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DDU
DDU (Delivered
Duty Unpaid) is a Multimodal term that must be further qualified
by naming the place up to which the seller is prepared to take responsibility
for transport costs (and the corresponding risks of transit). This
is excluding the payment of domestic duties and the ancillary clearance
charges associated with the import process at destination.
DDU will often
financially correlate to CPT. But, for the buyer DDU represents
CPT without the disadvantages of placing risks on the buyer, over
which they have no control. (See CPT)
From the seller's
perspective, DDU reverses the risk advantages of CPT, placing all
risks with the seller until the cargo arrives at the named port.
As with all
of the D prefixed terms, this term is not easy to use in conjunction
with a Documentary Credit and as a multimodal term, would require
the use of Multimodal transport documents over any traditional monomodal
documents such as Bills of Lading or Airwaybills.
Sellers are
further cautioned that, if the intended transit is beyond the point
of entry in the country of destination, then their ability to move
the goods to the final destination may be dependent on the buyer's
ability to first clear the goods through the customs authority.
The possibility of delays in transit and any resultant storage charges
(should the buyer fail to conduct clearance in good time), should
be noted.
Seller's should
be equally aware of additional charges which may be due for payment
resultant from local taxes which do not fall into the category of
'duty', but are nevertheless payable prior to release.
DDU (and DDP)
correlates closely to the generic expressions of 'free domicile'
and 'free house', which are frequently used in the transport industry.
Each should be avoided due to their ambiguous nature.
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