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International Delivery Guides

Shipment Size/ Weight

Delivery Methods

Destination

Delivery Time

Pricing

Things to Consider

Small Parcel Delivery <
50kg

Express Air (UPS/ DHL
Fedex/ TNT/ EMS)

to door

1-7 days

$8.00/kg

Cost includes door to door,

but it may need taxor customs

clearance fee when above

certain value.

Economic Express Air $6.50/kg

(DPEX/ ARAMEx, etc)

to door

8-15days

$6.5/kg

Cost includes door to door, but it

may need taxor customs clearance

fee when above certain value.

Air Transfer

to airport

1-7days

$5.00/kg

Buyer needs to arrange local delivery,

tax &customs clearance.

Medium Parcel Delivery

50-300kg

Truck-EU special

to door

16-20days

$4.00/kg

Freight is all costs from door to door,

including local delivery & tax.

CN-EU Train -EU

       Special

to door

25-30days

$3.00/kg

Freight is all costs from door to door,

including local delivery & tax.

Medium-Large Parcel
Delivery 2CBM ~
10CBM

Sea Transfer-LCL(Less-Than-Container Load)

to port

30-40 days (around 1 week to Asia, 60 days to Africa)

$2.00/kg

Not suggested for cracked/valuable items.

lf ClF terms, main freight will be charged at

port of import.

Large Parcel Delivery
>10CBM

Sea Transfer-FCL (Full
Container Load)

to port

around 30 days (1 weekto Asia, 45 days to
Africa)

$1.00/kg

The safest delivery method. Buyer needs to

arrange local delivery,tax & customs
clearance.

International Delivery Guides FAQ

MAKE YOUR DREAM COME TURE

Express: Click the official Express UPS/ DHL/ Fedex/ TNT/ EMS/ DPEX/ ARAMEX, etc, and type in your tracking numbers.
Air shipment: click here and type in your AWB#.  
Sea shipment: click here and type in your MBL#.

Duties

An import duty is an indirect tax imposed by the government on the value of an imported product. The duties you will owe upon importing into your government are determined by your product’s HTS code. Normally it is not included in the freight, and paid by buyer’ s side. What’ s more, there is a free tax under a certain value for personal parcel only.

Exams

Your shipment may be selected for a Customs examination, especially if you’re a first-time shipper. Shipments may undergo an X-ray exam, a Tail Gate exam, or an Intensive exam.

An X-ray exam is the least intensive exam. If CBP selects your shipment for a Customs exam, the container will be driven through an X-ray machine at the ocean terminal. A customs officer will then review the X-ray images and either release the container, or escalate it to a Tail Gate or Intensive exam.

A Tail Gate exam is the next step up from an X-ray exam. During a Tail Gate exam the customs officer will break the seal of the container at the ocean terminal, open the doors, and look inside the container. The customs officer will then either choose to release the container, or escalate it to an Intensive exam.

An Intensive exam is the most thorough exam. During an Intensive exam, the container will be trucked to a Centralized Examination Station (CES) where the container is unloaded so that a Customs officer can examine the cargo.

As you know, every type of customs exam will result in fees & delay. It depends on shipment terms.

If your cargo is shipping via express service, it will be put on a direct flight to its destination, making it the most expensive type of air service.

If your cargo is shipping via standard service, the cargo will likely make stops at one or two airports, where the cargo either switches planes or other cargo is on/off-loaded. Standard is the most common type of air service.

If your cargo is shipping via deferred air service, the cargo will make multiple stops along the route to its final destination. Deferred air is the cheapest type of air service, but deferred air freight rates are still higher than LCL rates.

Air International Delivery Guides

These three types are the most common ones used for container shipping. Because prices are similar for 40ft container (2.39m H) and 40 HQ container(2.70m H), we suggest 40 HQ, cost-effective and convenient for loading & unloading.

Sea Shipping International Delivery Guides

As a general rule, FCL is generally fast compared to LCL because of the less general handling and unforeseen delays. It is also great for cargo that require high security and fewer risks of damage. On the other hand, LCL is a more cost effective solution for small volume shipments. This makes it the best option for businesses with smaller orders as it reduces inventory investment while providing more flexibility.

Sea Shipping International Delivery Guides FCL

FCL (full container load) is a mode of ocean shipping where one importer’s cargo occupies a full container. FCL shipments are faster than LCL, as they don’t need to spend time at a CFS at the origin port and destination port, and can be trucked directly to their final destination.

Sea Shipping International Delivery Guides LCL

There are currently 11 incoterms, but you’re most likely to encounter FOB, EXW, DPU, and DDP:

international delivery guide ship

EXW – Ex Works (named place of delivery): means that a seller has the goods ready for collection at his premises (Works, factory, warehouse, plant) on the date agreed upon. The buyer pays all transportation costs and also bears the risks for bringing the goods to their final destination

FOB – Free on Board (named port of shipment): The seller must themself load the goods on board the ship nominated by the buyer, cost and risk being divided at ship’s rail.

CIF – Cost, Insurance & Freight (named port of destination): Seller must pay the costs and freight to bring the goods to the port of destination, in addition procure and pay for insurance for the buyer. However, risk is transferred to the buyer once the goods have crossed the ship’s rail.

DPU – Delivered at Place Unloaded (named place of destination): This term means that the seller delivers the goods to the buyer to the named place of destination in the contract of sale. The goods are not cleared for import or unloaded from any form of transport at the place of destination. The buyer is responsible for the costs and risks for the unloading, duty and any subsequent delivery beyond the place of destination. However, if the buyer wishes the seller to bear cost and risks associated with the import clearance, duty, unloading and subsequent delivery beyond the place of destination, then this all needs to be explicitly agreed upon in the contract of sale.

DDP – Delivered Duty Paid (named place of destination): This term means that the seller pays for all transportation costs and bears all risk until the goods have been delivered and pays the duty. Also used interchangeably with the term “Free Domicile”. The most comprehensive term for the buyer. In most of the importing countries, taxes such as (but not limited to) VAT and excises should not be considered prepaid being handled as a “refundable” tax. Therefore, VAT and excises usually are not representing a direct cost for the importer since they will be recovered against the sales on the local (domestic) market.

Allocations of risks to buyer/seller according to Incoterms 2024ustorefurniture trading term

PS:Marine insurance is very cheap, rough US$50-US$100 based on the shipment invoice value. There’s no reason not to have your consignment insured with a little additional money. It will cover the transportation damage, but please note it doesn’t cover any quantity or quality issue. The risk and the cost is not always the same for Incoterms. In many cases, the risk and cost usually goes together but it is not always the case.

Allocations of costs to buyer/seller according to Incoterms 2024ustorefurniture trading term

If you are new to importing, and haven’t found the right forwarding agent, you’d better choose an incoterm that takes the cargo as far as possible, until you are definitely sure you can handle the rest, like CIF/DPU/DDP.

If you have trusted forwarding agent with good prices, we suggest you can select EXW or FOB terms. Regarding to wood products (eg. Our retail shop display units, or other sensitive products), it is suggested FOB terms, because your forwarding agent may be in trouble for exporting customs clearance.

Anticipate tighter capacity and higher rates during certain times of the year when import volumes are up:

Peak Season

Peak Season ramps up during the second half of the year, as importers begin to bring in stock for the holiday season. As businesses prepare for the winter holidays import volumes will rise and ocean and air rates will increase. Prepare for high rates, rolled cargo (cargo that cannot be loaded onto the vessel it was scheduled to sail on because the vessel ran out of capacity), trucking delays, and other interruptions.

Golden Week

Golden Week is a 7-day festival in China starting on October 1st to celebrate the founding of the People’s Republic of China. Suppliers and carriers will take the week off, so space becomes constrained in the weeks leading up to Golden Week, amplifying the already tighter space and higher rates of Peak Season.

Chinese New Year

Chinese New Year is celebrated in February, and similar to Golden Week, suppliers and carriers will have the week off and usually take time to travel before and after the holiday, so expect additional closures and delays

Always plan ahead when shipping near holidays and anticipate delays and higher rates.

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