
TMS, LP is a fourth-party logistics provider (4PL) headquartered in Round Rock, Texas, specializing in nearshoring logistics for companies expanding operations to the United States and Mexico. Since 2005, TMS has helped manufacturers, distributors, and enterprise buyers navigate the U.S.-Mexico trade corridor — managing customs brokerage, USMCA compliance, warehousing, cross-border transportation, cross docking, and last-mile delivery under a single chain of custody. Locations: Round Rock, TX | Medley, FL (Miami FTZ) | Mexico City.
Years in the U.S.–Mexico Corridor
Units Managed Per Program
U.S. Trading Partner: Mexico (2024)
Border Crossing Complications — Our Standard
Nearshoring is the strategic decision to move manufacturing, assembly, or distribution operations from distant markets — typically Asia — to countries geographically closer to your end customers. For companies selling into the United States, that means Mexico, Central America, and the broader Americas corridor. For companies based in Latin America expanding northward, it means establishing logistics and distribution infrastructure inside the United States.
The shift is not a trend — it is a structural realignment of global supply chains. Mexico became the United States' largest trading partner in 2023 and has held that position into 2026, driven by companies in every industry reducing their exposure to long ocean transit times, geopolitical risk, and unpredictable tariff environments. The companies moving fastest are the ones with a trusted logistics partner who already knows the corridor. TMS, LP has been that partner since 2005.
Most logistics providers think downstream: they wait for a shipment to be ready, then move it. TMS, LP operates on an upstream model — we engage at the planning stage, before freight moves, to identify and eliminate the problems that create border delays, customs holds, and supply chain disruptions before they ever happen.
This approach is the foundation of our zero border crossing complications commitment. When a shipment under TMS management crosses the U.S.-Mexico border, the documentation, classification, compliance verification, and carrier coordination have already been completed. There is nothing left to resolve at the crossing. For companies whose production schedules and customer commitments depend on predictable transit times, this is not a detail — it is the entire value proposition.
Planning a nearshoring move? Speak with a cross-border logistics specialist before your first shipment moves.
Effective nearshoring logistics Texas Mexico operations require physical infrastructure on both sides of the border and at the key distribution hubs that connect the Americas. TMS, LP operates from three strategic locations that together cover the full U.S.-Mexico-LATAM supply chain:
Headquarters & U.S. Distribution Hub
Technology corridor access · I-35 corridor · Austin-Bergstrom Airport
Cross-Border Operations
U.S.–Mexico customs coordination · LATAM gateway · USMCA compliance
Miami FTZ Bonded Warehouse & LATAM Hub
Container Freight Station · Port Miami & MIA access · Caribbean distribution
Our Round Rock, Texas headquarters sits in the heart of the technology corridor, just north of Austin, with direct access to the I-35 freight lane that connects Texas to Laredo — the busiest land port on the U.S.-Mexico border. This is not an accident of geography. It is a deliberate position in the center of the most active nearshoring logistics Texas Mexico corridor in North America.
Our Miami FTZ bonded warehouse in Medley, Florida adds a critical layer for companies with Caribbean and South American distribution requirements. Goods entering the Free Trade Zone (or Foreign Trade Zone) can be stored, processed, and redistributed to Latin American markets without formal U.S. customs entry — deferring duties and dramatically simplifying the flow of product through the Americas.
As a 4PL logistics provider Texas companies and international brands rely on, TMS does not simply move freight — we orchestrate the entire supply chain so our clients can focus on their core business. For a nearshoring program, that means managing every element of the logistics chain from origin to end customer:
TMS's in-house customs brokerage team handles all U.S. and Mexico import documentation, duty classification, entry processing, and USMCA compliance verification. No third-party broker to coordinate — one team, one contact, zero delays.
TMS is a cross docking logistics provider operating at our Medley, Florida CFS facility. Inbound ocean containers or air freight pallets are deconsolidated and transferred directly to outbound carriers — eliminating warehousing costs and compressing transit time for time-sensitive nearshoring freight.
135,000 sq ft of secure, ESD-compliant warehousing across Texas and Florida. Act as your U.S. distribution center from day one — no capital expense, no lease negotiation, no build-out time.
As an independent agent of Landstar Systems Inc. through our sister company QHE Logistics, TMS provides access to 90,000+ vetted carriers. Through-trailer service across the U.S.-Mexico border, through Laredo and other key crossing points, with no-touch transloading options for sensitive cargo.
For international companies without a U.S. Tax ID or legal entity, TMS can act as the importer of record — bringing your goods into the country immediately while your legal entity is established. Start distributing in the U.S. on day one.
As an approved Computer Industry Services Vendor, TMS performs laser etching, mass software imaging, firmware updates, and enterprise device provisioning within our warehouse facilities. Learn more about our Value-Added Services — turning nearshored products into customer-ready assets before the last mile.
Companies evaluating nearshoring logistics partners often focus on price per shipment. The question they should be asking is: how many of my shipments will clear the border on the first attempt? A cheaper freight quote means nothing if a documentation error creates a 72-hour hold at Laredo that delays your customer delivery and triggers a contractual penalty.
TMS's proximity to the Austin-Round Rock market, combined with our direct operational connection to the U.S.-Mexico border at Laredo, means our team is managing your cross-border logistics Austin Texas operations in the same time zone, in real time, with the same urgency your own team would bring. We are not a national carrier with a regional office — we are a border-corridor specialist with 20 years of operational history in this exact lane.
TMS has managed supply chain programs exceeding 100,000 units for Fortune 500 clients including Dell Technologies, Ingram Micro, Toyota, and Barcel. Dell's senior managers and directors — the people accountable for millions of dollars of device deployments across Latin America — Our Difference & Trade Management Solutions. That is the standard we hold ourselves to for every client, regardless of program size.
“Throughout this project we've faced challenges and obstacles that have forced us to re-evaluate our strategy and adjust based on issues and changes within our environment — you and the team have been instrumental in our overall success. Huge thank you and congratulations.”
— Robert T. Ramirez, Senior Manager, Product Operations Engineering, Dell EMC | US EUC Fulfillment
Whether you are in the early stages of evaluating a nearshoring strategy or ready to move freight across the U.S.-Mexico border next month, TMS, LP has the infrastructure, expertise, and network to make it happen without complications. Tell us about your program — we will respond with a practical plan, not a sales pitch.
Talk to a TMS logistics specialist — no commitment, no generic proposal. Just a direct conversation about your program.
Three terms dominate the supply chain conversation today — but they are not interchangeable. Offshoring moves operations to a distant, lower-cost country, typically in Asia, prioritizing labor cost reduction at the expense of transit time and supply chain visibility. Reshoring brings those operations back to the company's home country, maximizing control and speed but sacrificing cost efficiency. Nearshoring occupies the strategic middle ground: manufacturing and distribution move to a geographically proximate country — for U.S. companies, that means Mexico — capturing meaningful cost advantages while dramatically reducing transit times, tariff exposure, and geopolitical risk.
Nearshoring to Mexico is currently dominant because it combines the cost benefits of offshoring with the logistical responsiveness of reshoring. Ocean freight from Asia averages 25–40 days; cross-border freight from Mexico to the U.S. averages 1–3 days. For companies managing just-in-time production or customer-committed delivery windows, that difference is structural, not marginal. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Mexico surpassed China as the United States' largest trading partner in 2023 — a position it has maintained as companies continue to restructure their supply chains for proximity and resilience.
| Factor | Offshoring | Nearshoring | Reshoring |
|---|---|---|---|
| Transit Time | 25–40 days | 1–3 days | Same-day to 2 days |
| Labor Cost | Lowest | Low to moderate | Highest |
| Tariff Risk | High (non-USMCA) | Low (USMCA eligible) | None (domestic) |
| Supply Chain Risk | High | Moderate | Low |
The shift from China-based manufacturing to Mexico-based production is not driven by a single factor — it is the convergence of several structural pressures that, together, make China-to-Mexico migration the defining supply chain strategy of the current decade. Transit time is the most immediate advantage: where ocean freight from China averages 25 to 40 days in transit, cross-border ground freight from Mexico to major U.S. distribution centers averages 1 to 3 days. For companies managing inventory-constrained programs or time-definite customer commitments, this compression is not an efficiency gain — it is a structural change in how a business operates.
Tariff exposure has accelerated the migration further. Goods manufactured in China face Section 301 tariff rates that can reach 25% or higher on finished goods, while USMCA-compliant products manufactured in Mexico can enter the United States duty-free or at significantly reduced rates — a landed cost optimization that directly improves margin without product changes. The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement also provides political stability that multi-year supply chain investments require: a rules-based framework managed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Mexico's Servicio de Administración Tributaria (SAT) that is not subject to the unilateral tariff actions that have repeatedly disrupted Asia-sourced supply chains. Reduced ocean freight volatility — avoiding port congestion, vessel capacity constraints, and unpredictable fuel surcharges — rounds out the case for nearshoring to Mexico as the dominant supply chain repositioning strategy available to U.S. manufacturers and importers today.
Laredo, Texas is the busiest land port of entry in the United States by trade value, processing over $300 billion in two-way trade annually. For companies executing U.S.–Mexico cross-border nearshoring, the Laredo port of entry is not just a crossing point — it is the operational center of gravity for the entire North American land freight network. The reason is geography and infrastructure: Laredo sits at the southern terminus of Interstate 35, the primary freight artery connecting the Texas–Mexico border to the Dallas-Fort Worth distribution hub, and from there to Chicago, the Midwest, and the entire U.S. interior. Any company moving freight between Mexico and the continental United States is, in most cases, routing through or adjacent to the Laredo corridor.
TMS, LP's Round Rock, Texas headquarters places our team 20 minutes from Austin and directly on the I-35 corridor — the freight lane that feeds Laredo. This proximity enables something that logistics providers based in Chicago, Atlanta, or Los Angeles cannot replicate: real-time operational coordination at the crossing in the same time zone, with the same business hours, with direct partner relationships on the Mexico side of the bridge. Our pre-clearance model means that Laredo customs clearance for TMS-managed freight is completed before the truck reaches the border, eliminating the documentation reviews, classification questions, and compliance holds that create costly delays for unprepared shippers. For companies whose nearshoring programs depend on predictable border crossing performance, TMS's Laredo operational capability is a competitive differentiator that no amount of cheaper freight rates can compensate for.
A third-party logistics provider (3PL) executes specific logistics functions — warehousing, transportation, or customs brokerage — as discrete services. A 3PL moves freight; it does not manage the supply chain architecture that determines how, when, and at what cost that freight moves. A fourth-party logistics provider (4PL) operates at a higher level of integration: a 4PL designs, manages, and continuously optimizes the entire supply chain on a client's behalf — coordinating multiple carriers, warehouses, customs brokers, and technology platforms through a single management layer accountable for end-to-end performance.
For cross-border nearshoring supply chains, a 4PL is not optional — it is the operational model that makes the strategy viable. U.S.–Mexico cross-border freight management involves customs brokerage in two jurisdictions, USMCA rules of origin compliance, multi-modal transportation coordination, FTZ bonded warehouse management, importer of record services, and real-time exception handling at the border. No single 3PL carrier or warehouse operator manages all of these functions. A 4PL like TMS, LP provides the orchestration layer that connects each element into a coherent, accountable supply chain — with a single point of contact, a single chain of custody, and a single team responsible for performance from origin to end customer.
The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) fundamentally changed the rules for goods moving between the three countries — and for companies that understand it, USMCA is not a compliance burden, it is a competitive advantage. Products that qualify for USMCA preferential treatment can cross the border duty-free or at significantly reduced rates. Products that do not qualify, or whose documentation does not support their claim, face delays, penalties, and unexpected duty assessments that can eliminate the cost savings that motivated the nearshoring decision in the first place.
TMS, LP's customs brokerage team manages USMCA compliance for every eligible cross-border movement we handle. We verify origin classification, prepare and validate Certificates of Origin, and ensure every shipment's documentation supports its USMCA claim before it ever reaches the border. For companies new to the U.S.-Mexico trade corridor, this expertise is the difference between a nearshoring strategy that works and one that gets derailed by compliance gaps.
Nearshoring is the relocation of manufacturing or distribution operations from distant markets — such as China or Southeast Asia — to closer ones, typically Mexico or other Latin American countries, for companies selling into the United States. It reduces lead times from weeks to days, lowers freight costs, decreases geopolitical risk, and improves supply chain responsiveness. For companies selling into the U.S. market, nearshoring to Mexico is the most common and most impactful move available. TMS, LP has specialized in nearshoring supply chains since 2005, operating from Round Rock, Texas with direct capability at the U.S.-Mexico border.
A 4PL, or fourth-party logistics provider, manages your entire supply chain — coordinating carriers, warehouses, customs brokers, and last-mile logistics on your behalf — rather than just moving freight from point A to point B like a standard 3PL. For nearshoring companies, a 4PL is critical because the U.S.-Mexico supply chain involves multiple modes, multiple borders, customs compliance, USMCA rules of origin, and potentially multiple warehousing locations. TMS, LP is a 4PL logistics provider Texas-based companies and international brands rely on to manage all of this through a single point of contact.
TMS's in-house customs brokerage team manages full USMCA compliance — including origin verification, Certificates of Origin preparation, tariff classification, and documentation validation before freight reaches the border. We ensure every shipment that qualifies for USMCA preferential treatment is correctly documented to receive it, and every shipment that does not qualify is processed under the appropriate duty schedule without error. USMCA compliance is not an add-on for TMS — it is a core part of every cross-border shipment we manage.
Yes. TMS is a cross docking logistics provider operating at our Container Freight Station (CFS) and Free Trade Zone warehouse in Medley, Florida. Inbound ocean containers from Mexico or other origins are deconsolidated and transferred directly to outbound carriers for U.S. domestic distribution or LATAM redistribution — eliminating long-term storage costs and accelerating total transit time. Cross-docking is particularly valuable for nearshoring companies with high-volume, time-sensitive shipments that need rapid redistribution after arriving at the U.S. port.
Yes. TMS, LP can act as the importer of record for international companies that do not yet have a U.S. Tax ID or established legal entity. This allows your goods to enter the United States and begin distribution immediately while your legal entity formation is completed. It is one of the most important services TMS provides for companies in the early stages of a nearshoring transition to North America.
Round Rock, Texas is located 20 minutes from Austin and sits directly on the I-35 corridor — the primary freight artery connecting Texas to the Laredo port of entry, which is the busiest land crossing on the entire U.S.-Mexico border. TMS's Round Rock headquarters places us in the center of the most active cross-border logistics Austin Texas market in North America. Our team manages border crossings in real time in the same time zone as the freight, which eliminates the communication delays that create costly holds at the crossing.
TMS, LP operates directly from Round Rock, Texas and Medley, Florida (Miami FTZ), with a cross-border partner network in Mexico City and throughout Mexico. For U.S.-side warehousing, customs brokerage, and distribution, TMS handles all operations directly. For Mexico-side coordination and cross-border management, we operate through our established partner network, providing seamless coverage on both sides of the border under a unified management structure. Through strategic alliances, we have access to warehousing space all over the Americas — Caribbean, Central America, and South America. More on our site: Global Locations & Trade Management Solutions
TMS, LP was founded in 2005 and has managed nearshoring and cross-border supply chains for the full 20+ years of its operation. The company's expertise in the U.S.-Mexico corridor pre-dates the current nearshoring boom by nearly two decades. Clients include Dell Technologies, Ingram Micro, Toyota, and Barcel — Fortune 500 companies whose supply chain directors have publicly praised TMS's operational performance in writing.