Payment terms define the allocation of commercial risk, cash flow timing, and the trust relationship between buyer and seller. Choosing the right payment term protects your business from non-payment, financial loss, or costly disputes. Below is a practical guide to the eight most common payment terms, their pros and cons, real-world examples, and recommended practices for exporters and importers.
How it works: Buyer transfers funds before shipment.
Pros for exporter: Payment secured before goods leave. No credit risk.
Cons for importer: High trust burden; importer risks non-delivery.
Typical use: First-time orders, custom manufacturing, high-risk buyers, small volumes.
How it works: Buyer’s bank issues LC guaranteeing payment against conforming documents (invoice, B/L, packing list, certificate of origin, etc.).
Pros: Strong bank guarantee, reduces payment/default risk for exporter and provides documentary control for buyer.
Cons: Costly (bank fees), document strictness (discrepancies lead to non-payment), requires documentary expertise.
Tip: Use confirmed irrevocable LCs where political or bank risk is a concern.
How it works: Exporter’s bank forwards documents to buyer’s bank; payment (D/P) or acceptance (D/A) triggers release.
Pros: Lower bank fees than LC, some documentary control retained.
Cons: No payment guarantee from the bank; exporter carries credit risk.
How it works: Seller ships goods and invoices; buyer pays within agreed credit days.
Pros for buyer: Best cash flow and lowest finance cost.
Cons for seller: High credit risk; requires good credit management or trade credit insurance.
How it works: Exporter ships goods, but title/ownership and payment transfer only after the goods are sold by the importer.
Pros: Good for market testing and retailer relationships.
Cons: Highest risk for exporter; susceptible to slow sales and inventory ageing.
How it works: Buyer pays on sight in exchange for documents enabling cargo collection. Practically similar to D/P.
How it works: Automated matching of data through bank systems; payment obligation arises upon matching conditions.
Pros: Faster and more automated than LCs; suitable for high-volume, digitally capable traders.
How it works: Seller delivers goods to buyer’s premises and is responsible for import duties, taxes, customs clearance, and all logistics.
Pros for buyer: Minimal hassle and risk.
Cons for seller: Maximum cost and legal responsibility; need reliable local agents and deep knowledge of importer country regulations.
| Scenario | Recommended Payment Terms |
|---|---|
| New buyer, high risk | Advance Payment, LC (confirmed) |
| Established buyer, trusted | Open Account with credit checks or trade credit insurance |
| Large, regulated imports (buyer’s country requires) | LC (mandatory in some jurisdictions) |
| Testing a new market or product | Consignment (limited) or small Advance Payment |
| Seller wants strong documentary control | LC or Documentary Collection |
Certain import regimes require LCs for larger imports or specific product categories. Examples (non-exhaustive): Bangladesh, Algeria, Ethiopia, Uzbekistan. Always verify local import regulations and central bank rules before agreeing on terms.
Payment terms are a strategic decision: they balance commercial risk, cash flow, and customer relationships. Conservative exporters start with secure methods (Advance, LC, D/P) for new buyers, then gradually extend more favorable terms (Open Account) to proven partners. DDP and consignment are specialist choices that require operational capacity and trust.
Kivaro Global can help you structure sales contracts, review LCs, and set internal controls so your international payments are secure, transparent, and profitable.
Advance Payment is the safest for exporters because payment is received before shipment. A well-structured and confirmed LC is also highly secure.
Open Account is acceptable for trusted, repeat buyers or when you have trade credit insurance or factoring to cover receivables.
Charges include issuance fees, advising fees, confirmation fees, negotiation charges, amendment fees and reimbursement/bank transfer fees. Costs vary by bank and country.
Yes. Always combine Incoterms (e.g., FOB, CIF, DDP) with payment terms to clarify responsibility for transport, insurance and customs.
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