Combining transport and warehousing under one provider is the practical answer for businesses that need their goods stored, picked and delivered without managing two separate suppliers and the gap between them. It is a focused form of contract logistics: you keep storage, handling and distribution within a single accountable relationship, so the people who hold your stock are the same people who deliver it. For many wholesalers, manufacturers and growing e-commerce brands, that single point of accountability is the difference between a logistics function that runs itself and one that consumes management attention.
What the combined service includes
A transport and warehousing arrangement typically covers inbound receipt and put-away, storage at the right temperature regime, stock control and inventory accuracy, order picking and packing, and the outbound transport that delivers finished orders to your customers. Many providers add value-added services — labelling, kitting, returns handling, customer-specific compliance — and integrate their warehouse management system with your order platform so stock and orders flow without manual re-keying. The result is a managed pipeline rather than a series of handoffs.
Why one provider beats two
When warehousing and transport sit with different suppliers, the boundary between them becomes a recurring source of friction: missed cut-offs, disputed responsibility for damage, and two sets of KPIs that never quite reconcile. A single provider removes that seam. Picking can be sequenced to vehicle departures, consolidation happens naturally, and when something goes wrong there is one party accountable for putting it right. You also gain a single, coherent view of stock and service rather than two dashboards that disagree.
Verified providers only
Because your stock and your deliveries both sit with the same partner, the trust bar is high. On the transport side, every provider we route to you holds a verified DVSA operator’s licence; we display the licence status, authorised vehicle count and accreditations openly so you can judge operational maturity before you engage. On the warehousing side, the brief lets you signal the storage characteristics you need — ambient, chilled or frozen, special handling, security — so you are matched to providers with the right facility, not just the right fleet. We never run a lowest-price auction, because the cheapest combined quote rarely protects both your stock and your service.
How matching works
Your structured brief captures the transport requirement (lanes, frequency, vehicle and handling types, coverage, indicative scale) and the warehousing need (sector, handling and temperature characteristics, broad volume). We match that against verified providers offering transport plus warehousing whose capability genuinely fits, and route a short, qualified shortlist. You are never matched to a pure haulier for a job that needs storage, nor to a storage-only operator for a job that needs an owned fleet — the platform knows the difference.
Common combined-service scenarios
The businesses that benefit most from a combined transport and warehousing partner tend to be at an inflection point: a wholesaler outgrowing its own unit and van fleet; a manufacturer that wants finished goods stored and distributed without building a logistics function; an importer needing a UK base to hold and break down containers for onward delivery; or a growing brand that has outgrown self-fulfilment but is not yet large enough to run its own network economically. In each case the win is the same — convert a fragmented set of arrangements into one managed pipeline with a single accountable partner. When you brief such a requirement, describe both the storage characteristics (volume, temperature regime, special handling) and the transport profile, so the match reflects the whole operation rather than half of it.
Where to go from here
If your need is genuinely integrated — storage and distribution managed together — describe it in a single brief. If the dominant requirement is the movement of goods, our contract distribution page is the better starting point, and for the fullest integrated scope see contract logistics. Whatever the shape, our specification checklist will help you write a brief complete enough to get accurate, comparable responses from verified providers.