CFR Incoterms: What Cost and Freight Means
for E-Commerce Sellers (2026)
CFR means your supplier pays freight to your port. But not insurance. Not customs. Not duties. Here is what CFR covers, where it falls short, and when it makes sense.
Quick Answer:
CFR (Cost and Freight) is an Incoterms 2020 rule for ocean transport. The seller pays the product cost and ocean freight to the named destination port. No insurance is included. Risk transfers when goods are loaded on the vessel at origin, meaning the buyer carries all transit risk. The buyer handles cargo insurance, destination port charges, import customs, duties, and delivery from port. CFR is the ocean-only equivalent of CPT, and CIF is CFR with insurance added. For most e-commerce sellers, DDP is simpler because it covers everything in one price.
What Is CFR (Cost and Freight)?
CFR is one of 11 Incoterms published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). It applies only to ocean freight and inland waterway transport.
Under CFR, the seller handles:
- Cost: The product price
- Freight: Ocean freight to the named destination port
The seller does NOT provide cargo insurance. The seller does NOT handle import customs. The seller does NOT pay duties or destination charges.
CFR has the same risk structure as CIF: risk transfers when goods are loaded on board the vessel at the origin port. The seller pays for the voyage but is not responsible for what happens during it. If your cargo is damaged in transit, that is your loss, unless you arranged separate insurance.
Think of CFR as CIF without the insurance, or as the ocean freight-only version of CPT.
Key Takeaway: CFR = seller pays freight to port. No insurance. You handle everything at destination. Arrange your own cargo insurance.
Where CFR Sits Among the "C" Terms
| Term | Transport Mode | Seller Pays Freight | Seller Pays Insurance | Risk Transfers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CFR | Ocean freight only | Yes | No | On board vessel |
| CIF | Ocean freight only | Yes | Yes (Clauses C, minimum) | On board vessel |
| CPT | Any mode | Yes | No | At first carrier |
| CIP | Any mode | Yes | Yes (Clauses A, all-risks) | At first carrier |
CFR vs CIF: Add minimum insurance and you get CIF. If your supplier quotes CFR and you want insurance included, ask for CIF. Or better, arrange your own Clauses (A) policy for broader coverage. See CIF Incoterms.
CFR vs CPT: Same concept, different transport scope. CFR is ocean freight only. CPT works for any mode. For air freight or multimodal shipments, CPT is the correct term. See CPT Incoterms.
CFR vs FOB: Under FOB, YOU arrange and pay for freight. Under CFR, the SELLER arranges and pays. Neither includes insurance. The practical question: do you want to book ocean freight yourself (FOB) or let your supplier book it (CFR)? See FOB Incoterms.
Why manage freight, insurance, and customs separately? DDP carriers on AiDeliv cover everything in one price.
Get DDP Rates →CFR in Practice: What Your Supplier Is Offering
When a supplier quotes "CFR Los Angeles," they are telling you:
| Included in the CFR Price | NOT Included (You Pay Separately) |
|---|---|
| Product manufacturing and packaging | Cargo insurance (approx. 0.3-0.5% of cargo value for Clauses A) |
| Inland transport from factory to Chinese port | Destination port terminal handling charges |
| Export customs clearance in China | Customs broker fee ($150-350) |
| Ocean freight to the named destination port | Import duties (0-25%+ depending on HS code) |
| Customs bond (single entry or annual) | |
| ISF filing ($25-75) | |
| Trucking from port to warehouse ($200-1,500 depending on distance) |
The CFR quote covers more than FOB (freight is included) but less than CIF (no insurance) and significantly less than DDP (no insurance, customs, duties, or delivery).
CFR Responsibilities Breakdown
Seller's Obligations Under CFR
| Obligation | What It Means |
|---|---|
| A1: General | Provide goods and commercial invoice |
| A2: Delivery | Deliver goods on board the vessel at origin port |
| A3: Risk transfer | Risk passes when goods are loaded on board at origin |
| A4: Transport | Arrange and pay for ocean freight to destination port |
| A5: Insurance | No obligation |
| A6: Transport document | Provide bill of lading covering carriage to destination |
| A7: Export clearance | Handle export formalities |
| A8: Checking/packaging | Package goods for ocean freight transport |
| A9: Cost allocation | Pay all costs to destination port, except insurance and import costs |
| A10: Notices | Notify buyer of dispatch details |
Buyer's Obligations Under CFR
| Obligation | What It Means |
|---|---|
| B1: General | Pay the agreed price |
| B2: Taking delivery | Accept delivery at destination port |
| B3: Risk transfer | Bear all risk from origin port loading onward |
| B4: Transport | No obligation (seller pays freight) |
| B5: Insurance | No obligation, but strongly recommended |
| B6: Transport document | Accept the bill of lading |
| B7: Import clearance | Handle ALL import customs, duties, and taxes |
| B8: Inspection | Pay for inspection if required |
| B9: Cost allocation | Pay insurance, destination port charges, customs, duties, unloading, trucking |
| B10: Notices | Notify seller of receiving requirements |
When CFR Makes Sense
CFR is not common for e-commerce imports. It appears in specific situations:
- Your supplier has favorable ocean freight contracts and can book cheaper rates than you can arrange independently. Some large Chinese manufacturers ship enough volume that their freight rates are significantly below market.
- You want to arrange your own insurance with a specific provider or under an annual policy.
- Commodity imports where CFR is the industry standard pricing term.
- Your supplier insists on CFR because they want to control the freight booking. Note: sometimes suppliers pad the freight cost, so compare against market rates.
For most e-commerce sellers: FOB or DDP is a better fit. FOB gives you full control over freight. DDP gives you zero logistics work. CFR sits in an awkward middle where you get some cost coverage but still manage insurance, customs, duties, and delivery yourself.
Common Mistakes with CFR
Mistake 1: Shipping CFR without cargo insurance.
CFR does not include insurance. Risk transfers at origin. If your $50,000 shipment is damaged in transit and you have no insurance, you absorb the full loss. Always buy cargo insurance under CFR. Cost is typically 0.3-0.5% of cargo value for Clauses (A) coverage.
Mistake 2: Not verifying the freight component in the CFR quote.
Some suppliers inflate the freight portion of CFR quotes. Ask for a breakdown: product cost vs. freight cost. Compare the freight number against current market rates. If your supplier quotes $2,500 for freight on a route that costs $1,800 at market rates, you are overpaying by $700.
Mistake 3: Assuming CFR includes destination port handling.
CFR covers freight TO the port. It does not cover port charges AT the port (terminal handling, unloading, documentation). Those are your costs.
Mistake 4: Using CFR for containerized cargo when CPT is technically correct.
Like FOB and CIF, CFR is designed for cargo that can be inspected at the ship's rail. For containers, CPT (which works for any transport mode) is the ICC's preferred term. In practice, CFR is still used for container shipments, but know the distinction.
One price. Factory to warehouse. No freight negotiations. No insurance gaps. DDP carriers compete on AiDeliv.
Run a DDP Auction →Frequently Asked Questions
What does CFR mean in shipping?
CFR stands for Cost and Freight. The seller pays the product cost and ocean freight to the named destination port. No insurance is included. Risk transfers at the origin port. The buyer handles insurance, customs, duties, and delivery from port.
What is the difference between CFR and CIF?
CIF includes minimum cargo insurance (Clauses C). CFR does not. Everything else is identical. Both are ocean freight-only terms where the seller pays freight and risk transfers on board the vessel.
What is the difference between CFR and FOB?
Under FOB, the buyer arranges and pays for freight. Under CFR, the seller does. Neither includes insurance. Both transfer risk on board the vessel. The question is whether you or your supplier books the ocean freight.
Does CFR include insurance?
No. CFR has no insurance obligation for either party. The buyer carries all transit risk and should arrange separate cargo insurance. If you want the seller to include insurance, use CIF.
Is CFR common for e-commerce?
Not very common. Most e-commerce importers use FOB (arrange their own freight) or DDP (the carrier handles everything). CFR appears when the supplier has favorable freight rates or when it is the standard term for a particular commodity category.
Related Incoterms and Resources
Freight. Insurance. Customs. Duties. One Price.
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