Mexican logistics platform WeShip, founded in 2021, is expanding into the U.S. in 2026 with domestic parcel shipping as its first step, aiming to simplify operations in the concentrated U.S. parcel market compared to Mexico’s fragmented last-mile sector.

WeShip connects parcel carriers with e-commerce platforms, offering customers savings of up to 75% on carrier shipping rates, serving small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) with over a thousand customers in Mexico, including enterprise clients like Costco and Movado.

For cross-border shipments, WeShip allows users to enter customs declarations and provides real-time visibility into customs status, catering to a range of products from apparel to industrial equipment for enterprise customers operating complex international supply chains.

WeShip, which grew from $95,000 in revenue in its first year to $2.2 million last year, remains fully bootstrapped, profitable, and has attracted the attention of major parcel carriers such as FedEx and UPS, accelerating its decision to launch in the U.S.

Unlike many logistics startups, WeShip was not initially a technology company, but was born out of the founders’ frustrations with their own e-commerce operation’s shipping processes, leading to a platform designed to automate shipment creation and provide analytics based on operational needs.

WeShip’s operator-first approach, influenced by Monterrey’s entrepreneurial culture, emphasizes controlled growth, with projected revenue of $3.5 million this year and a focus on disciplined expansion in the U.S. and the U.S.-Mexico trade corridor in the future.

Read more at Yahoo Finance: Mexican-built logistics startup WeShip sets sights on US expansion