{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"DefinedTerm","name":"Fallback Route","description":"Maintaining delivery schedules is the core purpose of a fallback route: it preserves supply chain continuity when the primary transport corridor becomes impassable or unavailable due to closures, strikes, port outages, border disruptions, or severe weather. Freight forwarders, carriers, and shippers pre-define and document fallback routes as part of contingency planning, so that rerouting decisions can be made immediately when disruptions occur – without losing time searching for alternatives. F","inDefinedTermSet":{"@type":"DefinedTermSet","name":"Frachtportal Logistics Glossary","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary"},"url":"https://www.freight-academy.com/en/glossary/fallback-route","inLanguage":"en","dateModified":"2026-06-19T04:13:51.199624","citation":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing","markdownMirror":"https://www.freight-academy.com/api/md/glossary/en/fallback-route","provider":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Frachtportal","url":"https://www.freight-academy.com"},"quickSummary":"Fallback Route · Maintaining delivery schedules is the core purpose of a fallback route: it preserves supply chain continuity when the primary transport corridor becomes impassable or unavailable due to closures, strikes, port outages, border disruptions, or severe weather. · Quelle: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing"}