Home

incoterms

Incoterms, short for International Commercial Terms, are a set of standardized trade terms published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). They define the responsibilities of seller and buyer for the delivery of goods under international sales contracts, including who arranges transport, who pays costs, and who bears risk at various points in the shipment.

Incoterms do not constitute a complete contract; they govern delivery obligations and the allocation of costs

The ICC publishes Incoterms in editions, with Incoterms 2020 being the widely used version. Contracts should

Practical use involves selecting an Incoterm that reflects which party handles transport, insurance, customs clearance, and

and
risk
related
to
the
movement
of
goods,
including
export
clearance
and,
where
applicable,
insurance.
They
apply
to
any
mode
of
transport,
with
some
terms
specific
to
sea
or
inland
waterway
transport
(for
example
FAS,
FOB,
CFR,
CIF)
and
others
usable
for
any
transport
mode
(EXW,
FCA,
CPT,
CIP,
DAP,
DPU,
DDP).
The
term
also
specifies
the
point
at
which
risk
passes
from
seller
to
buyer
and
the
responsibilities
for
delivery
to
the
named
place.
reference
both
the
exact
Incoterm
and
the
version,
along
with
a
named
place.
Responsibilities
vary
across
terms:
EXW
places
minimal
obligation
on
the
seller,
while
DDP
places
maximum
obligation
on
the
seller,
with
other
terms
representing
intermediate
allocations
of
risk
and
costs.
For
terms
involving
insurance,
CIF
and
CIP
require
the
seller
to
procure
insurance
to
defined
limits.
taxes,
then
clearly
incorporating
the
chosen
term
and
version
into
the
contract.
This
helps
reduce
ambiguity
and
align
logistics,
costs,
and
risk
management
between
trading
partners.