Introduction
Canada is the second-largest country in the world by land area. Its population is spread across a 5,000‑kilometer band – from Vancouver on the Pacific coast to Montreal and Halifax in the east.
If you store all your inventory in just one Canadian city, you’re forcing your logistics network to work against geography.
A multi‑city warehouse network – with fulfillment centers in Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, and Montreal – solves this problem by placing your products closer to both Amazon FBA centers and your end customers.
In this guide, we’ll walk through the 5 measurable benefits of using a multi‑city network, with real cost and time data. You’ll learn:
- How to reduce shipping costs by 15‑25%
- Why multi‑city storage prevents Q4 stockouts
- How it enables 1‑2 day delivery for non‑FBA channels
- Why it lowers your Amazon storage fees
- How to manage the complexity with the right WMS
Let’s dive into the benefits.

Benefit #1: Dramatically Lower Shipping Costs to Western Canada
Most Chinese and US sellers start with a warehouse in Toronto (Ontario) because it’s close to the busiest Amazon FBA hubs (YYZ1‑YYZ7) and the major port of entry.
However, shipping a pallet from Toronto to Vancouver (British Columbia) or Calgary (Alberta) costs $150‑$250 and takes 5‑7 days by LTL truck.
Now multiply that by hundreds of pallets per year.
Real Cost Comparison
| Lanes | Distance | LTL Cost (CAD) | Transit Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto → Vancouver | 4,400 km | $220‑$280 | 6‑7 days |
| Toronto → Calgary | 3,400 km | $170‑$210 | 5‑6 days |
| Toronto → Montreal | 540 km | $80‑$120 | 1‑2 days |
| Calgary → Vancouver (local) | 970 km | $60‑$90 | 1‑2 days |
How a multi‑city network saves you money:
Instead of shipping everything from Toronto, you send inventory directly to Vancouver and Calgary warehouses via sea (port of Vancouver) or rail. Then your FBA replenishment trips become local trucking moves – not cross‑country hauls.
Example: A furniture seller shipped 200 pallets/month from Toronto to Calgary. After switching to DH’s multi‑city network, they stocked 60 pallets directly in Calgary. Their monthly shipping cost dropped by $12,000 (from $200/pallet cross‑country to $70/pallet local).
✅ DH advantage: Our warehouses in Vancouver, Calgary, and Edmonton are located near major Amazon FBA centers (YVR2‑YVR4, YYC1, YYC4). We also offer rail/freight consolidation from Western to Eastern Canada when your demand patterns shift.
👉 [Learn more about FBA Transfer & Replenishment →](link to article 6)
Benefit #2: Faster Delivery & Reduced Stockouts During Peak Seasons
Q4 (October‑December) is chaos for Canadian logistics. Amazon receiving can take 3‑4 weeks during peak. Cross‑country LTL carriers get fully booked. A single snowstorm on the Trans‑Canada Highway can shut down traffic for days.
The risk: Your Vancouver bestseller runs out of stock while inventory sits in a Toronto warehouse, stuck in transit.
How Multi‑City Warehousing Solves This
By pre‑positioning inventory in multiple cities before Q4, you can:
- Replenish Amazon FBA locally (same‑day or next‑day trucking)
- Bypass cross‑country shipping bottlenecks
- Respond to demand spikes in 24‑48 hours instead of 7‑10 days
Transit Time Comparison (During Peak Season)
| Shipment Origin → Destination | Single Warehouse (Toronto only) | Multi‑City Network (DH) |
|---|---|---|
| Replenish Vancouver FBA | 7‑10 days (delays common) | 1‑2 days (local from YVR) |
| Replenish Calgary FBA | 6‑8 days | 1 day (local from YYC) |
| Replenish Montreal FBA | 2‑3 days | 1 day (local from YUL) |
| Replenish Toronto FBA | 1 day | 1 day (local from YYZ) |
Result: Your Amazon inventory stays in stock longer, and you avoid expensive “out‑of‑stock → air freight emergency” cycles.
✅ DH advantage: We monitor your sales velocity by region and can dynamically reallocate inventory across our 5 warehouses. If Alberta sales spike, we move pallets from Calgary to Edmonton – or vice versa – without involving expensive LTL carriers.
Benefit #3: Enable 1‑2 Day Delivery for Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Channels
Not all your sales go through Amazon. If you also sell on Shopify, Walmart Marketplace, eBay, or your own website, delivery speed directly impacts conversion rates.
A multi‑city warehouse network allows you to offer 1‑2 day delivery to most Canadian zip codes without paying Amazon’s FBA fees for every order.
Coverage Map (Approximate)
| Warehouse Location | 1‑Day Delivery Zone | 2‑Day Delivery Zone |
|---|---|---|
| Vancouver | Metro Vancouver, Victoria | Rest of BC |
| Calgary & Edmonton | Calgary, Edmonton, Red Deer | Saskatchewan, Manitoba |
| Toronto | Golden Horseshoe, Ottawa | Most of Ontario |
| Montreal | Montreal, Quebec City | Southern Quebec, Atlantic provinces |
With 5 warehouses, you cover >85% of Canadian e‑commerce demand within 2 days.
Customer Experience Win
When a customer in Calgary orders from your Shopify store:
- Single warehouse (Toronto): 5‑7 day delivery → they may abandon cart at checkout
- Multi‑city network (Calgary stock): 1‑2 day delivery → higher conversion, fewer returns
Case Study: A health supplement brand switched to DH’s multi‑city network for their DTC channel. Their average delivery time to Western Canada dropped from 6 days to 2 days. Cart abandonment fell by 18%, and customer reviews mentioning “fast shipping” increased 3x.
✅ DH advantage: We handle both FBA replenishment and DTC fulfillment from the same inventory pool. No need to split stock between a “FBA warehouse” and a “DTC warehouse.” Our WMS automates order routing: Amazon orders go to FBA prep, Shopify orders go to direct packaging with Canada Post, Intelcom, or Purolator.
👉 [Learn more about One‑Dropship Services →](link to article 3)
Benefit #4: Lower Overall Storage & Inventory Carrying Costs
This sounds counterintuitive – storing goods in five warehouses means paying for five rental spaces, right?
But because your inventory is distributed closer to demand, you experience faster inventory turns. And faster turns mean you need less total inventory to achieve the same service level.
The Math of Inventory Reduction
| Metric | Single Warehouse (Toronto) | Multi‑City Network (5 cities) |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly sales (units) | 10,000 | 10,000 |
| Safety stock (days) | 21 days (cross‑country buffer) | 7‑10 days (local buffer) |
| Total inventory (units) | 10,000 ÷ 30 × 21 = 7,000 | 10,000 ÷ 30 × 8 = 2,667 |
| Storage space (pallets) | 140 pallets | ~80 pallets (spread across 5 cities) |
| Monthly storage cost (CAD) | 140 × $35 = $4,900 | 80 × $35 = $2,800 |
Savings: $2,100/month (43% reduction) in storage fees alone.
Plus, you free up working capital tied up in excess inventory. If your average unit cost is $20, reducing inventory by 4,333 units frees $86,660 in cash.
Additional Savings
- Lower long‑term Amazon storage fees – Because you replenish FBA more frequently, nothing sits in Amazon’s warehouse for >365 days
- Less air freight – Fewer emergency cross‑country shipments mean less expensive expedited shipping
✅ DH advantage: We offer flexible storage options – pay by pallet or cubic foot, with volume discounts and free storage periods for fast‑moving SKUs. Our WMS provides turn reports so you can identify slow movers and consolidate.
Benefit #5: Risk Mitigation & Business Continuity
A single warehouse is a single point of failure. Consider these real scenarios from 2023‑2024:
- BC floods (November 2021): Rail and road links between Vancouver and the rest of Canada were cut for weeks. Sellers with only a Vancouver warehouse couldn’t ship east.
- Canada post strikes (rolling): Local carriers can handle volume if one carrier is disrupted.
- Localized weather events: Ice storms in Toronto, snow in Calgary, or fires in BC can shut down a single location.
How a Multi‑City Network Protects You
| Risk Scenario | Single Warehouse | Multi‑City Network (DH) |
|---|---|---|
| Fire/flood at one facility | Total loss of operations | Other 4 warehouses continue operating |
| Regional carrier strike | Can’t ship from that region | Switch to another local carrier in unaffected cities |
| Highway closure (e.g., Coquihalla) | Inventory stranded in transit | Local inventory in each region unaffected |
| Labor dispute at one port | Inbound delays affect entire country | Split inbound shipments across Vancouver and Montreal ports |
Real example: During the 2024 Canada Post labor negotiations, DH activated alternative carriers (Intelcom, UniUni, FedEx) in each city. Clients using our multi‑city network saw zero shipping interruptions while single‑warehouse competitors scrambled.
✅ DH advantage: We partner with multiple last‑mile carriers in each city (UPS, Purolator, FedEx, Canada Post, Intelcom, Canpar). When one carrier faces delays, we automatically reroute.
How DH Supply Chain’s 5‑City Network Works
Here’s our physical footprint:
| City | Warehouse Focus | Proximity to Amazon FBA | Special Capabilities |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto (YYZ) | Primary hub for Ontario & Eastern Canada | 30 min to YYZ1‑YYZ7 | Dangerous goods, high‑volume DTC |
| Calgary (YYC) | Hub for Alberta & Prairies | 20 min to YYC1, YYC4 | Dangerous goods, rail receiving |
| Edmonton (YEG) | Secondary Alberta hub | 45 min to Amazon YEG (future) | Bulk storage, cross‑dock |
| Vancouver (YVR) | Western Canada gateway (Asia inbound) | 25 min to YVR2‑YVR4 | Sea freight receiving, transload |
| Montreal (YUL) | Quebec & Atlantic gateway | 20 min to YUL1 | Bilingual support, Quebec PST compliance |
Inbound options:
- Sea freight – Vancouver (Pacific) or Montreal (Atlantic)
- Air freight – Any major airport
- Rail – CN & CP intermodal to all 5 cities
- Truck – LTL/FTL cross‑border from US
We handle customs clearance at every port of entry through our in‑house brokerage – including LVS and High Volume clearance.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Q1: How do you manage inventory allocation across 5 warehouses?
Our WMS analyzes your sales by shipping postal code. We recommend a distribution plan (e.g., 50% in Toronto, 20% in Calgary, 15% in Vancouver, 15% in Montreal). You can adjust at any time.
Q2: Do I pay extra for having inventory in multiple locations?
No. You pay the same per‑pallet storage rate regardless of location. The only difference is inbound freight – but that’s usually lower because you ship directly to each port (e.g., sea to Vancouver vs. sea + cross‑country rail to Toronto).
Q3: Can I start with just 2 or 3 cities and expand later?
Absolutely. Many clients begin with Toronto + Vancouver, then add Calgary or Montreal as their volume grows.
Q4: How do you handle returns across multiple cities?
Returned items go to the nearest DH warehouse (based on customer address). Our return label replacement service processes them locally and restocks them into the correct regional inventory pool.
Q5: Is there a minimum volume requirement?
For multi‑city distribution, we typically recommend at least 500 units/month across all locations. Below that, a single warehouse may be simpler. Contact us for a volume‑based recommendation.
Q6: How does dangerous goods storage work across 5 cities?
Currently, our Toronto and Calgary warehouses have dedicated DG zones. Goods stored there can be shipped to any FBA center that accepts DG (with proper documentation).
Q7: Can you integrate with my inventory planning tool (e.g., TradeGecko, Skubana, Extensiv)?
Yes. Our WMS has open API and pre‑built integrations with major inventory management platforms.
Ready to Switch to a Multi‑City Network?
Canada’s geography demands a distributed logistics strategy. DH Supply Chain has already built the infrastructure – five warehouses, in‑house brokerage, last‑mile carrier relationships, and a WMS that ties it all together.
We’ll help you:
- Analyze your current shipping patterns and costs
- Design an optimal inventory distribution plan
- Handle inbound customs clearance to each port
- Provide a single dashboard for all 5 locations
[Contact our warehousing team](link to /warehouse-network)
*Or call: +1 647 898 7506 (Toronto)
Related Articles:
- LVS Clearance Canada: Complete Guide for Shipments Under CAD 3300
- How to Choose the Right Canada FBA Warehouse for Your Amazon Business