A consumer electronics importer placed a single purchase order with their Shenzhen supplier for 1,800 units of a new product line, scheduled for a US retail launch. Two weeks before the cargo ready date, the supplier confirmed that only 1,200 units would be ready in time. The remaining 600 units needed three additional weeks of production. The buyer faced a choice: hold the entire shipment until production caught up and miss the launch window, or split the order into two consignments and ship the ready stock immediately. They chose to split. The first 1,200 units flew out by air to meet the launch; the remaining 600 followed three weeks later by ocean to recover margin on the back end of the order.
That one decision is the textbook definition of a split shipment. The purchase order stayed one PO on the buyer's books and one contract with the supplier, but the physical cargo moved as two separate consignments, with separate transport documents, separate customs entries, and separate billing.
Split shipments are common across both ocean and air freight, but they introduce real operational complexity: PO-level visibility across multiple house bills, customs filings per consignment, and reconciling many invoices to one order. This glossary entry explains when split shipments happen, how customs treats them, and how forwarders manage the workflow without losing the audit trail.
A split shipment is one purchase order or sales order that is physically dispatched as two or more separate consignments, typically at different times or via different transport modes. Each consignment travels under its own bill of lading or air waybill and is treated by customs as a distinct entry, even though all the cargo belongs to the same underlying order.
Split shipments are rarely the customer's first plan. They happen because something in the upstream cargo flow does not line up with the original booking. The most common reasons cut across both ocean and air:
The single most important rule with split shipments: customs does not see one order. Customs sees one filing per bill of lading or air waybill. Every split is a separate entry from the regulator's perspective, with its own documentation requirements and its own duty calculation.
For a US ocean import that arrives as a split, this means:
For US air imports, the equivalent is one AMS filing per AWB. For Canadian imports, eManifest is filed per house bill, so two splits means two eManifest house bill filings on top of the carrier's primary cargo report.
The customs side is where most of the unexpected cost on a split shipment shows up. Two entries means two brokerage fees instead of one. Two ISFs means two filing charges. A trade-program claim that worked on the consolidated order may not work on a smaller split if total value drops below a threshold, or may require duplicate origin documentation. None of this is hard, but none of it happens automatically. It has to be planned at the moment the shipment splits.
A split shipment can change the duty outcome even when the goods are physically identical. If the first consignment ships under one Incoterm and the second under another (an air expedite shipped DDP, an ocean follow-up shipped FOB), the dutiable value, the importer of record, and the broker workflow can all differ. Confirm the Incoterm per split, not per PO, before either consignment leaves origin.
These three terms get used interchangeably in conversation, but they describe different things in a forwarding workflow. The differences matter because each one drives a different operational setup.
| Term | What It Means | When It Applies |
|---|---|---|
| Split shipment | One PO dispatched as multiple consignments at different times, often different modes. | Cargo readiness lag, expedite priority items, aircraft cap overflow, customs hold. |
| Partial shipment | Same idea, often the term used in the underlying sales contract or letter of credit clause. | Letters of credit, sales agreements where "partial shipments allowed: yes/no" is a contract term. |
| Consolidated shipment | Multiple POs (often from multiple shippers) combined into one container or one master AWB. | LCL consolidation, multi-supplier ocean buyer's consolidation, air freight master AWB. |
In day-to-day operations, "split shipment" and "partial shipment" describe the same physical event. The distinction is mostly which document you are looking at. Operations and forwarding documents tend to say "split shipment." Commercial contracts and letters of credit tend to say "partial shipment" and treat it as a yes/no clause the buyer and seller have to agree on in advance.
Consolidation is the opposite movement: many small orders combined into one shipment for efficiency. A consolidated shipment can itself end up split if the consolidation does not fully close out before the cut-off, but the two concepts solve different problems.
The most deliberate split (as opposed to the involuntary aircraft weight-cap split) is the expedite versus balance decision. The buyer flags a subset of the order as time critical, that subset flies out by air on the earliest available flight, and the rest of the order rides the original ocean sailing. This is the pattern behind the electronics importer story at the top of this article, and it shows up across apparel launches, seasonal SKUs, damaged-goods replacements, and demo units for enterprise customers.
The operational trick is that the two consignments now live in two different mode workflows: the air expedite is running against a matter-of-hours cargo cut-off with Air Freight Management Software tracking a house AWB against a specific flight number, while the ocean balance is running against a weekly sailing with a house B/L, ISF, and container number. Both roll up to the same PO for the buyer, but each half of the split follows its own booking template, its own filing calendar, and its own documentation set. The FMS has to keep both in view without forcing operators to duplicate anything.
Cost modeling on this pattern is straightforward: the freight premium on the air-expedited fraction of the order has to be less than the revenue lost from waiting for the ocean balance to arrive. If you cannot make that math work, the correct call is usually to fly nothing and ship the whole order by ocean. Splits that get made "just in case" without an explicit cost check are where margin quietly leaks.
The operational challenge of a split shipment is not the physical handling. Forwarders ship multi-leg cargo every day. The challenge is keeping one purchase order visible across two, three, or four consignments without losing milestone, document, or billing fidelity.
This is exactly the kind of multi-touchpoint operation that benefits from Workflow Automation Software for Forwarders. A split that happens manually requires the operator to remember three separate filing deadlines, three sets of documents, and three milestone updates. The same split managed through a freight management system inherits the parent PO's contract data, copies the matching commercial invoice line items into each child shipment, and triggers customs filings against the correct deadlines automatically.
The accounting side of a split shipment is where buyers most often feel the operational drag. The original PO is one number on the buyer's purchasing system. The actual landed cost is the sum of:
The total cost of two splits is almost always higher than the cost of the same volume shipped as one consolidated consignment. That premium is the price the buyer pays for the flexibility of getting part of the order to market sooner. The job of the forwarder is to make that cost visible up front, not to surprise the buyer in the monthly invoice run.
From the forwarder's accounting side, Freight Billing & Accounting Software for Forwarders handles split-driven invoicing by treating each child shipment as its own billable job while keeping the parent PO reference on every line, so finance and the customer can reconcile the total cost back to the original order without rebuilding the math in a spreadsheet.
Splitting a shipment is never free, so the question is when the operational and cost premium is worth paying. The answer usually falls into one of three patterns:
The pattern that almost never justifies a split is "the supplier is a little late and we always do this." Habitual splits without an explicit cost-benefit decision quietly eat margin on every order. Worth flagging in the quarterly business review with the supplier rather than absorbing as background cost.
Split shipments multiply your filings, milestones, and invoices. See how GoFreight keeps one PO visible across every split, with customs, tracking, and billing handled on one cloud platform.
Request a GoFreight Demo →A split shipment is one purchase order or sales order that is physically dispatched as two or more separate consignments, often at different times or via different transport modes. Each consignment gets its own bill of lading or air waybill and is filed with customs as a separate entry, even though all the cargo belongs to the same underlying order. Splits commonly happen when the supplier can only release part of the cargo on schedule, when an aircraft or container cannot fit the full order, or when the buyer wants priority items moved ahead of the rest.
Operationally they describe the same event: one order moving as multiple consignments. The terminology differs by context. Forwarders and ocean carriers tend to say "split shipment" when talking about the physical operation. Sales contracts and letters of credit tend to say "partial shipment" and treat it as a yes/no clause the buyer and seller have to agree on in advance. If a letter of credit says "partial shipments not allowed," the cargo must move as a single consignment or the buyer cannot present documents for payment.
Yes. Each consignment has its own bill of lading or air waybill, and customs treats every transport document as a separate filing. For US ocean imports that means a separate ISF (Importer Security Filing) per consignment and a separate CBP entry. For US air imports it means a separate AMS filing per AWB. For Canadian imports each split needs its own eManifest house bill filing. The result is more brokerage fees, more entry summary work, and more filing deadlines to track than a single consolidated shipment would generate.
Yes, and this catches buyers off guard. Each entry stands on its own for HTS classification, value declaration, and trade-program eligibility. If the splits cross different time periods, a tariff or anti-dumping rate change can apply to only one of them. If a USMCA or GSP claim depends on documented origin per entry, the buyer must produce a valid certificate for each consignment. And if value or quantity changes between splits, the classification or duty calculation can change as well. Confirm classification and trade-program treatment per consignment, not per PO.
Splits happen when waiting for the full cargo costs the buyer more than the freight premium on the early consignment. The most common drivers are time to market for a product launch, contract penalty exposure for late delivery, low inventory in market on a hot-selling SKU, or a physical limit (aircraft weight cap, container cube limit) that makes a single move impossible. The forwarder almost never makes the split decision in isolation. It is a buyer call based on the cost of waiting versus the cost of splitting.
Air freight bookings are built around a specific chargeable weight and volume allowance on a specific flight. If the cargo arrives at the airline's terminal heavier or larger than booked, the carrier loads what fits on the booked flight and rolls the overflow to the next available flight, which can be hours or days later. The buyer's one order is now two AWBs with two arrival times and two separate customs filings on the receiving end. This is the most common involuntary split in air freight and one of the strongest arguments for accurate cargo dimensions and weights at the booking stage.
The buyer flags the priority subset of the order (launch stock, hot-selling SKU, replacement pallet) and the forwarder books that portion as an air expedite against the earliest available flight, while the remainder rides the original ocean sailing. Each half of the split gets its own house transport document, its own customs filing, its own milestone timeline, and its own freight invoice. Both halves keep the parent PO reference so the buyer can still see one order view. The cost check is whether the freight premium on the air portion is less than the revenue lost from waiting for the full order to arrive by ocean.
The buyer's PO number stays as the parent reference on every child shipment. Each consignment gets its own house B/L or house AWB, with the PO number carried as a shared reference field. Milestones (booked, on-board, arrived, customs released, delivered) update per shipment, and a freight management system rolls them up to the parent PO so the buyer can see one order view: "consignment 1 delivered, consignment 2 on-board, consignment 3 in production." Without this aggregation, the buyer's operations team has to chase status across multiple shipment numbers manually.
Yes, almost always. Splits double or triple per-shipment fixed costs: customs entry fees, ISF or AMS charges, origin and destination handling, and brokerage fees apply per consignment, not per PO. Freight rates are also usually less efficient on the smaller splits because the booking does not earn the volume break. The premium is the price the buyer pays for the flexibility of getting part of the order to market sooner, and it is worth modeling explicitly before deciding to split rather than treating it as background cost on every order.
Each split is its own billable shipment from the forwarder's perspective, with its own freight charges, customs filings, and handling fees. The accounting system has to invoice per consignment while keeping the parent PO reference visible on every line, so the buyer can reconcile the total cost back to the original order. A freight forwarder running this through a connected freight management platform handles the link automatically. A forwarder running splits through spreadsheets and email tends to either lose the PO reference or under-bill on the second consignment by accident.