Global trade speaks a language of three-letter words. Do you speak it?
Imagine this: You ship a pallet of goods to a new distributor in Japan. The shipment arrives at the port, but nobody picks it up. The goods sit there, racking up thousands of euros in storage fees. The distributor blames you; you blame the distributor. Who is actually right? The answer lies in the Incoterm you agreed to.
Incoterms® (International Commercial Terms) are the backbone of global logistics. They define exactly where your responsibility ends and your buyer’s begins. In 2026, understanding these 11 rules is no longer just for legal teams—it is a requirement for e-commerce managers, dropshippers, and B2B wholesalers. Choosing the wrong term (like confusing DDP with DAP) can kill your conversion rate, while choosing the wrong B2B term (like FOB for air freight) can leave you uninsured and liable for damaged goods.
In this definitive guide, we break down the 11 Incoterms currently in effect for 2026, separating the essential terms for e-commerce from the complex rules used only for sea freight.
Incoterms (short for International Commercial Terms) are a set of 11 standardized trade rules published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). They act as a universal language for global trade, determining three critical elements in a contract:
Costs: Who pays for shipping, insurance, import duties, and VAT?
Responsibility: Who handles the documentation, export declarations, and customs clearance?
Risk: If the ship sinks or the truck crashes, who loses the money?
If you do not specify an Incoterm on your Commercial Invoice, customs authorities will usually default to DAP (Delivered At Place). This often leads to a "bad surprise" for your international customer: a text message demanding tax payment before delivery. If the customer refuses to pay, the package is returned, and you lose the shipping cost.
Not sure which code to use? Follow this logic flow to find your match.
While there are 11 terms in the official ICC list, 90% of online retailers only need to master these three.
Below is the full breakdown of all 11 Incoterms 2026, categorized by mode of transport.
These are the most common codes for e-commerce parcel shipping.
Used primarily for bulk cargo and containers. Do not use these for air freight.
Use this reference chart to audit your current shipping setup and ensure your pricing model is correct.
1. Using FOB for Air Freight It is a common mistake to write "FOB London Heathrow" on an air waybill. FOB is strictly for sea. If you are shipping via air but want the buyer to pay for the main flight, use FCA (Free Carrier).
2. Confusing DPU and DAP
3. Vague Locations Never write just "DAP London". Always be precise: "DAP 123 Oxford St, London, W1D 1LT, United Kingdom". The risk transfer point is a specific coordinate, not a city.
No. The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) updates Incoterms approximately every 10 years. The current set of rules is Incoterms® 2020, which came into effect on January 1, 2020. These rules remain the global standard for trade in 2026 and will likely remain so until the expected 2030 update.
For dropshipping, DAP (Delivered At Place) is the industry standard. Your supplier ships the product directly to the customer, but the customer is responsible for any import VAT or duties upon arrival. However, high-end dropshippers are moving toward DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) to prevent customers from refusing packages due to unexpected tax fees.
Using EXW for B2C is logistical suicide. It requires your customer (a private individual) to hire a courier to come to your warehouse, pick up the package, and handle the export declaration. No standard online shopper has the ability or license to do this. EXW is strictly for B2B trade.
No. Under CIF (Cost, Insurance & Freight), the seller is only required to provide "Minimum Cover" insurance (Institute Cargo Clauses C). This typically covers major disasters like the ship sinking or burning, but not minor damage or theft. For high-value goods, you should negotiate for CIP, which requires "All Risk" coverage (Clauses A).