Generally, companies outsource warehousing and fulfillment to a third-party logistics (3PL) provider to improve supply chain performance and reduce facility and labor costs. What they are often less certain about is whether to choose a dedicated or a shared model.
Shared warehousing — also called multi-client warehousing — is a 3PL model in which multiple companies share warehouse space, labor, equipment, and technology within a single facility. Rather than committing to a long-term lease or a dedicated footprint, businesses pay only for the space and services they use, making it a flexible, variable-cost alternative to dedicated-contract warehousing.
Shared warehousing is proving ideally suited for companies such as new and emerging brands that do not need large amounts of space; for special projects with short timelines; and for companies that need locations closer to their customers.
In this article, we’ll compare the benefits and trade-offs to those of a dedicated model and explain how a flexible, well-established 3PL partner can help maximize performance and reduce costs.
Before comparing models, it’s important to understand why companies outsource warehousing and fulfillment. Financial strategy is the primary reason: a 3PL converts high fixed costs and capital investments, such as multi-year leases, labor, and equipment, into variable, usage-based expenses.
Outsourcing also reduces supply chain risk by leveraging a 3PL’s advanced technology, standardized processes, experienced teams, and greater visibility.
Once this decision is made, choosing between dedicated and shared warehousing is less straightforward. In many cases, a hybrid approach across markets and SKUs yields the best results. A 2024 Transportation Intelligence study supports this, reporting that nearly half of logistics buyers use both models.
Against this backdrop, shared warehousing is growing rapidly.
Beyond cost pressures, companies are navigating e-commerce expansion, omnichannel complexity, labor shortages, and demand volatility. These challenges require rapid, flexible solutions without overcommitting resources.
Shared warehousing provides that flexibility. It enables companies to enter new markets and scale operations for seasonal peaks or promotions without long-term capital investment.
At the same time, advancements in multi-tenant technology are improving efficiency and service levels. Modern 3PLs can support diverse client needs across a single facility and a unified platform while maintaining real-time visibility.
For example, a shared warehouse management system (WMS) can be deployed across multiple clients, reducing the need for separate technology investments and ongoing maintenance.
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Shared / Multi-Client |
Dedicated / Contract |
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Contract length |
1–3 years |
3–7 years |
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Cost structure |
Variable / usage-based |
Fixed, Fixed-Variable, or Cost-plus |
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Best for |
Seasonal, growing, or mid-market companies, special projects |
High-volume, predictable, or specialized needs |
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Flexibility |
Scale up or down as needed |
Low — capacity fixed at contract |
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Customization |
Moderate — within shared infrastructure |
High — facility designed to your spec |
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WMS / technology |
Shared platform, real-time visibility |
Fully configurable to your systems |
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Capital investment |
Minimal — no lease or equipment ownership |
Substantial — long-term commitment required |
The benefits of shared warehousing are evident in practice.
A mid-sized omnichannel retailer in apparel and home goods faced rising costs and seasonal demand swings. To improve flexibility, the company moved from a dedicated facility to a multi-client warehouse in the Southwest.
Using a configurable WMS, the transition was seamless and tailored to the retailer’s SKU complexity and order profiles.
Through its partnership with Knight-Swift Supply Chain, the retailer gained flexible space and labor scaling, real-time inventory visibility, and maintained 99%+ order accuracy throughout peak season.
By shifting operational complexity to Knight-Swift, the retailer reduced warehousing overhead and improved fulfillment speed. The savings were reinvested in marketing and product development, directly supporting business growth.
While the benefits are compelling, success ultimately depends on choosing the right 3PL partner.
Knight-Swift Supply Chain begins with a detailed operational assessment covering SKU profiling, velocity analysis, storage requirements, inbound and outbound patterns, seasonality, and compliance needs, including temperature control or hazmat.
Equally important is compatibility with the existing multi-client environment. Product segregation, zoning, and labor requirements must align to maintain efficiency across all clients.
Knight-Swift then runs utilization and throughput models across its network, often supported by site visits or pilots, and aligns SLAs with growth projections. This ensures a partnership built for performance and long-term profitability.
Once operations are in place, consistent execution depends on clear metrics.
Knight-Swift tracks core KPIs, including:
Returns processing time is also closely monitored, particularly for e-commerce operations.
Through customized dashboards, Knight-Swift provides clients with real-time visibility into these metrics. This combination of transparency and accountability ensures consistent service and maximizes the efficiency of shared resources.
The value of shared warehousing increases significantly when integrated with transportation — an area where Knight-Swift Supply Chain excels.
With one of North America’s largest truckload and LTL networks, Knight-Swift integrates warehousing and transportation into a unified solution. This includes consolidating inbound and outbound shipments to and from warehouse locations.
Cost savings stem from working with an integrated logistics provider that offers optimized routing and backhauls through a nationwide capacity network, often reducing transportation costs by 10% to 20%.
Beyond cost, seamless coordination between warehousing and transportation reduces delays, improves reliability, and simplifies operations through real-time visibility on a single platform.
Shared warehousing is no longer just a cost-saving tactic; it’s a practical way to build a more flexible and resilient supply chain.
The ability to scale quickly, maintain performance, and control costs makes it a powerful solution for companies facing demand volatility and mounting operational pressure.
For companies with consistent, high-volume throughput and specialized handling requirements, dedicated warehousing may offer the control and customization that justifies a longer-term commitment. However, many companies that operate across diverse markets and have a wide variety of SKUs can also benefit from shared warehousing, which delivers superior flexibility at lower cost.
Knight-Swift Supply Chain delivers this advantage through operational expertise, advanced technology, and a highly integrated transportation network.
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Question |
Answer |
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What is the difference between shared and dedicated warehousing? |
Shared (multi-client) warehousing places multiple companies in a single 3PL facility, sharing space, labor, and technology on a usage-based cost model. Dedicated warehousing reserves a facility exclusively for one client, with long-term contracts and fully customized operations. |
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When does shared warehousing make more sense than dedicated? |
Shared warehousing is typically the better fit for companies with significant seasonal demand swings, plans to enter new markets, or that are not ready to commit to a 3–7-year dedicated contract. It offers speed-to-market and financial flexibility that dedicated models cannot match. |
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How does multi-client warehousing reduce supply chain costs? |
By pooling space, labor, equipment, and technology across multiple clients, shared warehousing eliminates the fixed overhead of a dedicated facility. Clients pay only for what they use, converting high fixed costs into variable, usage-based expenses. |
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What KPIs should I track for shared warehousing performance? |
The most important metrics are inventory accuracy (99.5%+), order accuracy (99%+), on-time shipping (98%+), dock-to-stock cycle time, space utilization, labor productivity, and cost per order. For e-commerce operations, returns processing time is also critical. |
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How do I know if a 3PL is the right fit for shared warehousing? |
Evaluate the 3PL’s operational assessment process, multi-tenant WMS capabilities, network coverage, and SLA transparency. A strong partner will model utilization and throughput against your SKU profile and growth projections before recommending a model. |
If you’re deciding between shared and dedicated warehousing for your business, Knight-Swift Supply Chain can help.
Our team will assess your operations, identify the optimal model, and design a solution to improve performance while reducing costs.
Contact Knight-Swift Supply Chain today to learn how a shared warehousing strategy can support your growth and strengthen your supply chain.