What each term really means (Incoterms® 2025)
FOB – Free On Board (Port of Shipment)
- Seller: clears export, delivers goods on board the vessel at the named port.
- Buyer: pays ocean freight, insurance, destination charges, and handles import.
- Risk transfers: when goods are on board at origin.
- Use for sea/inland waterway. (For air/multimodal, use FCA instead.)
CIF – Cost, Insurance and Freight (Port of Destination)
- Seller: clears export, books & pays ocean freight to the named destination port, and buys minimum cargo insurance for buyer (Institute Cargo Clauses “C”, typically 110% of invoice).
- Buyer: pays destination charges and import.
- Risk transfers: still at origin on board (even though seller pays freight & insurance).
- Sea/inland waterway only. (For multimodal equivalent, use CIP, which requires broader “A” insurance.)
Pros & cons for electronics importers
FOB – why importers like it
Pros
- Cost control & transparency: you choose the forwarder, route, carrier, and insurance level.
- Avoid hidden markups in seller-arranged freight.
- Flexibility across shipments and consolidation (useful if you buy from multiple suppliers).
Cons
- More workload: you must manage main carriage and insurance.
- If you’re new, you might face rate volatility or routing mistakes.
CIF – when it’s convenient
Pros
- Simplicity: one price to destination port for the main carriage.
- Helpful when you lack a trusted forwarder or need a quick first shipment.
- Seller arranges basic insurance for you.
Cons
- Risk still passes at loading: a loss at sea is technically your risk; you must claim on the seller’s policy (slower).
- Insurance is minimum (Clause C) unless you ask & pay for upgrades—may be inadequate for high-value electronics or lithium-battery cargo.
- Less control over carrier/ETA; possible high destination charges from seller-chosen carrier/agent.
Typical cost components (know what you’re comparing)
- Origin: factory handling, export customs, terminal handling.
- Main carriage: ocean freight + surcharges (BAF, PSS, etc.).
- Insurance: cargo value × rate (CIF includes minimum; FOB you choose).
- Destination: terminal handling, documentation, delivery order, demurrage/detention (if delays), import duties/VAT, local drayage.
👉 Rule of thumb: Under FOB, you control main carriage + insurance.
Under CIF, you still pay destination costs and taxes either way.
Quick decision guide
Choose FOB if you:
- Have (or want) a trusted forwarder and need predictable, transparent landed costs.
- Plan to consolidate multiple suppliers in Shenzhen/Guangzhou.
- Ship electronics with batteries and want to control dangerous-goods handling & better insurance.
Choose CIF if you:
- Are new and want a single price to port for the first trial order.
- Need the seller to handle space booking during peak season.
- Your port agent can confirm reasonable destination fees for the carrier the seller will use.
Practical tips for electronics
- Specify the term precisely:
“FOB Shenzhen, Incoterms® 2020” or “CIF Hamburg, Incoterms® 2020”. - Upgrade insurance when needed (CIF→request Clause A). High-value SKUs and UN3481 lithium batteries merit broader coverage and clear packing/labeling.
- Pre-agree destination charges (or get a not-to-exceed quote from a local agent) to avoid surprises under CIF.
- Mind mode suitability: for air or rail, use FCA/CIP, not FOB/CIF.
- Document control: under CIF, confirm who holds the original B/L and how you’ll receive it (or use telex release) to prevent delays.
- Watch detention/demurrage: arrange pickup quickly; electronics margins suffer from storage fees.
Mini scenario (illustrative)
- FOB Shenzhen: Unit price $9.50 → You book freight & insurance; landed-to-port driven by your forwarder’s rates; full visibility, easy consolidation.
- CIF Los Angeles: Unit price $10.05 (freight+basic insurance included) → You still pay destination/handling; simple for a trial, but less control and slower insurance claims if cargo is damaged.
Bottom line
- Experienced importers: FOB usually wins on control, transparency, and total cost over time.
- First-time/one-off shipments: CIF can reduce coordination effort—just upgrade insurance and pre-check destination fees.