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El Paso, TX

El Paso, Texas sits at one of the most important inland ports of entry on the U.S.-Mexico border, forming a critical trade corridor with Ciudad Juárez. El Paso plays a major role in North American manufacturing and cross-border supply chains. The region’s economy is fueled by automotive, electronics, aerospace, textiles, and medical device production, with many goods flowing northbound for distribution and southbound for assembly. Seasonal manufacturing cycles and consumer demand shape container movement through the area. As a strategic logistics hub with strong highway and rail connectivity, El Paso supports steady demand for used containers.

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20ft Used Container

40ft Used Container

40ft Used High Cube Container

TX

El Paso, TX

$2,217

2.25%

$2,793

9.6%

$2,989

9.95%

About El Paso, TX

El Paso sits on the U.S. Mexico border along the Rio Grande, directly across from the Mexican city Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. This area is known for being binational and is an important throughfare for goods crossing the border. According to ELTX, El Paso, Texas stands as a key center for logistics and distribution, offering businesses an advantageous position within North American trade networks. With direct links to extensive highway systems, rail corridors, international airports, and one of the most active U.S.-Mexico border crossings, the region ensures efficient supply chain operations and rapid transportation solutions.

Trade, Container, and Intermodal Potential: Why El Paso Matters for Container and Shipping Markets

Just like our Chicago depot, El Paso hub location and intermodal container distribution deserves similar recognition for border trade, cross-border freight, and intermodal (rail + truck + border) connectivity:

  • With major rail yards (Union Pacific + BNSF), El Paso serves as a key rail-road intermodal transfer point connecting U.S. interior markets with Mexico.
  • High volume of cross-border trade: Over US$100 billion processed in 2024 through El Paso’s ports of entry.
  • Diverse cargo flows: Machinery, electrical goods, automotive parts, consumer goods, agricultural produce, both imports and export, traverse the region, making it an active node for container and freight logistics.
  • Warehouse/cross-docking growth: Recent expansions by logistics firms underline the region's growing capacity to store, sort, and redistribute goods — a sign of rising demand and strategic importance.

Local Economic Drivers in El Paso, TX

  • Population & Region Significance

    • The city of El Paso had an estimated population of 681,723 in July 2024, according to data released by the Census Bureau
    • It is among the largest U.S. cities located on the Mexican border and serves as a major U.S.–Mexico gateway.
  • Exports from El Paso Region

    • Computer chips and parts
    • Electronics and machinery
    • Gasoline and refined fuels
    • Medical instruments and electrical supplies
  • Imports into El Paso Region

    • Electronics (e.g., computers, cell phones)
    • Machinery
    • Automotive parts and commercial vehicles
    • Cables and other industrial components
  • As a Border Port City

    • Busiest Ports of Entry: El Paso hosts some of the nation's busiest land ports, handling massive flows of people, vehicles, and goods between the U.S. and Mexico, forming a vital economic link.
    • Economic Engine: This port activity drives industries like automotive manufacturing, electronics, textiles, and food production, creating jobs and economic impact.
    • Cultural Fusion: The city's border status creates a vibrant, unique culture with strong Mexican influences evident in food, festivals, and daily life.
  • Intermodal Trade & Transportation Infrastructure

    • Rail: The city hosts major rail-yard facilities (e.g. yard for Union Pacific Railroad and terminal for BNSF Railway), which link U.S. transcontinental rail lines with Mexico.
    • Freight volume: The rail network moving through El Paso handles over 25 million tons of freight annually, supporting thousands of regional jobs and generating significant economic impact as a top U.S. Mexico trade corridor.
    • Port(s) of Entry & Border Crossings: El Paso has multiple international bridges/ports of entry for example El Paso BOTA Port of Entry (Bridge of the Americas), which is a major crossing for both passenger vehicles and commercial trucks.
  • Agriculture & Crops

    • Cotton (including high-quality Pima): Much of the cotton production in the region is irrigated due to the low rainfall.
    • Pecans: The El Paso region (with surrounding counties) is among the top pecan-producing areas in the U.S. Some orchards near El Paso produce hundreds of acres of pecan nuts.
    • Alfalfa for hay and forage: Local farms may produce multiple cuttings per year.
    • Vegetables: Onions, chile peppers, certain vegetables, and horticultural crops are cultivated when irrigation is available.
    • Orchards, fruit trees, & arid-adapted plants: Given the desert climate and water constraints, many growers rely on drought-tolerant or well-adapted plants.
El Paso, Texas pinned on a map

What is Unique About El Paso Texas

El Paso is a very different kind of depot city because of its border position, arid climate, and intermodal infrastructure, it occupies a unique niche in North America’s supply-chain geography. It’s a critical U.S. and Mexico gateway — enabling trade flows, manufacturing supply-chains, and cross-border commerce between two nations. It combines rail, road, and border-crossing infrastructure to support high freight volumes.

It demonstrates resilient agriculture and adaptation in a desert environment with cotton, pecans, alfalfa, and irrigated crops. Its binational culture and geography give it unique social, economic, and logistic identity. For container logistics, warehousing, border-trade support, or agriculture-linked storage/transportation, El Paso offers structural advantages distinct from typical U.S. hubs.