TOC Americas 2026

TOC Americas 2026 shifts the conversation to the Caribbean gateway of Cartagena. If you work in ports, terminals, or the container supply chain, this is the kind of event where practical operator pain points meet real tech and equipment discussions, and where regional trade realities (congestion, resilience, productivity, security, decarbonization) get debated with people who can actually change outcomes.

TOC Americas 2026 — Event Snapshot

20–22 October 2026
Dates
20–22 October 2026
City
Cartagena, Colombia
Format
Conference and exhibition focused on ports, terminals, and container supply chain operations across the Americas
Core audience
Terminal operators, port authorities, shipping lines, logistics providers, equipment and automation suppliers, digital platform teams, safety and sustainability specialists
Content lanes
Container supply chain strategy and operations plus port technology and innovation programming
Official site
Registration
Cartagena location map
Note: The official TOC Americas 2026 site currently confirms the city and dates. Venue specifics are sometimes published closer to the event. The map above points to Cartagena’s main convention center area used for large conferences.

What makes TOC Americas a high-signal week

This is an operator-forward ports and terminals event. You get the mix of strategic container supply chain conversation plus very practical tech, equipment, and automation discussions that translate into projects.

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Operations-first content

Expect discussions anchored in throughput, yard and gate performance, berth planning, labor realities, safety, and service reliability across the Americas.

Use it to pressure-test
  • What will change your vessel and truck turn times
  • What is measurable in 90 days versus 12 months
  • What breaks integration in real terminals
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Port tech and equipment in one circuit

The exhibition focus is built for terminals: automation, TOS ecosystems, sensors, cranes and handling, safety systems, power and electrification, and data platforms.

Bring to meetings
  • Your top 3 bottlenecks by hour and location
  • Current stack: TOS, planning tools, telemetry
  • Constraints: power, footprint, labor, permits
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Supply chain view, not just port view

TOC’s container supply chain framing keeps the focus on upstream and downstream impacts: network planning, inland connections, shipper expectations, and disruption resilience.

Good questions to ask
  • How do projects change total dwell time
  • Which KPIs carriers actually care about
  • Where visibility fails across handoffs
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Networking that is role-aligned

This is built for operator-to-supplier conversations and peer benchmarking. If you come with a short decision list, it becomes a productive buying and validation week.

Simple approach
  • Pre-book 6–10 meetings, then protect two daily windows
  • Do one “integration reality check” meeting per vendor
  • End each day with a short next-step decision
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TOC Americas 2026 week game plan

20 to 22 October • Cartagena

Make the week pay off by arriving with a short list of operational priorities, then using the conference to narrow options and the expo floor to verify what is deployable in a real terminal.

Suggested time split for a high-ROI week
Tune for your role below
Conference sessions
35%
Expo floor demos
45%
Target meetings
20%
Keep one protected block each day for comparison shopping. That is where you validate integration effort, timelines, and the real KPI impact.
Choose a track
Day 0 prep
  • Pick one priority KPI: berth productivity, yard moves, truck turn time, dwell, safety incidents, energy use.
  • Write down your current system map and where data quality breaks.
  • Set three meeting windows and protect them.
Days 1 and 2 on-site
  • Spend the first hour on the expo floor to locate the top 6 vendors for your KPI.
  • Ask every vendor the same three questions: integration burden, timeline to first measurable result, what fails in live operations.
  • Capture one reference site per vendor with a comparable throughput profile.
Day 3 closeout
  • Convert conversations into pilots, not purchases.
  • Leave with a shortlist of 2 to 3 options and a clear success metric for each.
  • Schedule follow-up calls within 7 to 10 days while details are fresh.
Leave with these 6 outcomes
  • 2 to 3 shortlisted solutions for your top KPI
  • 1 pilot scope per shortlisted option
  • 1 reference site per vendor with similar scale
  • Integration notes: systems touched and data needed
  • Timeline to first measurable result
  • Follow-up meetings booked within 7 to 10 days
🏙️

Cartagena practical notes for TOC week

Quick logistics that save time

Cartagena is compact. The airport is close, and the main visitor districts concentrate hotels, dining, and meeting spots, which helps you keep the week efficient.

Arrivals and transfers
  • CTG airport sits in the Crespo area and is typically a short drive to the historic center.
  • For teams, use pre-booked cars or app-based rides for predictable pickup and fewer negotiations.
  • Build buffer time in the late afternoon when the city feels busiest.
Where to stay for a smoother week
  • Walled City for walkable dinners and easy client hosting.
  • Getsemaní for a busy evening scene and fast access to the historic core.
  • Bocagrande for modern hotels and straightforward car access.
Daily rhythm that reduces friction
  • Put your highest-priority meetings in the morning when everyone is on time.
  • Plan dinners in one district per night so the group does not scatter.
  • Use short debriefs right after sessions to capture actions and owners.
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Venue check that saves a wasted morning
Confirm the venue name from your badge email or the official event site before you book hotels. If your materials reference the Cartagena de Indias Convention Center area in Getsemaní, it is right by the historic core, which makes the Walled City and Getsemaní especially efficient bases for the week.
Meeting hygiene in a tourism-heavy city
  • Use the hotel lobby, venue cafés, and well-known restaurants for first meetings.
  • Agree pickup points and times in writing for group dinners.
  • Keep receipts and notes in one shared channel so nothing is lost.
Heat and comfort planning
  • Cartagena is typically hot and humid, so schedule outdoor walks early or after sunset.
  • For multiple meetings, pick air-conditioned venues and keep transfers short.
  • Carry water and a backup shirt if you are on the floor all day.
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Night-before checklist
  • Top 2 sessions and top 6 booths
  • Three meeting windows locked
  • One KPI you are driving this week
  • Short pilot template and constraints list
  • Who owns each follow-up
  • Where the team regroups after the show day
By the ShipUniverse Editorial Team — About Us | Contact