressive. The meeting plan should still work under conservative.
Breakbulk Americas 2026 is a short, meeting-heavy week that rewards preparation. If you arrive with cargo parameters, timelines, and a target list, the format makes it easier to convert conversations into next steps quickly. Treat Tuesday as your scouting and scheduling window, use Wednesday for deep dives, and reserve Thursday morning for confirmations and follow-up bookings so you leave Houston with dates on the calendar, not just contacts.