The Short Answer
Usually no. A standard 26ft moving truck has roughly 1,600-1,700 cubic feet of cargo space. A 20ft shipping container has only 1,172 cubic feet. If your truck is fully loaded, you will have ~30% overflow.
Comparing the Capacities
This is the most common mistake in international relocation: assuming "big truck" equals "big container." A standard 26ft rental truck (like those from U-Haul or Penske) is designed for domestic moves with generous dimensions. Its box is typically 26ft long, 8ft 1in wide, and 8ft 1in high, yielding approximately 1,700 cubic feet of volume (including the "Mom's Attic" space above the cab).
In contrast, a standard 20ft ISO shipping container is built for stacking strength, not volume. Its internal dimensions are roughly 19ft 4in long, 7ft 8in wide, and 7ft 10in high. The total internal capacity is capped at 1,172 cubic feet (33.2 CBM).
The math is unforgiving: 1,700 > 1,172. If you have a full 26ft truck, you have 528 cubic feet of "excess cargo"—that's equivalent to leaving an entire Master Bedroom suite (King bed, dresser, 2 nightstands, armoire, and 10 large boxes) on the curb.
Furthermore, rental trucks have thin, straight walls made of aluminum or fiberglass. Containers have corrugated steel walls. The "valleys" of the corrugation add width, but the "peaks" subtract it. You effectively lose another 2-3 inches of usable width when trying to load wide furniture like sofas, further reducing the practical capacity compared to the smooth walls of a truck.
The Volume Formula
Volume is calculated as Length x Width x High. For a 26ft truck, the volume is straightforward: 26' x 8.1' x 8.1' ≈ 1,705 ft³. This openness gives you wiggle room for awkward furniture like sofas standing on end. Truck loading is "forgiving" because you can push against the flexible walls slightly, and the rollout door allows ceiling-height loading.
For a 20ft container, the "Corrugation Penalty" applies. The steel walls act like efficient structural columns but eat into your usable width. You functionally have only about 90 inches of width to work with at the pinch points. The door header (the metal bar above the doors) is often 4-6 inches lower than the ceiling, creating a "lip" that makes loading tall items difficult.
The Formula for Disaster: (Truck Volume) - (Container Volume) = Overflow. In this specific matchup, 1705 - 1172 = 533 ft³ overflow. You would need roughly 1.5x 20ft containers to fit the load of one 26ft truck.
Crucially, packing density in a container is often lower. In a rental truck, you might just throw in loose items (lamps, folded chairs) at the end. In a container going across the ocean, **every single item** must be boxed and wrapped to withstand 30 days of rolling waves. This wrapping adds bulk—sometimes increasing displacement by 15-20%.
Moving Day Reality Check
Consider the case of a family moving from Texas to Germany. They loaded their 4-bedroom house into a 26ft Penske truck, packing it "tight to the door." They ordered a single 20ft container for the ocean freight segment to save money. They assumed "a truck is a truck."
On loading day, the crew managed to fit the boxes, the beds, and the dining table. But as they reached the halfway point, realized the 20ft container was full. The sectional sofa (100 ft³), the antique piano (60 ft³), and 40 large book boxes (120 ft³) were left on the driveway.
They were forced to panic-buy a second 20ft container at spot rates ($4,500 extra) or sell the remaining goods for pennies. A single 40ft container (2,389 ft³) would have swallowed the entire load with room to spare for only $1,000 more than the 20ft. The logic of "saving money with a smaller container" backfired, costing them $3,500 more in net logistics spend.
The lesson: If your rental truck is more than 60% full, you need a 40ft container. Do not gamble with a 20ft unless you are willing to leave furniture behind.
Strategic Planning for Moves
If you are moving from a large truck to a container, you have two strategic options: Purge or Upgrade.
The Purge Strategy: If you must use a 20ft container, visualize "cutting off the last 7 feet" of your rental truck. Everything behind that invisible line is garbage. Sell the big furniture. Donate the books. Ship only high-value, sentimental items. Measure exactly 1,000 cubic feet of goods and stop.
The Upgrade Strategy: Just book a 40ft High Cube container. It offers 2,694 ft³ of space—more than enough to swallow a full 26ft truck (1,700 ft³) plus a mid-sized SUV (approx 450 ft³). The price difference between shipping a 20ft and a 40ft container is often surprisingly small relative to the total move cost. In 2024 rates, a US-Europe 20ft might be $3,000 while a 40ft is $4,200. That extra $1,200 buys you double the space.
Another option is Transloading. Drive your 26ft truck to a consolidation warehouse. They can palletize your goods and ship them LCL (Less than Container Load). This is efficient if you have exactly 1,300 cubic feet—too big for a 20ft, too empty for a 40ft. You pay per CBM.
Actionable Steps
1. Use the "Box Rule": Don't count bedrooms. Count boxes. A 20ft container fits roughly 200 medium boxes and basic furniture. A 26ft truck fits 300+ boxes. If your inventory list has more than 200 items, verify carefully.
2. Measure the Door: Rental trucks have roll-up doors that give full height clearance. Containers have heavy steel swing doors with a header bar that lowers the entrance height to roughly 7ft 6in. Tall armoires might not fit upright unless tilted.
3. Calculate Usable Volume: Assume only 85% of the container volume is usable due to inefficient "Tetris" packing. 1,172 ft³ * 0.85 = ~1,000 ft³ of real cargo space. Professional packers can hit 90-95%, but amateurs usually hit 75-80%.
4. Check the Ramp: Rental trucks have low decks and built-in ramps. Containers sit on chassis 4 feet (1.2m) off the ground. You cannot walk a sofa into a container without a loading dock or a massive external ramp rental. Factor this into your loading day plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only.