What customs expects
Every international IT infrastructure shipment requires a documentation package that satisfies customs authorities at both origin and destination. Missing or inconsistent documents cause delays, additional inspections, and potential fines.
Core documents
Commercial Invoice
The commercial invoice must include seller and buyer details, item descriptions, quantities, values, HS codes, and payment terms. For IT infrastructure, itemize by product category (servers, switches, storage) with model numbers and serial counts.
Packing List
A detailed packing list cross-references each pallet or package to its contents. Include dimensions, weights, and pallet IDs that match physical labels. Forwarders and customs brokers rely on this for cargo manifests.
HS Code Alignment
Harmonized System codes classify goods for tariff and regulatory purposes. IT infrastructure spans multiple HS headings — servers (8471), networking (8517), storage (8471). Correct classification prevents misrouting through wrong customs channels.
Serial Inventory
A complete serial inventory links specific devices to the shipment. This supports warranty claims, asset tracking, and compliance verification. Capture serial numbers, part numbers, and model identifiers for every item.
Best practices
- Prepare documents before freight booking, not after
- Cross-reference packing list to pallet labels
- Verify HS codes against destination country requirements
- Include a compliance checklist summarizing export control status
- Maintain a digital evidence archive alongside paper copies