Trade Compliance April 10, 2026 Suaid Global Editorial

FCA Incoterms: Free Carrier Explained

FCA (Free Carrier) is an Incoterm where the seller delivers goods, cleared for export, to a carrier nominated by the buyer at a named place. It is the most versatile of all 11 Incoterms 2020 rules because it works for every transport mode and gives buyers maximum control over freight. This guide covers obligations, cost examples, FCA vs FOB, and when FCA is the right choice.

What Does FCA Mean in Shipping?

FCA (Free Carrier) is one of the 11 Incoterms 2020 rules published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). Under FCA, the seller is responsible for delivering goods — cleared for export — to a carrier or person nominated by the buyer at a named place. Once delivery occurs, all risk and further costs transfer to the buyer.

FCA is classified as an "F" group Incoterm, alongside FOB and FAS. All F-terms share one principle: the seller delivers goods to a carrier arranged by the buyer. The buyer contracts and pays for the main carriage (freight). According to the ICC, FCA has become the most commonly recommended Incoterm for containerized freight because it accurately reflects how modern container logistics work.

A critical feature of FCA is that the delivery point has two variants. If the named place is the seller's premises (factory or warehouse), the seller is responsible for loading the goods onto the buyer's transport. If the named place is anywhere else — such as a port, airport, or freight terminal — the seller delivers the goods to that location but is NOT responsible for unloading them from their transport.

FCA Seller and Buyer Obligations

FCA creates a clean split: the seller handles everything up to export and delivery to the carrier; the buyer handles main carriage, insurance, import clearance, and all destination costs. The following table details each obligation.

ObligationSeller (FCA)Buyer (FCA)
Packaging and labeling✓ Seller arranges and pays
Export customs clearance✓ Seller arranges and pays
Delivery to named place✓ Seller delivers to carrier/terminal
Loading at seller's premises✓ Seller loads (if delivery at seller's place)Buyer's risk if not at seller's premises
Main carriage (freight)✓ Buyer contracts and pays
Cargo insuranceBuyer's decision (recommended)
Import customs clearance✓ Buyer arranges and pays
Import duties and taxes✓ Buyer pays
Unloading at destination✓ Buyer arranges and pays
Delivery to final destination✓ Buyer arranges and pays
Risk transfer pointAt the named place when goods are delivered to the carrierFrom carrier onward

FCA Cost Example: China to USA Shipment

Here is a real-world cost breakdown showing who pays what on an FCA shipment of 500 units of consumer electronics from Guangzhou, China to Los Angeles, USA (1×40ft FCL container, goods value $45,000). Named place: FCA Nansha Port, Guangzhou.

Cost ComponentPaid ByEstimated Cost
Factory packaging and palletizingSeller$200–400
Inland trucking (factory → Nansha Port)Seller$150–300
Export customs clearance (China)Seller$80–120
Terminal Handling Charge (origin THC)Buyer (part of freight contract)$120–180
Ocean freight (Guangzhou → Los Angeles)Buyer$2,200–3,800
Cargo insurance (all-risk)Buyer (recommended)$225–450 (0.5–1%)
Destination THC + port chargesBuyer$250–400
US customs clearanceBuyer$150–250
Import duties (varies by HS code)Buyer$2,250–65,250+
Drayage (LA port → warehouse)Buyer$500–1,200

Need an FCA Freight Quote?

Suaid Global coordinates FCA shipments worldwide. Whether you need freight booking, customs clearance, or door-to-door logistics, we handle it.

FCA vs FOB: Why the ICC Recommends FCA for Containers

FOB (Free on Board) has been the default Incoterm for ocean freight for decades, but the ICC has recommended FCA over FOB for containerized shipments since the 2010 revision. The reason is practical: FOB risk transfers when goods cross the ship's rail, but containerized cargo is delivered to the terminal long before loading. The seller loses control of the container at the terminal gate, yet FOB technically holds them responsible until the container is loaded on the vessel — a gap of 1-7 days where neither party controls the cargo.

FCA solves this by transferring risk when the goods are delivered to the carrier at the named place. If you write 'FCA Nansha Port, Guangzhou,' risk transfers when the container arrives at the port terminal — matching the physical reality of how containers are handled.

Despite the ICC recommendation, FOB remains more widely used due to tradition, letter of credit requirements, and familiarity. For new contracts, particularly containerized ocean freight, FCA is the technically correct and lower-risk choice for sellers.

FeatureFCA (Free Carrier)FOB (Free on Board)
Transport modesAny (ocean, air, road, rail, multimodal)Sea and inland waterway only
Risk transferWhen goods are delivered to carrier at named placeWhen goods are loaded on board the vessel
Works for containers?Yes — ICC recommended for containersTechnically misaligned with container logistics
Bill of lading timingFCA 2020 allows buyer to request on-board B/L from sellerOn-board B/L issued naturally at vessel loading
Letter of credit compatibilityRequires FCA + on-board B/L clause (Incoterms 2020 feature)Natively compatible with L/C requiring on-board B/L
Market adoptionGrowing — recommended by ICCDominant — most used sea freight Incoterm globally

When to Use FCA: Best Scenarios

FCA is the best choice when the buyer wants full control over the main carriage, the shipment uses multimodal transport, or the seller wants clean risk transfer at origin. These are the most common scenarios.

  • Containerized ocean freight: FCA is the ICC-recommended term for container shipping. Risk transfers at the terminal gate, matching how containers are actually handled. Write 'FCA [Port Terminal]' for clarity.
  • Air freight where buyer controls routing: Buyers who have volume discounts with airlines or air freight forwarders prefer FCA at the origin airport. The seller delivers to the airport cargo terminal, and the buyer's forwarder takes over.
  • Buyer has their own freight forwarder: Companies with established forwarder relationships prefer FCA because they control carrier selection, routing, and costs. The seller's only freight obligation is getting goods to the named place.
  • Multimodal shipments: FCA works across all transport modes. For goods moving by truck to a rail terminal to a port to a vessel, FCA provides a single clean handoff point instead of the mode-specific limitations of FOB or FAS.
  • Amazon FBA and e-commerce fulfillment: Sellers shipping to Amazon FBA warehouses often use FCA at the origin port or factory. The buyer's (Amazon seller's) forwarder handles ocean freight, customs, and FBA delivery.
  • When L/C requires on-board bill of lading: Incoterms 2020 added a provision allowing the buyer to instruct their carrier to issue an on-board B/L to the seller under FCA. This solved the historical L/C compatibility issue that kept many traders on FOB.

Common FCA Mistakes to Avoid

FCA is straightforward, but these common mistakes cause disputes, delays, and unexpected costs.

  • Mistake: Not specifying whether delivery is at seller's premises or elsewhere. 'FCA Guangzhou' is ambiguous. Is it the factory? The port? A freight terminal? Specify: 'FCA Seller's Warehouse, 123 Industrial Road, Guangzhou' or 'FCA Nansha Container Terminal, Guangzhou.' The location determines who loads the goods.
  • Mistake: Confusing FCA with EXW. Under EXW, the buyer handles everything including export clearance. Under FCA, the seller handles export customs clearance. This is a critical difference — the buyer cannot legally clear goods for export in most countries.
  • Mistake: Using FOB for containerized cargo when FCA is better. FOB risk transfers on board the vessel, but containers are delivered to the terminal days before loading. During that gap, neither party has clear responsibility under FOB. FCA eliminates this gap.
  • Mistake: Seller not obtaining proof of delivery. Under FCA, the seller should obtain a receipt or transport document proving that goods were delivered to the carrier at the named place. Without this document, the seller cannot prove delivery occurred if a dispute arises.
  • Mistake: Forgetting origin THC under FCA at port. When the named place is a port terminal, the buyer may be responsible for origin Terminal Handling Charges (THC) as part of the freight contract. Clarify THC responsibility in the sales contract to avoid surprise costs.
  • Mistake: Assuming FCA includes freight. FCA means the seller delivers to the carrier — the buyer contracts and pays for all freight from that point. If you want the seller to pay freight, use CPT (Carriage Paid To) or CIF instead.

How to Write FCA in a Contract

The correct format follows the ICC Incoterms 2020 standard: <strong>FCA [Named Place of Delivery] Incoterms 2020</strong>. The named place must be specific enough to identify exactly where the seller's delivery obligation ends.

Examples: 'FCA Seller's Factory, 456 Huangpu Road, Shenzhen, China Incoterms 2020' (delivery at seller's premises — seller loads), 'FCA Yantian International Container Terminal, Shenzhen, China Incoterms 2020' (delivery at terminal — seller delivers but does not load onto vessel), 'FCA Shanghai Pudong International Airport, Cargo Terminal 2, China Incoterms 2020' (air freight delivery at airport cargo terminal).

For letter of credit transactions, add the on-board B/L clause from Incoterms 2020 A6/B6: the buyer instructs their carrier to issue an on-board bill of lading to the seller, who can then present it to the bank. This resolved the main historical barrier to using FCA with L/Cs.

FCA vs Other Incoterms: Quick Comparison

FCA sits between EXW (buyer does everything) and CPT (seller pays freight). Understanding where FCA fits helps you choose the right Incoterm for your supply chain.

IncotermSeller's ObligationBuyer's ObligationBest For
EXW (Ex Works)Make goods available at seller's facility onlyEverything: pickup, export clearance, freight, import, dutiesBuyer controls 100% of logistics
FCA (Free Carrier)Export clearance + deliver to carrier at named placeMain carriage, insurance, import clearance, dutiesBuyer controls freight; seller handles export
FOB (Free on Board)Export clearance + load on board vesselOcean freight, insurance, import clearance, dutiesSea freight (traditional, L/C compatible)
CPT (Carriage Paid To)Export clearance + freight to named destinationInsurance, import clearance, dutiesSeller pays freight; buyer bears transit risk
DAP (Delivered at Place)Everything to named destination (excl. import)Import clearance, duties, unloadingSeller bears risk to destination

Frequently Asked Questions: FCA Incoterms

What does FCA mean in Incoterms?

FCA stands for Free Carrier. It means the seller delivers goods, cleared for export, to a carrier nominated by the buyer at a named place. Once the goods are delivered to the carrier, all costs and risks transfer to the buyer. FCA works for any transport mode — ocean, air, road, rail, or multimodal.

What is the difference between FCA and FOB?

FCA works for any transport mode and transfers risk when goods are delivered to the carrier at a named place. FOB is restricted to sea freight and transfers risk when goods are loaded on board the vessel. The ICC recommends FCA over FOB for containerized cargo because FCA matches the physical reality of how containers are handled at terminals.

Who pays for freight under FCA?

The buyer pays for all freight (main carriage) under FCA. The seller only pays for transport to the named delivery point — which could be the seller's factory, a port terminal, or an airport cargo area. From that point, the buyer contracts and pays for all transportation.

Does FCA include export clearance?

Yes. Under FCA, the seller is responsible for export customs clearance at their own cost. This is a key difference from EXW, where the buyer handles export clearance. In most countries, only the resident party can legally clear goods for export, making FCA more practical than EXW for international trade.

Who is responsible for loading under FCA?

It depends on the named place. If delivery is at the seller's premises (factory or warehouse), the seller loads the goods onto the buyer's collecting vehicle. If delivery is at any other place (port, terminal, airport), the seller delivers the goods but is NOT responsible for unloading from their transport — the carrier handles loading.

Can FCA be used with a letter of credit?

Yes. Incoterms 2020 added a specific provision (A6/B6) that allows the buyer to instruct their carrier to issue an on-board bill of lading to the seller under FCA. The seller can then present this document to the bank for L/C payment. This solved the historical L/C compatibility problem that kept traders using FOB.

What is the difference between FCA and EXW?

Under EXW (Ex Works), the seller simply makes goods available at their premises — the buyer handles everything including pickup, export clearance, and all logistics. Under FCA, the seller handles export clearance and delivers goods to the carrier. FCA is generally preferred because the seller is better positioned to handle export formalities in their own country.

Ship FCA with Suaid Global

We coordinate FCA shipments from any origin. Whether you need your supplier to deliver to a port, airport, or our warehouse, Suaid Global manages the freight from pickup to destination.

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