DDU stands for Delivered Duty Unpaid, an Incoterm where the seller delivers goods all the way to a named destination in the buyer's country and covers every transport cost and risk to that point, except import customs clearance, duties, and taxes, which stay with the buyer. If you have ever traced a labyrinth of trade terms, from "Incoterms" to abbreviations like DDU and DDP, this guide settles exactly what DDU means, who pays for what, when risk transfers, and how DDU compares to the terms that replaced it.
A machinery manufacturer in Germany ships $240,000 of industrial equipment to a buyer in Mexico City. The contract says DDU. The seller arranges everything: pickup, ocean freight, inland transport to the buyer's warehouse. But when the shipment reaches Mexican customs, the buyer is not ready. They have not appointed a customs broker, have no import permits in hand, and have no idea what duties they owe. The shipment sits in a bonded warehouse for three weeks, racking up $8,500 in storage fees.
That scenario plays out more often than it should. DDU puts a specific obligation on the buyer to handle import clearance, duties, and taxes. When that responsibility is not clearly communicated and planned for, the whole shipment stalls at the destination border. Whether you are a freight forwarder advising clients or a shipper negotiating contract terms, understanding DDU prevents expensive misunderstandings.
DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid) is an Incoterm under which the seller delivers goods to a named destination in the buyer's country, bearing all costs and risks of transport to that point, except import duties, taxes, and customs clearance, which are the buyer's responsibility.
The abbreviation DDU stands for Delivered Duty Unpaid. It was originally published under Incoterms 2000 by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). The "Duty Unpaid" half of the name is the entire point of the term: the seller's quoted price does not include the cost of importing the goods.
In practical terms, under DDU the seller handles:
The buyer is responsible for:
DDU was officially retired when the ICC published Incoterms 2010. Its modern replacement is DAP (Delivered at Place). Despite this, DDU still appears in trade contracts worldwide, especially where legacy contract templates remain in use. Many traders say "DDU" colloquially even when they technically mean DAP. If your contract reads DDU, treat the obligations as identical to DAP.
Understanding exactly who handles what under DDU is what prevents disputes. Here is the full breakdown for each party.
| Responsibility | Details |
|---|---|
| Goods and commercial invoice | Provide the goods as specified in the contract, with the commercial invoice and any required conformity documentation. |
| Export clearance | Obtain export licenses and permits and handle export customs formalities in the origin country. |
| Origin transport | Arrange and pay for pickup and inland transport from the seller's premises to the port or airport of departure. |
| Main carriage | Arrange and pay for international freight (ocean, air, or land) from origin country to destination country. |
| Destination delivery | Arrange and pay for transport from the port or airport of arrival to the named destination, such as the buyer's warehouse or job site. |
| Risk transfer | Bear all risk of loss or damage until the goods are placed at the buyer's disposal at the named destination. |
| Insurance | No obligation to insure, but must provide information the buyer needs to arrange their own coverage if requested. |
| Documentation | Provide the buyer with transport documents, delivery confirmation, and documents needed for import, such as certificates of origin and packing lists. |
| Responsibility | Details |
|---|---|
| Payment for goods | Pay the purchase price as agreed in the contract. |
| Import clearance | Handle all import customs formalities, including import licenses, permits, and regulatory approvals. |
| Duties and taxes | Pay all import duties, taxes (VAT, GST), and customs processing fees in the destination country. |
| Unloading | Arrange and pay for unloading the goods from the arriving transport vehicle at the named destination. |
| Risk after delivery | Bear all risk of loss or damage from the moment the goods are placed at their disposal at the named destination. |
| Inspection costs | Pay for any mandatory pre shipment inspection required by the destination country's authorities. |
Under DDU, risk transfers from the seller to the buyer at the named destination, before unloading and before import customs clearance. This is the single distinction that causes the most confusion, so it is worth being precise about.
The seller bears the risk during the entire journey. That covers everything from the origin warehouse, through export customs, across the ocean or through the air, and through inland transport in the destination country, right up until the goods arrive at the agreed delivery point.
A Korean electronics manufacturer ships a container of components DDU to a distribution center in Rotterdam. The container travels by ocean from Busan to Rotterdam port, then by truck to the buyer's warehouse in an industrial park outside the city.
This is why sellers and buyers should define the named place of delivery precisely in the contract. Vague terms like "DDU Netherlands" invite disputes. "DDU Buyer's Warehouse, Industrieweg 45, Rotterdam" leaves no room for argument.
Since DDU was replaced by DAP in 2010, and DDP sits at the opposite end of the seller obligation spectrum, understanding all three together is what makes contract terms clear. For a deeper look at the closely related rule, see our guide to what DAP means in international trade.
| Feature | DDU (Incoterms 2000) | DAP (Incoterms 2010 / 2020) | DDP (Incoterms 2010 / 2020) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Delivered Duty Unpaid | Delivered at Place | Delivered Duty Paid |
| Current status | Superseded (still used in contracts) | Active | Active |
| Seller delivers to | Named destination | Named destination | Named destination |
| Export clearance | Seller | Seller | Seller |
| Main carriage | Seller | Seller | Seller |
| Import clearance | Buyer | Buyer | Seller |
| Import duties and taxes | Buyer | Buyer | Seller |
| Unloading at destination | Buyer | Buyer | Buyer (unless agreed otherwise) |
| Risk transfer point | At named destination, before unloading | At named destination, before unloading | At named destination, before unloading |
| Best for | Legacy contracts | Most international shipments | Seller wants full control, or e commerce |
The key point: DAP and DDU are functionally identical. The ICC replaced DDU with DAP mainly for clarity and simplification when it consolidated 13 Incoterms down to 11 in the 2010 revision. If your contract says DDU, the obligations match DAP exactly: the seller delivers to the named place, and the buyer handles import formalities.
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) flips the script. Under DDP, the seller takes on import clearance, duties, and taxes on top of everything else. That gives the buyer a true door to door price but puts a heavy regulatory burden on the seller in a foreign country.
Even though DDU has been replaced by DAP, the underlying delivery structure remains one of the most popular in international trade. Here is when this arrangement works and when it does not.
Most DDU problems trace back to four recurring errors. Each one is avoidable with a short conversation before the goods move.
For freight forwarders managing DDU shipments, the challenge is coordination. You are often the bridge between a seller who thinks the job is done once the goods leave origin and a buyer who does not realize they have obligations until the shipment is sitting at customs.
Here is how experienced forwarders handle DDU effectively:
Managing many DDU shipments across ocean and air lanes requires a system that keeps all documentation, milestones, and party communications in one place. Forwarders handling high volumes of DDU and DAP cargo often rely on platforms like GoFreight's Shipment Tracking & Operations Software for Forwarders to maintain visibility across every shipment stage, from booking through final delivery confirmation, with Ocean Import Freight Management Software coordinating destination clearance milestones.
DDU shipments live or die on coordination between seller, buyer, and customs. See how GoFreight keeps every milestone, document, and duty handoff on one cloud platform.
Request a GoFreight Demo →DDU stands for Delivered Duty Unpaid. It is an Incoterm where the seller delivers goods to a named destination in the buyer's country, covering all transport costs and risks up to that point. The buyer is responsible for import customs clearance, duties, taxes, and unloading. DDU was part of Incoterms 2000 and has been replaced by DAP (Delivered at Place) in Incoterms 2010 and 2020, though the term is still widely used in trade contracts.
DDU stands for Delivered Duty Unpaid. The "Duty Unpaid" part is the defining feature of the term: the seller's quoted price does not include import duties or taxes. The seller delivers the goods to the buyer's named destination, and the buyer pays the import charges and clears customs.
DDU is no longer an official Incoterm. It was published under Incoterms 2000 and was removed when the ICC released Incoterms 2010, which replaced it with DAP (Delivered at Place). DDU is still written into many trade contracts, especially where legacy templates remain in use. When a current contract says DDU, treat the obligations as identical to DAP.
Functionally, yes. When the ICC updated Incoterms in 2010, DDU was replaced by DAP and the obligations are essentially identical. The seller delivers to the named place, bears all transport costs and risks to that point, and the buyer handles import clearance and duties. If you see DDU in a contract today, it carries the same meaning as DAP.
The buyer pays all import duties, taxes, and customs fees under DDU. This is the defining characteristic of the term. "Duty Unpaid" means the seller's price does not include import charges, so DDU charges such as customs duty, VAT or GST, and any clearance processing fees fall to the buyer. Buyers should factor estimated duties into their total landed cost before agreeing to DDU terms.
Risk transfers when the goods are placed at the buyer's disposal at the named destination, before unloading. The seller bears all risk during the entire transport chain, from origin through international carriage to the destination address. Once the goods arrive at the agreed place and are available for the buyer to take, risk shifts to the buyer.
No. DDU does not obligate either party to arrange cargo insurance. However, because the seller bears risk for the entire transport journey, it is strongly advisable for the seller to insure the goods. If the seller chooses not to, the buyer should arrange their own coverage. The contract should explicitly state which party is responsible for insurance.
Under DDU, the buyer handles import clearance and pays all duties and taxes. Under DDP (Delivered Duty Paid), the seller takes on import clearance, duties, and taxes as well, giving the buyer a true door to door landed price. DDU shifts the import burden to the buyer, while DDP places maximum cost and regulatory responsibility on the seller.
It depends on who is better positioned to handle import clearance. Use DDU, or its modern equivalent DAP, when the buyer has established import capabilities, a customs broker, and wants control over their duty payments. Use DDP when the seller wants to offer a fully landed price, the buyer is unfamiliar with importing, or the transaction is consumer facing such as e commerce. DDP shifts more cost and regulatory burden to the seller but simplifies the process for the buyer.