Excess Luggage King Shaka International – Ship Big, Save Big
Cargo We Ship:.
– Golf
clubs.
– Unaccompanied baggage.
– Gifts.
– Memorabilia.
– Paintings.
– Purchased Souvenirs.
– Household Removals Internationally.
– Immigration relocation of household effects.
– Shipping your goods for Overseas Consignments.
Documentation Required on Excess Baggage Imports:.
– Valued
Inventory List.
– Packing List.
– Copy of Passport.
– Affidavit (sample available from our office).
– Completed DA304.
Documentation Required on Excess Baggage Exports:.
– Valued
Inventory List.
– Packing List.
– Copy of Passport.
Packaging Allowed:.
– Packing
boxes.
– Shipping tea chests.
– Shipping boxes.
– Plastic Cases.
– Wooden Crates.
Heavy cargo should be packed in forklift support Boxes or crates. These is
available at most box suppliers.
Sea freight is less expensive for big heavy or bulky stuff. Transit time is longer. Fragile Cargo Should be packed by Professionals. Seafreight can be rough and cargo have a tendency to roll, move and breakages is imminent on the ocean.
Excess Luggage King Shaka International Transport Information:.
Freight can be booked on a variety of shipping providers, including ships, airplanes, trucks, and railroads. It is not unusual for a single shipment to move on multiple carrier types. ‘International freight forwarders” typically handle international shipments. International freight forwarders have additional expertise in processing customs documentation. And activities pertaining to international shipments.
Contact Us – Excess Luggage King Shaka International
Excess Luggage King Shaka International – Daigon
📍 Freight Terminal, Cape Town International Airport, 7490
📞 Phone: +2787 702 2104
📧 Email: Cape Town Info Mail
🕒 Open Monday to Friday: 08:00 – 16:00
Because your giraffe statue deserves a passport too.
Welcome to the Land of Luggage Liberation
Whether you’ve over-shopped at the V&A Waterfront, inherited a vintage surfboard from Muizenberg, or simply packed like you’re moving continents (again), Excess Luggage King Shaka International is here to rescue your baggage from airline tyranny. We specialize in air and sea freight solutions for excess luggage, personal cargo, and oversized souvenirs. If it fits in a box, crate, or tea chest—we’ll ship it. If it doesn’t, we’ll find a way.
Why Ship Excess Luggage?
We ship anything legal – from golf clubs to giraffes (wooden ones, please).
Airlines charge a fortune for overweight bags and don’t offer door-to-door service.
Sea freight is cheaper for bulky or non-urgent items.
We handle the paperwork so you don’t have to Google “DA304” at midnight.
Door-to-door or airport collection – your choice, your convenience.
Daigon Excess Luggage King Shaka International:.

Shipping baggage is costly with commercial airlines. Airlines do not offer a door to door shipping solution for unaccompanied baggage. Daigon transport bags that weighs over the allowed airline weight limits.
As part of a Global network, Daigon Excess Baggage can offer services across the globe and can offer save and timely deliveries.(pending any customs delays).
There is no limit on weight or size. Only requirements will be that it is packed well enough for international transport.
Please read more here on packaging for Unaccompanied baggage transport.
Transport Modes offered:.
– Full
Container Loads.
– Shared Container Loads.
– Express Airfreight. (expensive option)
– Normal Airfreight.
– Consolidated Airfreight. (cheap air rates – space sharing)
– All modes have options door to door. Door to Port. Port to Port.
Request a Quote Online © 2025 Daigon Excess Luggage King Shaka International. All rights reserved.
I tried checking in my suitcase, but the airline said it was overweight. I told them, “It’s not heavy—it’s emotionally complex.” Turns out, excess baggage isn’t just about kilograms. It’s unresolved souvenirs, three pairs of ‘just-in-case’ shoes, and a blender I swore I’d use on holiday.
“The Emotional Weight of Luggage”
When I arrived at Cape Town International with three suitcases, a duffel bag, a box of biltong, and a life-sized wooden penguin named Trevor, the airline agent looked at me like I’d just wheeled in a small furniture showroom.
“Sir,” she said, “you’re 47 kilograms over the limit.”
I blinked. “But Trevor’s mostly hollow.”
She didn’t laugh.
I tried reasoning. “It’s not excess baggage—it’s emotional support cargo.”
Still no smile.
I offered to wear all my clothes at once. She said that wouldn’t help the penguin.
So I did what any rational adult would do: I called my mom.
She suggested I ship it via air freight. I asked if she’d pay. She hung up.
Next, I tried sea freight. The guy at the counter asked, “Is it waterproof?”
I said, “Trevor’s a penguin. Of course he is.”
He nodded solemnly and handed me a form titled “Declaration of Sentimental Objects.”
I ticked every box.
Weeks later, Trevor arrived in London—wrapped in bubble wrap, wearing a sticker that said “Handle With Awe.”
Customs asked if it was art. I said, “It’s family.”
They waved me through.
Now Trevor sits proudly in my flat, next to the couch, silently judging my Netflix choices.
And every time someone asks why I didn’t just leave him behind, I say:
“You don’t abandon a penguin in Cape Town. That’s how villains are made.”


