March 18, 2026 – Global shipping giant Maersk has released its latest Latin America Market Update. The report reveals structural transformations in the region’s logistics landscape.
Latin American consumer behavior is polarizing. Aging is accelerating. Digital-native shoppers are rising. These factors collectively drive logistics models from uniform services toward differentiated, customized solutions.
Data shows Latin America has become the world’s fastest-growing e-commerce market. It has over 300 million digital consumers. The population aged 65+ will reach 138 million by 2035. This jumps from 9.9% to 18.9% of the total population.
This dual transformation forces logistics providers to meet multiple demands. They need efficiency, speed, reliability, and personalized service. A single logistics strategy can no longer adapt to market changes.
Consumer Polarization: Essentials vs. “Little Luxuries”
The most notable feature is the widening gap between essential purchases and experience-driven categories. Persistent inflationary pressures make households more cautious.
Since 2020, consumer purchasing power fell approximately 25%. Consumers turn to private labels, discounters, and small, frequent purchases. This segment’s core logistics requirements are predictable replenishment and cost protection.
Meanwhile, categories delivering emotional value continue to grow. Beauty, fashion, accessories, and electronics thrive online. According to Statista, Latin America is the fastest-growing e-commerce region globally.
These “little luxuries” have different logistics requirements. They need speed, accuracy, clear delivery promises, and real-time visibility. The same household may require two different logistics services simultaneously.
Aging Acceleration: Demographic Shifts Reshape Networks
Latin America is aging at an unprecedented pace. Currently, 65 million people are aged 65+. This will double to 138 million by 2035.
This demographic transformation directly impacts logistics operations. Older consumers increasingly concentrate in mature urban districts. This drives logistics toward more consumer-proximate network design.
More dark stores, micro-fulfillment centers, and pickup points emerge. Distributed warehousing shortens last mile. Demand planning uses neighborhood-level “micro-clusters” rather than national averages.
For this group, reliability outweighs speed. Practices show narrow guaranteed delivery windows of 2–3 hours. Simple tracking and fewer failed deliveries are crucial.
Labor and Operational Impacts
Aging affects the logistics workforce. Retiring drivers are hard to replace. Fewer younger workers enter transport roles. This accelerates automation and leaner routing.
Older consumers buy lighter baskets but more frequently. This pushes higher drop density and more frequent replenishment cycles. Standardized, repeatable routes maintain margins.
Strategic Capital Allocation
With slower growth, companies must prioritize strategic densification. Automation and route optimization become essential. Investments must boost delivery reliability.
Companies using demographic insights avoid overbuilding and idle capacity. Maersk’s report emphasizes key success factors for Latin America.
Regional Operational Status
Central America, Andina, and the Caribbean Sea Area: Operations remain stable in March. Most ports function within normal capacity levels.
East Coast South America Area: Port operations remain stable. Localized pressure persists in Itapoa, Paranagua, and Buenos Aires.
West Coast South America Area: Operations remain steady. Ports are open with manageable yard occupancy.
Strategic Implications: Delivery by Design
Amy Alonso Urbina, Regional Customer Communications Manager at Maersk, notes:
“Latin America will increasingly ‘deliver less by distance and more by design.’ Logistics providers need to understand different consumer segment expectations.”
Essentials require efficiency. Experience-driven categories require speed and care. Aging communities prioritize reliability and proximity. Younger digital natives expect convenience and visibility.
The report recommends strategic measures. Invest in data analytics and AI tools. Develop flexible logistics networks. Build closer local partnerships. Integrate sustainability considerations.
As Latin America continues its transformation, adaptable logistics providers gain competitive advantages. Those with traditional approaches face market share erosion.
Maersk’s report provides a clear roadmap. The future is not faster or cheaper. It’s smarter, more adaptive, and more consumer-centric.
Source: www.maersk.com
This article was AI-assisted and reviewed by our editorial team.









