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Trade Terms — China to South Africa

Incoterms Explained: FOB, CIF, EXW & DDP for South African Importers

Every quote you get from a Chinese factory ends in a three-letter code — FOB, CIF, EXW, DDP. Those codes decide who pays for the freight, who carries the risk if a container goes overboard, and who deals with SARS. Here's what each one means for an importer in South Africa, and which to choose.

Read time9 minutes UpdatedJune 2026 ForSA buyers reading factory quotes from China
What's Covered
  1. What Incoterms actually are
  2. The four that matter for China–SA
  3. EXW — Ex Works
  4. FOB — Free On Board (the SA default)
  5. CIF — Cost, Insurance, Freight
  6. DDP — Delivered Duty Paid
  7. The hidden CIF cost trap
  8. Which Incoterm should you choose?
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

What Incoterms actually are

Incoterms — short for International Commercial Terms — are a set of standard trade terms published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). The current version is Incoterms 2020. They exist to answer three questions on any cross-border shipment, the same way every time, regardless of language:

When a factory quotes you "$4.20/unit FOB Shenzhen", the FOB part is telling you that the price covers the goods loaded onto the ship at Shenzhen — and that everything after that point is yours to arrange and pay for. Read the Incoterm wrong and a quote that looked cheap can land 30–40% higher than you budgeted.

The golden rule: an Incoterm only has meaning with a named place attached. "FOB" alone is incomplete — it must be "FOB Ningbo" or "FOB Shenzhen". "DDP" must be "DDP Johannesburg". The named place is where the cost and risk handover happens.

The four that matter for China–South Africa

There are eleven Incoterms in the 2020 set, but for a typical SA importer buying from China by sea or air, four cover almost every quote you'll ever see. Here's the whole journey at a glance, and how far the seller's responsibility reaches under each:

Stage of the journeyEXWFOBCIFDDP
Goods ready at factorySellerSellerSellerSeller
Inland transport in ChinaBuyerSellerSellerSeller
China export clearanceBuyerSellerSellerSeller
Loading onto shipBuyerSellerSellerSeller
Sea / air freightBuyerBuyerSellerSeller
Marine insuranceBuyerBuyerSellerSeller
SA import clearanceBuyerBuyerBuyerSeller
Duty & 15% import VATBuyerBuyerBuyerSeller
Delivery to your doorBuyerBuyerBuyerSeller

Read left to right, each term hands more of the journey to the seller. EXW is the buyer doing almost everything; DDP is the seller doing almost everything. FOB and CIF sit in between — and the gap between those two is where most SA importers lose money without realising it.

EXW — Ex Works

Under EXW (Ex Works), the factory's only obligation is to have your goods packed and ready for collection at its premises. From the factory gate onwards — inland trucking to the port, Chinese export clearance, the freight, SA clearance, duty, VAT and final delivery — it's all on you.

The upside

EXW gives the lowest possible headline price and total control over how the goods move. If you have a sourcing agent or freight partner with a strong presence in China, EXW lets them optimise every leg.

The catch for SA buyers

EXW puts Chinese export clearance on the foreign buyer, which is awkward — you're a South African company being asked to file Chinese export paperwork. In practice this only works if your agent handles it on the ground in China. Buy EXW without that, and you'll be scrambling. For most SA importers, EXW is a term to hand to your agent, not to manage yourself. A good China sourcing agent turns EXW into a workable option.

FOB — Free On Board (the SA default)

FOB (Free On Board) is the term you'll see most often, and for good reason. The factory delivers the goods, cleared for export, loaded onto the vessel at the named Chinese port. Risk passes to you once the goods are on board. From there, you (or your import agent) arrange the sea freight, insurance, SA clearance and delivery.

Why FOB suits South African importers

FOB + your own agent = control + price. This is the combination most experienced SA importers settle on: factory quotes FOB, your import agent handles freight forward from the Chinese port through SARS to your door.

CIF — Cost, Insurance, Freight

Under CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight), the factory does everything FOB does plus pays the sea freight and marine insurance to the named South African port (usually Durban or Cape Town). Once the goods land, clearance, duty, VAT and delivery are back on you.

Why it looks attractive

One number covers the goods all the way to a SA port. It feels simpler — less for you to arrange up front. For a first-time importer, that simplicity is tempting.

Why it usually costs more

The factory isn't a freight company. It books your freight through its own agent, marks it up, and has no incentive to find you the best rate or the right service. You also lose visibility — the freight is buried inside one figure, so you can't see whether you're being overcharged. And CIF only covers goods to the port, not to your door, so people who think CIF means "delivered" get a nasty surprise when the port and clearing bills arrive.

DDP — Delivered Duty Paid

DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) is the opposite end of the scale from EXW. The seller delivers the goods all the way to your premises in South Africa, with the freight, import clearance, customs duty and 15% VAT all arranged and paid. You get one price and one delivery, and you touch none of the logistics.

Why DDP is the simplest term for the buyer

There's nothing to arrange. No forwarder to brief, no SARS clearance to manage, no duty or VAT to calculate or fund on arrival. For a busy business that just wants the goods to appear, DDP is as easy as importing gets.

The catch — and how to remove it

A Chinese factory quoting DDP is leaning on a freight agent to clear SARS on the SA side. If that agent under-declares, mis-classifies the HS code, or gets the duty wrong, it's your shipment that gets held and your company that's the importer of record. The fix is to use a DDP service where the South African side owns the clearance — so you get the one-price simplicity of DDP with a local agent accountable for getting SARS right.

How Storm media works. We quote a single delivered price to your door anywhere in South Africa — product, freight, customs duty, VAT and delivery all in. It's the simplicity of DDP, but the SARS clearance is managed here in SA, not left to a factory's agent. See our freight forwarding service.

The hidden CIF cost trap

The single most common mistake we see SA importers make is assuming CIF is cheaper than FOB because "the freight's included." Here's a simplified comparison of the same 1 CBM sea shipment, quoted both ways:

Cost lineFOB + own agentCIF
Goods (FOB price)R40,000R40,000
Sea freight to DurbanR3,200R5,400
Marine insuranceR420R600
Port & clearing (SA side)R2,800R3,500
Cost to cleared, before duty/VATR46,420R49,500

Same goods, same boat — but the CIF freight and insurance carry the factory's markup, and CIF buyers often get hit with higher port-side charges because the factory's nominated agent controls the SA destination handling. The "convenience" of CIF can cost R3,000–R5,000 per shipment. On regular orders, that adds up fast. (Figures are illustrative — for how the freight portion is actually priced, see our air vs sea freight guide.)

Watch the duty base. SARS calculates customs duty on the FOB value of the goods, not the freight. Whether you ship FOB, CIF or DDP, the duty and VAT are worked out the same way — so paying more for CIF freight doesn't even reduce your tax bill. For exactly how SARS builds the figure, read our import duties & taxes guide.

Which Incoterm should you choose?

A quick decision guide for SA importers:

If you...Best term
Have an agent with a strong China presence and want maximum controlEXW
Want a clean handover and to control your own freight & clearanceFOB
Want a factory to handle freight and don't mind paying a premiumCIF (with caution)
Want zero involvement — one price, delivered, taxes paidDDP

For most South African businesses the honest answer is FOB if you have a trusted import agent, or DDP if you'd rather not touch the logistics at all. The two terms to be careful with are CIF (freight markup) and EXW (Chinese export clearance lands on you). The right choice depends less on the term itself and more on who's handling the SA-side clearance — because that's where shipments actually get stuck.

New to all of this? Start with our step-by-step guide to importing from China to South Africa, then come back to lock in the right Incoterm for your order.

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Tell us what you're importing and we'll quote one delivered price to your door in South Africa — goods, freight, duty, VAT and delivery all in, with the SARS clearance handled on our side. No three-letter codes to decode.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Standard three-letter trade terms published by the International Chamber of Commerce. They define where the seller's responsibility ends and the buyer's begins on an international shipment — who pays for transport, who carries the risk at each point, and who handles export and import clearance. For an SA importer buying from China, the Incoterm on your invoice decides how much of the journey is your problem.
Under FOB the factory loads the goods onto the ship and you pay freight, insurance and everything after. Under CIF the factory also pays the sea freight and insurance to the SA port. CIF looks more convenient, but the factory marks up the freight and picks the cheapest carrier, so SA buyers usually pay more under CIF than arranging their own freight on FOB terms.
The factory's only job is to have the goods ready for collection at its premises in China. The buyer arranges and pays for everything from the gate onwards — inland transport, Chinese export clearance, freight, SA import clearance and delivery. Lowest headline price and most control, but it needs an agent who can handle Chinese export formalities.
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) means the goods arrive at your door in SA with freight, duty, VAT and clearance all handled and paid — one price, no surprises. The risk is that a Chinese factory quoting DDP relies on a freight agent to clear SARS; if that agent gets duty or VAT wrong, your shipment is held. A locally-managed DDP service, where the SA-side agent owns the clearance, removes that risk.
For most SA importers, FOB is the sensible default — the factory loads the goods at a known cost and you (or your agent) control freight, insurance and SARS clearance from there. EXW suits buyers with a strong China-side agent; CIF is best avoided because of the freight markup; DDP is ideal if you want zero involvement and trust the agent managing your clearance.
Under EXW, FOB and CIF, the buyer (importer of record in SA) pays SARS customs duty and the 15% import VAT. Only under DDP does the seller cover duty and VAT as part of the delivered price — which is why DDP pricing always looks higher at first glance. It already includes taxes the other terms leave for you to pay on arrival.
Only CIF and CIP include insurance as a seller obligation. Under EXW, FOB and DDP, marine insurance is arranged by whoever carries the risk on that leg. Even where the Incoterm doesn't require it, never ship a container from China to SA uninsured — the cost is small relative to the value at risk for 25–30 days at sea.

Disclaimer: This guide is general information for South African importers and not professional legal, tax, customs or financial advice. Figures such as freight rates, customs duty percentages, exchange rates, minimum order quantities and timelines are indicative only and change frequently — confirm current rates and your specific tariff (HS) classification with SARS or a licensed clearing agent before making decisions. For figures specific to your shipment, request a quote.