
Navis Terminal Operating System
Terminal operating systems (TOS)
Marine software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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What is Navis Terminal Operating System
Navis Terminal Operating System is a terminal operating system (TOS) used by marine container terminals to plan, execute, and monitor vessel, yard, and gate operations. It supports workflows such as berth and vessel planning, yard inventory management, equipment dispatch, and truck/rail gate processing. The product is typically used by terminal operators, planners, and operations teams that need a centralized system of record for container movements and operational performance.
End-to-end terminal workflows
The system covers core terminal processes including vessel planning, yard operations, and gate activities in one operational platform. This reduces reliance on separate point tools for planning versus execution. It is designed for high-volume container terminal environments where consistent process control and auditability matter.
Operational visibility and control
Navis TOS maintains a real-time view of container inventory, moves, and work queues across the terminal. This supports dispatching and exception handling when conditions change (e.g., vessel schedule shifts or yard congestion). Compared with pure vessel-tracking or booking tools in the space, it focuses on execution inside the terminal boundary.
Integrates with port ecosystem
A TOS commonly needs to exchange data with carriers, port community systems, customs, and gate/appointment solutions, and Navis is positioned for these integration-heavy environments. It supports standardized data exchange patterns used in terminal operations (e.g., EDI-style message flows). This helps terminals coordinate with external stakeholders without manually re-keying operational events.
Complex implementation and change
Deploying a full TOS typically requires significant process mapping, configuration, and integration work across terminal systems. Organizations often need dedicated internal SMEs and external services to implement and stabilize operations. This can make timelines and total cost higher than lighter-weight marine applications focused on a single function.
Training and usability overhead
Because it supports many operational roles and exception scenarios, the user experience can feel complex for occasional users. Terminals usually need structured training and role-based access design to avoid operational errors. This can slow adoption compared with simpler tracking or scheduling tools.
Best fit for container terminals
Navis TOS is primarily oriented to container terminal operations and may require additional modules, customization, or complementary systems for specialized cargo types or niche terminal models. Terminals with mixed cargo, smaller throughput, or limited IT capacity may find the feature set more than they need. In those cases, a narrower operations toolset can be easier to run.
Seller details
Kaleris, Inc.
Alpharetta, Georgia, USA
2004
Private
https://www.kaleris.com/
https://x.com/kaleris
https://www.linkedin.com/company/kaleris/