Handle FedEx shipments through one Unified API
If FedEx is part of your shipping mix, ShipPeek gives your team one place to request enabled rates, bookings, tracking, labels, and documents. You keep ShipPeek's Unified API; ShipPeek handles the carrier-specific codes, credentials, mappings, and response differences.
- 7 workflows
- FEDEX_PARCEL carrier code
- Parcel + LTL freight shipment type
Carrier-specific handling
What ShipPeek handles for FedEx
ShipPeek is not asking your team to buy a standalone FedEx API. FedEx runs as an enabled carrier workflow inside ShipPeek's Unified API, with carrier-specific setup, mapping, and response handling kept behind one contract.
Carrier setup
01Use FEDEX_PARCEL and your enabled carrier-account configuration from one place instead of hardcoding FedEx rules into every product workflow.
Workflow mapping
02ShipPeek maps FedEx rates, tracking events, bookings, labels, and documents into normalized objects where those workflows are enabled.
Operational accountability
03Carrier responses and exceptions come back through the Unified API so your team can tell whether an issue is credentials, lane/service eligibility, missing documents, or carrier-side availability.
Carrier workflows
What you can do with FedEx in ShipPeek
Capabilities are enabled per account and carrier configuration, so this page shows the FedEx workflows ShipPeek can route through the Unified API — not a promise that every lane or service is available for every account.
Tracking
FedEx tracking events come back in the same shipment status model you use across every supported carrier.
Rates
Request eligible FedEx rates without creating a carrier-specific quoting path.
Booking
Create supported FedEx shipments from the same integration surface when your account is enabled.
Labels
Return carrier-issued FedEx labels where that workflow is enabled.
Documents
Pull BOLs, delivery receipts, and other shipment documents into normalized workflows.
Integration model
One API contract, FedEx-aware routing
Keep ShipPeek's Unified API as the integration surface. Use carrier identifier fedex_parcel to route eligible workflows to FedEx; ShipPeek keeps carrier-specific request fields, credentials, and response mappings out of your product code.
- Track FedEx shipments and status events without portal checks
- Request eligible FedEx rates through the Unified API
- Create FedEx bookings where your carrier account allows it
- Retrieve carrier-issued FedEx labels when enabled
- Pull FedEx BOLs and delivery documents into your system
- Keep FedEx inside the same API contract as the rest of your carriers
Unified API example
curl "https://api.shippeek.com/track/TRACKING_NUMBER?carrier=fedex_parcel" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_TOKEN" The carrier identifier selects an enabled workflow. It does not create a separate FedEx product surface; ShipPeek's Unified API remains the contract.
How it works
How a FedEx request moves through ShipPeek
Send one request
01Your app sends a standard ShipPeek request for the workflow it needs and includes FedEx only when that carrier should handle the shipment.
Apply carrier setup
02ShipPeek uses the enabled FedEx configuration, including carrier identifier fedex_parcel, credentials, and available workflow rules.
Translate the response
03Carrier rates, tracking events, labels, or documents are mapped back into ShipPeek's normalized fields where available.
Act on one model
04Your team gets a consistent response shape with enough carrier context to route support, exceptions, and downstream automation.
Use cases
Where FedEx fits in your operation
Confirm how FedEx can fit into quoting, operations, customer support, and shipment visibility workflows.
Quote eligible FedEx lanes in checkout, OMS, TMS, or WMS flows
Track FedEx shipments and surface status changes to operators or customers
Create FedEx bookings when your account and service rules allow it
Retrieve FedEx labels without a carrier-specific backend path
Pull FedEx BOLs, delivery receipts, and shipment documents into support workflows
Compare FedEx with other enabled carriers from the same request model
Reduce portal checks, email attachments, and spreadsheet handoffs
Add more carriers without redesigning the FedEx integration
FAQ
Questions about FedEx
How does ShipPeek support FedEx?
ShipPeek supports FedEx as a carrier workflow inside the ShipPeek Unified API. It is not a separate FedEx-only product or an official FedEx-owned API; enabled capabilities depend on your account, region, credentials, and carrier permissions.
Can I track FedEx shipments?
Yes. ShipPeek normalizes FedEx tracking events into the same shipment status model used across supported carriers, so operations and support teams are not forced back into a carrier portal for every update.
Can ShipPeek get FedEx rates?
Yes, where your carrier account, lane, service, and credentials are enabled. The request still uses ShipPeek's Unified API; ShipPeek handles the carrier-specific mapping.
Can ShipPeek create FedEx bookings?
Yes, where enabled through ShipPeek's Unified API. Booking still depends on your carrier account, service, permissions, and FedEx rules.
Can I get FedEx labels or documents?
ShipPeek can return carrier-issued FedEx labels, BOLs, delivery receipts, or documents where available through enabled Unified API workflows.
What does ShipPeek handle for FedEx?
For enabled workflows, ShipPeek handles the Unified API contract, carrier identifier, request and response mapping, status normalization, and document workflow shape. Carrier acceptance, service availability, rates, and document availability still depend on FedEx and your carrier account setup.
Is ShipPeek an official FedEx API?
No. ShipPeek is a unified logistics API platform that connects to supported carrier integrations. ShipPeek is not FedEx or a FedEx-owned API.
Still have questions? Book a call with the ShipPeek team.
Related carriers
Same API, more carrier coverage
Ready to bring this carrier into one workflow?
Use ShipPeek's Unified API for FedEx without making FedEx a one-off integration.
Bring enabled rates, tracking, booking, labels, and documents into one carrier-aware API contract, with ShipPeek handling the carrier-specific differences behind the scenes.
What ShipPeek helps centralize
- One integration surface for enabled FedEx rating, tracking, booking, and documents
- Carrier codes, credentials, status mappings, and exception handling behind the Unified API
- A path to add more carriers without copying the FedEx implementation