A bill of lading and a packing slip both travel with an international shipment, but they do completely different jobs. A bill of lading is a legally binding contract between the shipper and the carrier that also acts as a receipt for the goods and, in many cases, as a document of title. A packing slip is a simple itemized list of what is physically inside the cartons or container. One controls who can collect the freight and on what terms; the other just tells the receiver what to count. Confusing the two is one of the most common causes of cargo release delays, mis-deliveries, and disputed claims in freight forwarding.
Before going into detail, the side-by-side view below shows where the two documents diverge. The short version: the bill of lading is the legal instrument that governs the move, and the packing slip is the practical inventory that supports the unpack.
| Attribute | Bill of Lading (BOL) | Packing Slip |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Contract of carriage, receipt of goods, and often title to the cargo | Itemized list of the goods physically inside the shipment |
| Who issues it | The carrier or freight forwarder | The shipper, seller, or warehouse |
| Legal status | Legally binding; can be negotiable and transfer ownership | No legal weight; informational only |
| Pricing shown | No prices; describes freight, weight, and terms | No prices; lists quantities and item descriptions only |
| Controls cargo release | Yes; an original negotiable BOL is usually surrendered to collect the goods | No; it never releases or holds freight |
| Used by | Carriers, forwarders, customs brokers, banks under letters of credit | Receiving and warehouse staff checking the delivery |
A bill of lading is a document issued by a carrier to a shipper that performs three roles at once: it is the contract of carriage that sets the terms of the move, the receipt confirming the carrier took the goods, and, when negotiable, the document of title that proves who owns the cargo.
Because the bill of lading does three jobs, it is the single most important document in most international shipments. It records the shipper, the consignee, the notify party, the port of loading and discharge, the description and quantity of the freight, the freight terms, and the date the carrier received the goods. When the BOL is issued as a negotiable original, whoever holds the endorsed original controls the cargo. That is why banks rely on the bill of lading to release payment under a letter of credit, and why a missing original can strand a container at the destination port.
Common bill of lading types include the straight (non-negotiable) BOL, the order (negotiable) BOL, the house BOL issued by a freight forwarder, and the master BOL issued by the underlying carrier. For a full breakdown of how the document works and its variants, see the GoFreight bill of lading guide linked in the Keep Reading section below. Whichever type is used, the BOL governs the legal relationship between shipper, carrier, and consignee from pickup to delivery.
A packing slip is an itemized document prepared by the shipper that lists exactly what goods are inside a package or shipment, including item descriptions, quantities, and often weights, but no prices. It travels with the freight so the receiver can verify the delivery against what was ordered.
The packing slip, sometimes called a delivery docket or delivery note, exists to answer one question for the person opening the boxes: did everything that was supposed to arrive actually arrive? It typically shows the order number, the ship-to address, a line for each SKU, the quantity packed, the number of cartons, and the total weight. It deliberately leaves out unit prices and totals, which keeps cost information away from warehouse and delivery staff.
In e-commerce and domestic distribution the packing slip is often the only paperwork inside the box. In international trade it supports, but does not replace, the heavier documents. Receiving teams use it to count and inspect; discrepancy claims usually start with a packing slip that does not match the cartons on the dock.
The cleanest way to separate the two documents is by what each one is for, who relies on it, and what happens if it is missing.
Put simply, the bill of lading governs the movement and ownership of the shipment, while the packing slip describes the contents of the shipment. The BOL is the document a customs broker, carrier, or bank cares about. The packing slip is the document the person on the receiving dock cares about. They are complementary, not interchangeable, which is why a complete international shipment normally carries both.
Treating a packing slip as proof of delivery or as a release document is a frequent and costly mistake. Only the bill of lading controls cargo release. If the original negotiable BOL has not been surrendered, the carrier will hold the freight no matter how detailed the packing slip is, and storage or demurrage charges will keep accruing.
This is one of the most searched questions on this topic, and the answer is mostly no. The two terms overlap, but they are not identical in international trade. A packing slip is the customer-facing document inside a single box that helps the receiver check the order. A packing list is a more formal export document that summarizes the entire consignment: every carton, gross and net weights, dimensions, and packaging marks across the whole shipment. Customs authorities and freight forwarders rely on the packing list; it is also one of the documents a bank may require under a letter of credit. The packing slip rarely leaves the warehouse floor.
A packing slip is also not a commercial invoice, which states the value of the goods for payment and customs duty, and it is not a shipping label, which only carries the address and tracking barcode on the outside of the box. Four documents, four jobs. The table below keeps them straight.
| Document | What it does | Shows prices? |
|---|---|---|
| Packing slip | Lists contents of one package for the receiver to verify | No |
| Packing list | Formal export summary of the whole consignment and its weights | No |
| Commercial invoice | States the value of the goods for payment and customs duty | Yes |
| Bill of lading | Contract of carriage, receipt, and title document for the freight | No |
In a typical international shipment the two documents are created at different points and used by different people. Mapping the workflow makes it clear why you need both.
Managing these documents across dozens of live shipments is where errors creep in. A mismatched consignee on the BOL, a packing slip that never made it into the box, or a master and house BOL that disagree can each stall a container. Workflow Automation Software for Forwarders uses AI document processing to read, validate, and cross-check shipping documents against the shipment record, so a wrong field is flagged before it becomes a delay at the port.
For a freight forwarder, the bill of lading is not just paperwork; it is the instrument that defines liability. An error on a BOL, such as a wrong consignee, an incorrect notify party, or a quantity that does not match the cargo, can lead to a misrouted shipment, a rejected letter of credit, or a claim. The packing slip carries far lower legal risk, but a packing slip that does not match the actual contents is the most common trigger for a customer dispute over short or damaged goods.
Keeping both documents accurate and synchronized with live container status is core operational work. Shipment Tracking & Operations Software for Forwarders ties documentation to the live shipment milestones, so the bill of lading, the packing details, and the actual position of the container all sit on one record instead of in scattered emails and spreadsheets.
A single document error can hold a container for days. See how GoFreight validates every bill of lading and packing document against the shipment record on one cloud platform.
Request a GoFreight Demo →A bill of lading is a legally binding document issued by the carrier that serves as the contract of carriage, the receipt for the goods, and often the document of title. A packing slip is an informational list created by the shipper that itemizes the contents of the shipment. The bill of lading controls how the freight moves and who can collect it; the packing slip simply tells the receiver what to count.
No. They are separate documents with separate jobs. A bill of lading is a binding carrier contract and can transfer ownership of the cargo. A packing slip has no legal force and only lists what is inside the shipment. They are used together in most international shipments, but one cannot replace the other.
A packing slip is an itemized document prepared by the shipper that lists the goods inside a package or shipment, including item descriptions, quantities, and often weights, but no prices. It travels with the freight so the receiver can check the delivery against what was ordered. It is sometimes called a delivery docket or delivery note.
Not exactly. A packing slip is a customer-facing list of the contents of one package, used mainly by the receiver. A packing list is a more formal export document that summarizes the entire consignment, including every carton, gross and net weights, and dimensions. Customs authorities and freight forwarders rely on the packing list; the packing slip usually stays on the warehouse floor.
A shipping label is attached to the outside of a package and carries only the delivery address and the tracking barcode used by the carrier. A packing slip is placed inside the package and lists the items it contains. The label moves the box to the right place; the packing slip tells the receiver what should be in it.
No. A packing slip deliberately leaves out unit prices and totals. It lists item descriptions, quantities, and often weights so the receiver can verify the goods. Pricing belongs on the commercial invoice, which is a separate document used for payment and customs duty.
A bill of lading is proof that the carrier received the goods, not proof that they were delivered. Proof of delivery is a separate signed receipt confirming the consignee accepted the freight. A surrendered original bill of lading does authorize the carrier to release the cargo, but the signed delivery receipt is what closes out the move.
For most international shipments, yes. The bill of lading is required to move the freight, clear customs, and release the cargo at destination. The packing slip is needed so the receiver can confirm the delivery matches the order. The two documents support different stages of the same shipment.
The bill of lading is issued by the carrier or by the freight forwarder handling the shipment. The packing slip is created by the shipper, seller, or warehouse that packs the goods. Because they come from different parties, both should be cross-checked against the same shipment record to catch mismatched quantities or addresses.