The 13 Incoterms
The 13 Incoterms
The 13 Incoterms
Why Incoterms?
Incoterms are international rules that are accepted by governments, legal authorities and practitioners
worldwide for the interpretation of the most commonly used terms in international trade. They either
reduce or remove altogether uncertainties arising from differing interpretations of such terms in different
countries.
Under FAS (FREE ALONGSIDE SHIP) the seller is required to clear the goods for export. This is a
reversal from previous Incoterms versions, which required the buyer to arrange for export clearance.
Under DEQ (DELIVERED EX QUAY) the buyer is required to clear the goods for import and to pay for all
formalities, duties, taxes and other charges upon import. This is a reversal from previous Incoterms
versions, which required the seller to arrange for import clearance.
I keep reading about "E"-terms and "C"-terms. What does that mean?
Incoterms 2000, like its immediate predecessor, groups the terms in four categories denoted by the first
letter in the three-letter abbreviation.
• Under the "E"-term (EXW), the seller only makes the goods available to the buyer at the seller's
own premises. It is the only one of that category.
• Under the "F"-terms (FCA, FAS and FOB), the seller is called upon to deliver the goods to a
carrier appointed by the buyer.
• Under the "C"-terms (CFR, CIF, CPT and CIP), the seller has to contract for carriage, but without
assuming the risk of loss or damage to the goods or additional costs due to events occurring after
shipment or dispatch.
• Under the "D"-terms (DAF, DES, DEQ, DDU and DDP), the seller has to bear all costs and risks
needed to bring the goods to the place of destination.
All terms list the Seller's and the Buyer's obligations. The respective obligations of both parties have been
grouped under up to 10 headings where each heading on the seller's side "mirrors" the equivalent
position of the buyer. Examples are: Delivery, Transfer of risks, Division of costs.
This layout helps the user to compare the parties' respective obligations under each Incoterm.