FOB vs DDP Explained For Importers
Understand the difference between FOB and DDP shipping terms so you can control cost, risk, and responsibility across your supply chain — and pick the right Incoterm for your next order from China, Vietnam, Mexico, or beyond.
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What Does FOB Mean?
FOB (Free on Board, sometimes called Freight on Board) is one of the most common Incoterms used in global trade. With FOB shipping, the seller is responsible for getting your goods to the port of departure and loading them onto the vessel. After that, responsibility — including freight, insurance, and customs clearance — transfers to you, the buyer. It's the term experienced importers use to control their own shipping and logistics.
- Seller covers
- Goods to port + loading
- You manage
- Freight, insurance, customs
- Risk transfers
- At the origin port
- Ideal for
- Experienced importers
What Does DDP Mean?
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) is a more turnkey shipping method. With DDP, the seller is responsible for everything: freight, customs clearance, tariffs, and delivery to your door. You pay one landed cost, and the supplier manages the logistics. It's the term that makes sourcing from overseas factories approachable for first-time buyers and cross-border sellers.
- Seller covers
- Freight, customs, tariffs, delivery
- You manage
- One landed cost
- Risk transfers
- At your door
- Ideal for
- First-time importers
FOB vs DDP Key Differences
Compare responsibilities, control, cost transparency, and risk in seconds.
- Pick FOB if you want carrier choice & lower variable costs at scale.
- Pick DDP if you want one invoice & minimal paperwork.
- FOB: plan for tariffs, brokerage, and insurance.
- DDP: verify what's included in “delivered” fees.
DDP Shipping For International Sales
If you sell across borders, DDP shipping is often the term that wins the order. Delivered Duty Paid lets you quote one all-in landed price to your overseas customer — no surprise duties at their door, no customs paperwork on their side.
One price your buyer trusts
For international sales, DDP removes the friction of unexpected import duties and broker fees on the customer's end. They see a single delivered price, which lifts conversion and reduces refused or abandoned shipments.
You own the customs risk
Selling DDP means you — or your sourcing partner — clear customs in the destination country and pay the duty. That demands accurate HS codes and a registered importer of record, but it keeps the buyer experience seamless for cross-border ecommerce and B2B sales alike.
Protect your margin
Because DDP bundles tariffs into the price, shifting 2026 duty schedules can quietly erode margin on every international sale. We audit each route so your delivered-duty-paid quote stays profitable as rates move.
How Importivity runs DDP for international sales
Whether you're shipping finished goods to overseas marketplaces or fulfilling cross-border B2B orders, we structure DDP so you stay in control of cost while your customer gets a clean, all-in delivered price.
- Correct HS classification & landed-cost modelling per destination market
- Importer-of-record and customs clearance handled end to end
- Vetted DDP quotes so no supplier markup hides inside “delivered” fees
- Tariff monitoring across key sourcing countries to defend your margin
Pros & Cons of FOB vs DDP Shipping
Choose based on control, visibility, risk, and scale.
FOB (Free on Board)
More ControlPros
- Greater control over carrier selection and routing
- Often lower long-term shipping costs for repeat importers
- Transparency with freight and customs processes
Cons
- Requires knowledge of customs and tariffs
- Higher risk for inexperienced importers
- Hidden fees if not carefully managed
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid)
Most ConvenientPros
- Convenience — the supplier handles everything
- Fewer moving parts for the buyer to manage
- Lower upfront risk for small businesses or startups
Cons
- Less visibility into actual freight and tariff costs
- Supplier may overcharge for duties or logistics
- Not ideal for large-scale importing where margins matter
FOB vs DDP: A Real Landed-Cost Example
The same $20,000 shipment, quoted both ways. Here's where the money actually goes.
With 2026 tariff schedules shifting faster than ever, knowing your true landed cost line by line is what protects your margin. Under FOB you see — and control — every line. Under DDP, they're bundled into one price.
FOB Quote
ItemizedYou manage each cost after the origin port
- Goods (FOB value)
- $20,000
- Ocean freight
- $2,400
- Cargo insurance
- $180
- Duties & tariffs (7.5%)
- $1,500
- Customs brokerage
- $350
- Drayage & final delivery
- $600
- Total Landed Cost
- $25,030
DDP Quote
All-InSeller manages everything to your door
- Delivered, duty paid — one invoice
- $26,500
- Freight breakdown
- Not disclosed
- Tariff & duty detail
- Not disclosed
- Supplier logistics margin
- Built into price
- Total Landed Cost
- $26,500
So which term saves you more?
In this example, FOB lands the same goods for about $1,470 less (~6%)— a gap that compounds with every reorder. DDP's premium is the price of simplicity: one invoice, zero customs paperwork. Our rule of thumb for 2026: choose DDP for first shipments, small test runs, and DDP shipping on international sales where buyer experience matters, then switch to FOB once volumes justify managing freight and tariffs yourself — or let Importivity manage FOB on your behalf and keep both the savings and the simplicity.
Figures are illustrative. Actual costs vary by product, HS code, route, and current 2026 tariff schedules.
Frequently Asked Questions
Still deciding between FOB and DDP for your next order? Our shipping and logistics team can map the right Incoterm to your product, volume, and destination market.
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