The logistics sector experiences times of the year when everything accelerates. Demands increase, schedules tighten, volumes grow, and the pressure on the supply chain changes pace. For B2B companies–manufacturers, distributors, large-scale retailers, technical suppliers, retail–these periods are not simply seasonal variations, but true critical phases in which the ability to deliver on time becomes a competitive advantage.

These are the peak seasons, predictable phases when demand for transportation, warehousing and document services exceeds the annual average. During these weeks, choosing a solid forwarder organized to handle rapid changes and high flows means protecting business continuity and preventing blockages.

What is really a peak period in logistics

A peak period is defined as a phase when the demand for shipping and logistics services grows beyond the standard capacity of the systems.
This may occur for commercial, calendrical or seasonal reasons: vacations, promotional campaigns, planned vacations, concentrated volumes or strategic restarts.

During these moments:

  • volumes to be shipped increase;
  • the availability of means is reduced;
  • warehouses anticipate closures or work with reduced staff;
  • customs become more congested;
  • unforeseen contingencies, emergencies and last-minute requests are growing.

For companies, this means rescheduling flows, coordinating internal departments and avoiding delays that can cost them dearly in terms of sales or production continuity.

The main times of the year when peak logistics occur

Peak trends are now consistent and documented by industry analyses.

There are four most critical periods.

1. Black Friday and Cyber Week

The end of November sees one of the most intense peaks of the year: volumes grow by an average of 30-40% and in some areas even exceed 45%.

This increase is not only in B2C e-commerce: in B2B, supplies, marketing materials, additional inventory and urgent deliveries related to the Christmas season are concentrated.

2. December and the Christmas season

According to Poste Italiane, Sendcloud and Statista, December brings an increase of up to 50 percent in shipping volumes.
The last week before Christmas is the most critical, with urgent requests growing up to 65 percent.

Here punctuality is not a variable: it is an essential requirement.

3. Summer and planned closures

July and August are less intuitive but very delicate months: many suppliers reduce staff or close for vacations, while customers anticipate orders and deliveries. The result is an irregular, concentrated flow that is difficult to manage.

4. Italian bridges and holidays

Bridges such as April 25, May 1, June 2, and Immaculate Conception create sudden micro-peaks: in the days leading up to them, requests increase rapidly, while in the days following, restarts slow down routes.

5. The January restart: fairs and events

Often underestimated, the second half of January is a new mini-peak season.
For sectors such as fashion, design, lifestyle, industry and food, major Italian and European trade fairs begin:

  • Homi
  • Pitti Uomo / Bimbo
  • Sigep
  • Furniture Fair
  • Car Show
  • technical and industrial fairs

Here shipments must be on time, fast, and highly organized.

 

What impacts a peak season can have on business logistics

When volumes grow and time compresses, critical issues emerge quickly.
Data from Convey, Statista and Shopify show that during peak periods:

  • delays increase between 15 and 25 percent;
  • tracking anomalies grow by 12 percent;
  • the availability of means is shrinking faster;
  • operating and transportation costs increase;
  • congestion intensifies at ports, airports and customs.

For many B2B companies, even a 24-hour delay can translate into production downtime, missed sales, or undelivered equipment.

How to cope with peak periods: the approach recommended by Insped

Coping with a peak season means more than just “holding up the slack.” It means predicting, anticipating, organizing.
Insped adopts a structured method that is based on five pillars.

Advance planning

Scheduling shipments weeks in advance allows you to secure loading slots, available vehicles, and optimal operating windows.

Own warehouses to manage volumes and advances

The Ornago and Brendola warehouses offer warehousing, consolidation, order preparation and advance stock management, reducing pressure on company warehouses.

Dedicated Express Services for Real Emergencies

In case of deliveries that cannot be postponed, Insped exclusive vehicles travel without intermediate stops, ensuring punctuality even during congested periods.

Organized groupage

For non-urgent shipments, groupage allows optimization of costs and volumes while maintaining continuity even with variable loads.

Fast and detention-free customs handling

Inland customs reduces risks of document delays, which are typical during peak periods.

Conclusion: turning peaks into opportunities

Peak seasons are not unexpected: they are annual appointments.
Companies that can govern them, rather than suffer them, gain a clear competitive advantage.
With a combination of experience, strategic warehouses, dedicated services and in-house customs management, Insped accompanies B2B customers through the busiest weeks of the year, ensuring continuity and reliability.