Ryder E-commerce is the DTC and omnichannel fulfillment arm of Ryder System, built on Whiplash (acquired 2022) and run on the RyderShip platform. It pairs a 20-facility US network, deep retail-compliance and returns capability, and enterprise scale with custom-quote pricing and uneven post-acquisition service. Best for growing brands moving into national retail; a weak fit for startups wanting flat-rate pricing or international warehousing.
EDI, retailer routing guides, carton labeling, and chargeback-sensitive documentation are built in, so a brand can ship DTC, marketplace, and wholesale-into-retail from one inventory pool and one provider.
Facilities near Seattle/Tacoma, NY/NJ, Savannah, and Long Beach give national reach close to the major inbound gateways, supporting competitive ground transit times across the contiguous US.
Native support for Loop Returns, Returnly, and Happy Returns makes it well-suited to apparel and subscription brands where reverse logistics is a core cost center, not an afterthought.
Shopify (via the RyderShip app), BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Big Cartel, Amazon, plus NetSuite and Acumatica ERPs cover most modern DTC and omnichannel tech stacks without custom middleware.
Ryder's balance sheet and operational depth absorb peak-season spikes and support enterprise clients through BFCM, a level of capacity assurance independent 3PLs struggle to match.
Subscription-box kitting and assembly, apparel handling, and B2B retail distribution are established workflows rather than retrofitted capabilities, which shows in the value-added-services execution.
No rate card, no online estimator, and no published per-order number. Rate-shopping against parcel-rate-card 3PLs requires a scoping call to surface pick, storage, and surcharge costs.
Several merchants reviewing the service post-Ryder have flagged pricing opacity and charges beyond what they expected at signing. Get the full fee schedule, overage terms, and offboarding terms in writing before committing.
Merchant feedback is bimodal: responsive support and clean scaling for some accounts, slipping quality and accuracy issues for others. The strength of your specific account team matters more than the brand name.
Multiple reviewers describe exit processes dragging on for months. Negotiate clear termination and inventory-return SLAs at signing rather than discovering them on the way out.
The current first-party footprint is domestic. Brands needing international inventory positioning will need a second vendor or a 3PL with global reach.
On large multi-item return or exchange orders, merchants report that a single error can require restarting the whole batch instead of correcting one line. In high-return apparel, that workflow friction adds real handling time.
Show all 11 listed warehouse locations
- Edison, NJ
- Secaucus, NJ
- Chino, CA
- City of Industry, CA
- Rancho Dominguez, CA
- Riverside, CA
- Sumner, WA
- Columbus, OH
- West Valley City, UT
- Locust Grove, GA
- Fort Worth, TX
Overview
Ryder E-commerce is the direct-to-consumer and omnichannel fulfillment arm of Ryder System, and it exists because of one acquisition. In December 2021 Ryder agreed to buy Whiplash, a nationwide ecommerce 3PL founded in 2009, in a deal valued at roughly $480 million, and closed it on January 1, 2022. The business now goes to market as Ryder E-commerce, its Shopify connector ships as RyderShip, and as of mid-2026 the original Whiplash platform and operating model still sit at the center of the offering even as the Ryder identity grows around it.
There are effectively two operations inside one company, and which one you experience depends mostly on the size and structure of your account. The original Whiplash was a boutique ecommerce fulfiller known for hands-on account management and apparel and subscription craft. Post-acquisition, that same operation is wired into Ryder's national supply-chain machine: roughly 20 US facilities, four-corner port coverage near the major inbound gateways (Seattle/Tacoma, New York/New Jersey, Savannah, and Long Beach), and the balance sheet of a public logistics company behind every contract. The tension between those two identities explains most of what merchants report, both the praise and the complaints.
What Ryder E-commerce actually sells
What the service actually sells is the work that sits between pure DTC parcel flow and full retail distribution. It runs apparel, subscription boxes, and kitting, and it owns the retail-compliance layer of omnichannel: EDI, retailer routing guides, carton labeling, and the chargeback-sensitive documentation that big-box and marketplace channels demand. That makes it a natural fit for a brand that has outgrown an SMB-tier 3PL and now needs to ship to a consumer's doorstep and a retailer's loading dock from the same inventory pool, with an enterprise parent that can absorb a national-retail purchase order or a Black Friday surge without flinching.
The Ryder relationship is the part most third-party write-ups underplay, and it is not just a logo change. Ryder contributes a national multiclient warehouse network, established port drayage, and big-and-bulky last-mile capability that an independent DTC 3PL of Whiplash's original size could never have assembled on its own. For a brand whose growth runs through national retail, that inherited infrastructure is the real reason to take the meeting. The cost of it is that you are now a line in an enterprise operation rather than the marquee client of a boutique, which is exactly the trade the service reviews keep circling back to.
Pricing
Ryder E-commerce does not publish a rate card, and as of mid-2026 there is still no public per-order number or online estimator. Pricing is quote-based and scoped per account, which is normal at this tier but means you cannot model a bill before a sales conversation.
A quote is assembled from the standard components (receiving, storage by the space your inventory occupies, pick and pack, and outbound shipping) plus value-added line items for kitting and assembly, branded packaging, and returns processing. The part worth understanding before you sign is how that structure interacts with your specific SKU profile. A custom-quote-plus-surcharge model rewards fast-moving, simply-packed inventory and quietly penalizes the opposite: slow movers that sit and accrue storage, SKUs that need heavy kitting or custom inserts, and high-return categories where reverse-logistics fees stack on top of the original pick. An apparel brand with steady turns and light kitting will see a very different effective rate than a subscription brand assembling elaborate monthly boxes, even at identical order counts. Model your own mix against those line items rather than asking for a single blended number.
There is no published minimum monthly order volume, so a smaller brand should ask directly whether its volume clears the economic floor rather than assuming it does. The model is built for brands sending real volume, not for a self-serve trickle. The public data points that exist suggest a fairly standard structure underneath the quote: storage around $0.45 per cubic foot per month with a roughly $250 monthly minimum, plus per-order and per-unit pick-and-pack and carrier-based shipping through Ryder's SmartRate carrier selection.
Features
Retail compliance is the real differentiator
The strongest and most defensible part of the offering is omnichannel retail compliance. The platform handles EDI, retailer routing guides, carton-level labeling, and the documentation that decides whether a shipment into a national retailer sails through or eats a chargeback. This is legitimately hard, under-served work that most 3PLs which grew up on DTC parcel flow cannot do well, and it is the single best reason to choose Ryder E-commerce. For a brand landing its first major-retailer purchase order while still running a Shopify storefront and an Amazon channel, having one provider satisfy all three from shared inventory removes an entire category of operational risk.
Platform, integrations, and returns
The core software is RyderShip, the proprietary WMS and OMS that came over from Whiplash, offering real-time multi-warehouse inventory, order orchestration, customer-specific packing rules, and a full API. The integration list is broad for a 3PL at this tier: Shopify (through the RyderShip app), BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Big Cartel, and Amazon on the storefront side, NetSuite and Acumatica on the ERP side, and FedEx and UPS on carriers. The returns ecosystem is a real standout, with native support for Loop Returns, Returnly, and Happy Returns that lets apparel and subscription brands run branded, automated reverse logistics instead of bolting on a manual process. The one rough edge merchants raise is the returns workflow itself: on large multi-item return or exchange orders, an error partway through can force a restart of the whole batch rather than a per-item correction, which is exactly the kind of friction that compounds in high-return apparel.
On category depth, apparel handling, subscription-box kitting and assembly, and B2B retail distribution are established workflows rather than features retrofitted onto a generic operation. The Ryder parent supplies the scalability layer an independent 3PL struggles to match: the warehouse footprint, labor pool, and financial depth to absorb peak-season spikes and carry enterprise clients through Black Friday and Cyber Monday without capacity scrambles. On Shopify, the current RyderShip app carries a 4.5-star rating, up from the older Whiplash-branded app near 3.9, which tracks with the platform's rebuild and rebrand.
Boundaries worth stating plainly
Two boundaries matter. First, the current first-party network is US-only. Some older reviews mention international delays and lost packages from Whiplash's earlier partner-based international program; that legacy footprint is no longer the offer, so treat Ryder E-commerce as a domestic network and bring a separate vendor for international inventory positioning. Second, service consistency is the recurring theme in merchant feedback, and the third-party ratings capture the spread rather than a single verdict: the RyderShip Shopify app has sat around 3.9 stars historically, Trustpilot runs higher near 4.4, and G2 lands in between. That gap is informative, not contradictory. Lighter, transactional app-store reviews skew toward recent friction, while higher scores tend to come from well-staffed, well-scoped accounts, which is the two-operations pattern showing up in the data. The capability ceiling is high; the experience you actually get depends heavily on how your specific account is resourced.
Verdict
Ryder E-commerce is a strong fit for one brand in particular: a growing DTC or omnichannel operation, in apparel, subscription, or consumer goods, that has outgrown a small 3PL and is moving into national retail, and that needs retail-compliance muscle and multi-channel fulfillment from shared inventory with an enterprise parent behind the contract. If that is you, the combination of a 20-facility national network, four-corner port coverage, a deep returns-integration stack, and Ryder's operational and financial depth is hard to assemble anywhere else at this tier. The retail-compliance capability alone is worth the evaluation.
The reservations are specific, and they trace back to the same root: you are buying a boutique fulfillment craft now embedded in an enterprise machine. Pricing is custom-quote with a documented pattern of surcharge surprises, so the diligence burden is on you to lock the full fee schedule before signing. Service consistency tracks how your account is staffed, which means the quality of your individual account team matters more than the Ryder name on the door. And the network is US-only, so international growth needs a second vendor.
The practical test: shortlist Ryder E-commerce if retail-compliance omnichannel at national scale is the actual problem you are solving, your volume is real enough to earn a well-resourced account, and you are prepared to negotiate pricing hard and pin service-level commitments into the contract. Look elsewhere if you want transparent flat-rate pricing, a self-serve onboarding path, or single-vendor international warehousing, none of which is what this operation is built to deliver.
What operators ask about Ryder E-commerce
Is Ryder E-commerce the same as Whiplash?
Yes. Ryder acquired Whiplash, a nationwide ecommerce 3PL founded in 2009, in a deal valued at roughly $480 million, closing on January 1, 2022. The business now goes to market as Ryder E-commerce and its Shopify integration ships as the RyderShip app, but the Whiplash technology platform and fulfillment operation remain the core of the offering. In practice you get Whiplash's ecommerce fulfillment with Ryder's enterprise network and balance sheet behind it.
How much does Ryder E-commerce cost?
Ryder E-commerce does not publish pricing. Every quote is custom and scoped per account, built from receiving, storage, pick and pack, and shipping, with surcharges for kitting and assembly, branded packaging, and returns processing. Public data points suggest storage around $0.45 per cubic foot per month with a roughly $250 monthly minimum. There is no online estimator, so expect a discovery call, and get the full fee schedule and overage terms in writing during scoping.
Where are Ryder E-commerce's fulfillment centers?
Ryder E-commerce runs a roughly 20-facility US network with four-corner coverage of the major inbound ports: Seattle/Tacoma, New York/New Jersey, Savannah, and Long Beach. Named markets include Edison and Secaucus (NJ), Chino, City of Industry, Rancho Dominguez, and Riverside (CA), Sumner (WA), Columbus (OH), West Valley City (UT), Locust Grove (GA), and Fort Worth (TX). The network is US-only, with no first-party international warehouses.
What platforms does Ryder E-commerce integrate with?
The native integration list is broad: Shopify (through the RyderShip app), BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Big Cartel, and Amazon on the storefront side, plus NetSuite and Acumatica ERPs. On returns it connects with Loop Returns, Returnly, and Happy Returns, a strong stack for apparel and subscription brands. Carrier relationships include FedEx and UPS. The breadth covers most modern DTC and omnichannel tech stacks without custom middleware.
Does Ryder E-commerce handle returns?
Yes, and returns are one of its stronger areas. It processes returns as a value-added service and integrates natively with Loop Returns, Returnly, and Happy Returns, so apparel and subscription brands can run branded, automated reverse-logistics flows. One workflow caveat merchants raise: on large multi-item return or exchange orders, an error partway through can force a restart of the entire batch rather than a per-item fix. Returns processing also carries its own line items in the quote, so confirm the per-return cost during scoping.
Does Ryder E-commerce ship internationally?
Ryder E-commerce's current first-party network is US-only. Whiplash ran an international program through partners in its pre-Ryder era, and some older reviews reference international delays and lost packages tied to that footprint, but it is no longer the core offer. It can hand outbound international parcels to carriers like FedEx and UPS, but for international inventory positioning or in-country fulfillment you will need a second vendor or a 3PL with a global network.
Who is Ryder E-commerce best for?
Growing DTC and omnichannel brands, especially in apparel, subscription, and consumer goods, that have outgrown an SMB-tier 3PL and need retail-compliance capability, multi-channel fulfillment from shared inventory, and an enterprise parent on the contract. It is a weaker fit for startups and low-volume brands wanting transparent flat-rate pricing and self-serve onboarding, and for brands that need international warehousing from a single vendor.
Continue evaluating Ryder E-commerce
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Alternative pages featuring Ryder E-commerce
Ryder E-commerce (formerly Whiplash) is the enterprise-retail answer. Backed by Fortune 500 parent Ryder, it runs multi-channel fulfillment from shared inventory across roughly 20 US facilities, with the retail routing-guide and EDI compliance that brands scaling DTC into national retailers actually need. For a Cart.com brand whose real workload is omnichannel — DTC parcel plus wholesale and retail distribution — Ryder matches the use case with the stability of a publicly traded parent rather than a still-consolidating VC-backed platform. Reviews are more mixed than the boutique picks (our overall is 3.8), onboarding is sales-led and quote-based, and it is US-focused rather than a single-vendor international play. But if retail compliance and enterprise durability are what pulled you toward Cart.com in the first place, Ryder covers that ground without the acquisition-integration question mark.
Whiplash is an omnichannel and DTC 3PL owned by Ryder since 2021, running a 20-facility US network from its City of Industry, CA base. Its strength is retail-readiness: apparel, subscription, kitting, returns, and retail-compliance/EDI work backed by one of the largest logistics operators in North America — useful for a ShipMonk leaver pushing into wholesale and retail distribution alongside DTC. Integrations span Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Amazon, and the major returns platforms. Be clear-eyed on the tradeoffs: pricing is custom-quote with no public rate card, and customer-service and accuracy ratings (3.4 and 3.6) land near ShipMonk's rather than above them — so this is the scale-and-retail pick, not a fix for billing transparency or support friction. Not a fit for startups or low-volume brands wanting flat-rate pricing and self-serve onboarding. For growing omnichannel brands that need retail compliance and enterprise stability, Whiplash delivers.
Company overview
View the company profile for a structured overview of Ryder E-commerce, its operations, and related coverage.
View company profileWill covers fulfillment strategy, provider evaluation, and the operational tradeoffs ecommerce teams run into when comparing 3PL partners.

