
Used 40 feet container: standard and high cube — prices 2026
The used 40 feet offers 67 m³ of usable space (76 m³ in high cube) — the format chosen when volume exceeds 30 m³. After 10-15 years of maritime service with shipping lines, used 40 feet containers are reclassified as A, B or C. The high cube (HC) adds 30 cm of interior height, essential for habitable conversion.
Price 2026 by status
The used 40 feet offers 67 m³ of usable space (76 m³ in high cube) — the format chosen when volume exceeds 30 m³. After 10-15 years of maritime service with shipping lines, used 40 feet containers are reclassified as A, B or C. The high cube (HC) adds 30 cm of interior height, essential for habitable conversion.
| Status | Price Excl. VAT | For what use |
|---|---|---|
| 40 feet standard class A | 2 900 € – 3 800 € | Volume storage, entry-level fit-out |
| 40 feet standard class B/C | 1 900 € – 3 200 € | Invisible storage, back of construction site |
| 40 feet high cube class A | 3 200 € – 4 200 € | Habitable fit-out, office, workshop |
Excluding delivery (£350 – £1,000 depending on zone). A 40 feet is longer to handle — allow 22 m of access and 4.5 m of clearance height.
For whom?
Professionals and individuals with significant volume needs: construction material storage, archives, workshop, site accommodation multi-modules. The used high cube class A is the sweet spot for those wanting habitable conversion at a controlled cost.
Key points to remember
- 67 m³ of usable space in standard, 76 m³ in high cube (+30 cm of interior height)
- Payload ~26 tonnes (little difference vs 20 feet)
- Classes A/B/C consistent with the 20-foot: same grid, same criteria
- More economical per m³ than the 20-foot (price-to-volume ratio)
- Daily availability in major European depots
Frequently Asked Questions
Standard or high cube: how to choose?+
Standard (2.39 m interior) is sufficient for storing palletised equipment. High cube (2.69 m) is essential when there is habitable fit-out, office, perceived ceiling height. +300 to +500 € for the HC, generally cost-effective.
Does a 40-foot container fit on all sites?+
Load-bearing surface (concrete, compacted gravel 30 cm, wooden longrines). Minimum area 13 m × 3 m. Access for truck crane: 22 m of free length, 4 m width, 4.5 m height. If you have an uneven terrain, plan a preliminary levelling.
What is the price difference between used 20-foot and 40-foot containers?+
A 40-foot container costs 30-40% more but offers DOUBLE the volume. Per cubic metre, the 40-foot is ~25% cheaper. Prefer one 40-foot over two 20-foot if usage is unified (single space).
Is a high cube 40-foot container deliverable everywhere?+
Total height 2.90 m + 30 cm thickness of truck bed = 3.20 m. Check bridges, branches, electrical lines on the access route. In urban areas, plan for parking permission (14-20 m crane truck).
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