International courier from Bharatpur to Bangladesh. Free home pickup.
Pickup from your Bharatpur door, packed and documented, fed via Delhi (~180 km) into the DTDC International network. 5–7 working days door-to-door for express to Dhaka, Chittagong or Sylhet; from ₹600 per kilogram before fuel surcharge and GST.
Five steps from your Bharatpur door to a Bangladesh address.
Pickup, Bharatpur.
Free at 5 kg+. We bring tape, bubble wrap and the international airway bill. Bharatpur has no airport, but Delhi is only ~180 km — fast feeder.
Pack & document.
Commercial invoice, KYC, content declaration. Done before handover.
DTDC handover.
Same evening into the DTDC International facility at Delhi; air movement to Dhaka (DAC), Chittagong (CGP) or Sylhet (ZYL) on Biman, IndiGo, Air India or SpiceJet.
Bangladesh customs.
Clearance at Hazrat Shahjalal Dhaka, Shah Amanat Chittagong or Osmani Sylhet. Major airports clear cleanly; we route through them rather than land borders.
Doorstep delivery.
Last-mile in Dhaka, Chittagong, Sylhet, Khulna or wherever the consignee sits. POD on WhatsApp the same day.
Starting rates. Real pricing depends on weight.
Final price depends on actual or volumetric weight (whichever is greater) plus the international fuel surcharge in force on your booking date. GST is extra.
Starting per-kg rates
- Express (5–7 days, door)from ₹600 / kg
- Economy (7–11 days, door)from ₹450 / kg
- Min billable weight0.5 kg
- Pickup from BharatpurFree at 5 kg+
Volumetric formula: (L × W × H cm) ÷ 5000.
Worked example
A 2 kg parcel — say a Bharatpur-Jat family parcel with sealed sweets and a wedding outfit for Hindu-minority relatives in Dhaka:
- Express, 2 kg × ₹600≈ ₹1,200
- + fuel surcharge (~25%)≈ ₹300
- + GST 18%≈ ₹270
- Approx total, express≈ ₹2,000
Indicative only. Fuel surcharge and rate cards change.
What you’ll need at pickup.
Customs paperwork is the most common reason an international parcel stalls. We’ll walk you through it before pickup so it doesn’t.
KYC of the sender
One photo ID for the person whose name is on the AWB — Aadhaar, passport or driving licence. We photograph it at pickup; not stored beyond DTDC’s record.
Commercial invoice
For commercial goods, a printed invoice listing items, quantity and value. For gifts, a written declaration suffices but value still must be stated. Recipient’s Bangladesh National ID number or passport helps clearance.
Prescription (medicines)
For tablets going to a family member: a copy of the prescription with the doctor’s registration number. The DGDA flags injectables, controlled substances and unbranded generics; sealed-strip oral medication in prescribed quantities is fine.
What Bangladesh doesn’t let in.
Bangladesh is Muslim-majority and enforces a clear list at customs. Items shipped against it are seized at Hazrat Shahjalal, with disposal fees billed to the consignee. We route through major airports because clearance is cleaner there than at land borders.
Don’t even try
- Pork products of any kind — pork ham, pork-derived gelatin sweets, sausage. Halal-policy enforcement is strict.
- Alcohol — zero tolerance, despite cultural similarity to West Bengal. Even sealed bottles are seized.
- Live or unprocessed agricultural produce — Bangladesh enforces phytosanitary controls; relevant to Bharatpur farming households who sometimes want to send seeds. Use sealed processed alternatives.
- Drugs and narcotics — including unprescribed pharmaceuticals.
- Weapons, replicas, decorative edged items — flagged.
- Aerosols, lithium > 100 Wh — universal courier rules.
- Counterfeit goods, anti-government media, religious-extremist material — seized; senders may be flagged.
Allowed with care
- Textiles and outfits — allowed but Bangladesh has strong import-sensitivity due to its own textile industry; for B2B quantities, a clean commercial invoice with HS codes is non-negotiable.
- Books, in any language — Bengali-translated Indian publications are welcomed; declare title and value.
- Sealed dry sweets and namkeen — Halal-compatible only; declare ingredients and keep packaging factory-sealed.
- Prescription tablets — sealed strips, prescription, recipient ID.
- Non-precious jewellery and small electronics — declare make, model, value.
- Hindu religious materials — relevant to the Bangladesh Hindu minority; pooja items and devotional books clear cleanly.
- Rajasthan handicrafts — straightforward declaration.
Family parcels (Hindu minority), Durga Puja shipments, returning-traveller baggage.
Agricultural-Jat-Sikh family parcels
Bharatpur is a Jat-region agricultural district with extended-family threads into Bangladesh’s Hindu-minority community — small but real, mostly in Dhaka, Chittagong and Sylhet. Books, festival clothes, sealed dry sweets, kitchen tools and household items move on this lane.
Wedding outfits
Cross-border Hindu weddings happen among the Bangladesh Hindu minority and Bharatpur-region families. Sherwanis, lehengas, dupattas, jewellery boxes (non-precious).
Durga Puja parcels
Bangladesh has a sizeable Hindu minority and Durga Puja in Sep–Oct is the peak window for them. Pooja items, decorations, sealed dry sweets. Ship by mid-September to land in time.
Returning-traveller baggage
Bangladeshi tourists who shopped too much around Bharatpur — Keoladeo birdwatching, Krishna-circuit pilgrimage in nearby Mathura-Vrindavan — picked up from the hotel, packed, shipped before they fly out.
Bengali-language books and cultural materials
Heavily welcomed; cultural exchange across the border is historic and active.
Student care kits
Dhaka University, BUET, North South University and several medical/engineering colleges have steady Indian-student presence. Books, kitchen tools, festival clothes, sealed snacks.
AWB on WhatsApp. Track on dtdc.in. POD when it lands.
The moment the parcel is booked into DTDC International, we send you the AWB number on WhatsApp. Type it into the public tracker at dtdc.in any time. When delivery happens we forward the POD — signed slip or photo — within the hour.
Asked most often.
Why route via Dhaka airport rather than the land border?
Customs clearance at Hazrat Shahjalal in Dhaka (and at Shah Amanat Chittagong and Osmani Sylhet) is documented, predictable and reasonably quick. Land-border crossings — Petrapole-Benapole, Hili, others — are slower, paperwork-heavier, and clearance discretion varies. For courier parcels, the airport route consistently lands faster and with fewer queries — and Bharatpur’s short Delhi feeder feeds smoothly into Dhaka air uplift.
Bharatpur Jat-region family with Bangladesh Hindu-minority relatives — what does a typical parcel look like?
Modest in volume but steady. Care kits to elderly relatives, sealed dry mithai for festivals, festival clothing for weddings and Durga Puja, books and household items. Standard paperwork — commercial invoice, KYC, recipient’s NID or passport. Halal-compatibility is not a constraint when shipping to Hindu-minority recipients, but pork products and alcohol still don’t clear Bangladesh customs regardless of recipient — keep that in mind.
When should I send Durga Puja parcels?
Durga Puja in Bangladesh falls in the Sep–Oct window and the lane gets noticeably busier from mid-September. Ship express by the second week of September; economy needs to leave by late August. Last-week shipments still go through, but Dhaka customs queues lengthen and the last-mile gets choked during Puja itself.
Tell us the rough weight and the destination city.
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