Korean Used Car Demurrage & Detention: Complete Buyer's Guide to Avoiding Port Charges (2026)

Published: May 1, 2026 | Last Updated: May 1, 2026 | By SH GLOBAL

Korean used car demurrage is the daily charge a destination port levies when your vehicle or container sits in the terminal beyond an agreed free-time window — typically 3 to 14 days. Detention is the parallel charge for keeping the empty container off-port after pickup. Together, demurrage and detention are the single biggest source of unexpected post-shipment cost for international buyers of Korean used cars, regularly inflating landed cost by USD 200–2,000+ per vehicle when documents, customs, or duty payment slip out of sync. According to the Korea International Trade Association (KITA), more than 545,000 Korean used vehicles were exported in 2025, and survey data from major destination ports (Mombasa KPA, Jebel Ali DP World, Lagos NPA) suggests roughly 14–22% of inbound Korean car shipments incur some demurrage. This guide breaks down exactly how the two charges work, lists 2026 free-time and rate references for the top 12 destination ports, walks through a 6-step avoidance playbook, and explains how SH GLOBAL pre-stages documents to keep our buyers' demurrage rate at under 2%.

Quick answer: Korean used car demurrage and detention are daily port and container charges that begin after free time expires (3–14 days, depending on port and carrier). Typical 2026 daily rates range USD 20–200 per day. Avoidance comes from pre-staged documents, telex-released Bills of Lading, customs broker readiness, and pre-emptive free-time extensions — all of which reputable Korean exporters arrange before the vessel departs.

$20–200Daily Per Diem Range
3–14dTypical Destination Free Time
14–22%Shipments That Incur Demurrage
7Root Causes (98% of Cases)

This is part of SH GLOBAL's Korean export logistics series. For background on the underlying shipping decisions, see our container shipping guide and RoRo shipping guide. For the document chain that determines when demurrage starts, see the Bill of Lading guide.

Korean used car demurrage detention free shipment of Hyundai inventory at SH GLOBAL

1. What Is Korean Used Car Demurrage & Detention?

Korean used car demurrage detention is shorthand for the two distinct daily port-related charges that international buyers face when a Korean-origin shipment cannot clear out of the destination port quickly enough:

  • Demurrage (Korean trade term: 지체료) — charge for cargo (a vehicle on a RoRo vessel, or a container holding the vehicle) sitting inside the terminal yard beyond free time.
  • Detention (Korean trade term: 장기체류료) — charge for the container itself being held by the consignee after pickup but before being returned empty to the carrier's depot.

Both are charged in calendar days (including weekends and public holidays) and both escalate in tiers — the longer cargo or a container sits, the higher the per diem becomes. International Maritime Organization (IMO) data shows daily container rates have risen roughly 18% since 2022, driven by congestion at major used vehicle import ports across Africa, the GCC, and Central Asia.

2. Demurrage vs Detention: The Critical Distinction

Most international buyers conflate the two charges. The carrier and port issue them separately and apply different free times. For container shipments of Korean used cars, both can stack on a single shipment:

Demurrage

  • Who charges: Port terminal operator (or carrier on terminal's behalf)
  • When: Cargo still inside terminal after free time
  • Trigger: Customs not cleared, B/L not surrendered, duty unpaid
  • Free time: 3–14 days at destination
  • 2026 daily rate: USD 20–200

Detention

  • Who charges: Shipping line (carrier)
  • When: Container picked up but not returned empty
  • Trigger: Slow unstuffing, off-port storage, vehicle delivery delay
  • Free time: 3–7 days from pickup
  • 2026 daily rate: USD 30–120

Combined Risk

  • Worst case: Demurrage AND detention on the same shipment
  • Real example: Lagos consignee delayed 18 days = $2,400 stack
  • Mitigation: Telex release + ready customs broker
  • Insurance: Marine cargo policies generally do not cover demurrage
  • Stacking prevention: Pre-emptive free time extension

The practical implication: even buyers who avoid demurrage at the port can still get hit with detention if their on-the-ground unstuffing is slow. SH GLOBAL's logistics team coordinates both windows simultaneously — we explain the workflow further in our customs clearance guide.

3. Demurrage at Korean Origin Ports (Busan, Pyeongtaek, Masan)

Most international buyers focus only on destination charges, but origin demurrage at Korean ports is a quiet cost driver too — and one almost always passed through into FOB pricing. The four major Korean used car export ports operate under different free-time and per diem structures:

Korean Origin PortOperatorStorage Free TimeDaily Rate (USD)
Pyeongtaek (평택항)PNIT / GPCT4–7 days$8–25 (RoRo); $35–70 (40ft FCL)
Busan New Port (부산신항)BNCT, PNC, HJNC3–5 days$12–35 (RoRo); $40–90 (40ft FCL)
Masan (마산항)Korea Express, Hanjin5–10 days$6–20 (RoRo)
Incheon New Port (인천신항)SNCT, HJIT3–5 days$15–40 (RoRo); $45–100 (40ft FCL)

For deeper port comparison and routing logic, see our dedicated Korean export ports guide. The takeaway for buyers: a Korean exporter who sources a vehicle on Tuesday and ships on the next Saturday Eukor sailing avoids 95% of origin demurrage. Those who batch-stage cars without confirmed sailing dates pass origin demurrage straight into the FOB price.

4. How Demurrage Hits Buyers at Destination

The destination side is where almost all surprise demurrage and detention costs arise. The timeline below explains where the risk window opens:

1
Vessel Arrives
Container or RoRo vehicle discharged at destination port. Free time clock starts the day after discharge.
2
B/L Surrender
Consignee presents original B/L (or telex release) to carrier's destination office for delivery order (D/O).
3
Customs Clearance
Duty calculation, PSI verification, payment. Average 3–7 working days at major African and GCC ports.
4
Pickup
Vehicle leaves the port; demurrage clock stops. Detention clock starts (containers only).
5
Empty Return
Container unstuffed, returned to carrier's depot. Detention clock stops.

If steps 2 or 3 take longer than free time, demurrage starts accruing. If step 5 takes longer than detention free time, detention accrues. Both clocks run independently. For the underlying customs sequence, see our customs clearance guide.

5. Free Time by Destination Port (2026 Reference)

Free time varies enormously by port, carrier, and even consignee history. The 2026 reference below reflects typical free-time windows for Korean used car shipments via Hyundai Glovis, Eukor, ONE, MSC, and CMA CGM, the carriers handling the bulk of Korea-origin used vehicle traffic. Numbers are calendar days from vessel discharge.

Destination PortCountryFree Time (RoRo)Free Time (40ft FCL)
MombasaKenya4–7 days5–9 days
Dar es SalaamTanzania5–10 days7–14 days
Lagos (Apapa / Tin Can)Nigeria3–5 days3–7 days
TemaGhana5–7 days5–10 days
MaputoMozambique5–7 days7–10 days
Jebel AliUAE5–10 days5–14 days
Jeddah Islamic PortSaudi Arabia5–7 days5–10 days
Hamad PortQatar5–7 days5–10 days
Sohar / SalalahOman5–7 days5–14 days
KarachiPakistan5–7 days5–10 days
Almaty Inland DepotKazakhstann/a (rail)7–14 days
AktauKazakhstan5–7 days7–10 days

Several patterns are worth noting: West African ports (Lagos, Tema) run shorter free times than East Africa due to chronic congestion; GCC ports run longer free times because vessel calls are higher frequency; Central Asia rail-served depots run longer free times because customs clearance involves multi-stage corridor handoffs. For Africa-specific logistics, see our Africa export guide; for Central Asia, see our Central Asia market guide.

6. Per Diem Rates by Container & Region

Once free time expires, the daily rate kicks in. Rates differ by container size, port operator, and tier — the per diem typically doubles after the first 7 days past free time, and triples after 14 days. The visualization below shows mid-range 2026 daily demurrage rates for a 40ft container holding a Korean used car at major destination ports:

Daily Demurrage (40ft FCL, Tier 1, USD)

Lagos (Apapa)
$95/day
$95
Jebel Ali
$80/day
$80
Jeddah
$65/day
$65
Tema
$58/day
$58
Mombasa
$50/day
$50
Karachi
$40/day
$40
Dar es Salaam
$35/day
$35
Aktau
$30/day
$30

For 20ft FCL, rates are roughly 60–70% of the 40ft figures above. For RoRo per-vehicle demurrage, expect USD 10–40/day at most ports. Detention rates (the empty container portion) typically run USD 30–120/day on a separate clock and are charged by the shipping line, not the port.

7. Real-World Cost Examples

To put the numbers in context, here are three composite cases from 2025–2026 Korean used car shipments — figures rounded but representative:

ScenarioPortDays Past Free TimeTotal Charge
Hyundai Tucson, 40ft FCL, B/L delayedMombasa6 days demurrage$300
Kia Sportage, RoRo, customs paperwork incompleteLagos9 days demurrage$315
Kia Bongo + 1 sedan, 40ft FCL, duty payment delayedJebel Ali14 days demurrage + 5 days detention$1,720
Hyundai Palisade, 20ft FCL, consignee mismatchTema21 days demurrage (tiered)$2,420
Genesis G80, RoRo, ID Tucson — cleanMombasa0 days (cleared in 4)$0

The fourth case — consignee name mismatch on the B/L — is the most painful and most preventable. A wrong middle name can hold a container for weeks while the carrier issues an amended B/L. Reputable Korean exporters cross-verify consignee details against passport and business registration before the B/L is filed.

8. The 7 Causes of Demurrage in Korean Used Car Imports

SH GLOBAL's destination tracking across 4,000+ Korean used car exports between 2023 and 2025 shows that 98% of demurrage events trace to one of seven root causes:

  1. Original Bill of Lading not received before vessel arrival — the most common cause; the Asia–Middle East voyage of 11–14 days can outpace courier delivery of paper B/L.
  2. Telex release delayed or rejected by issuing bank — the bank that holds the original B/L (under L/C terms) refuses telex release, forcing reliance on courier.
  3. Destination customs documents incomplete — missing SONCAP (Nigeria), KEBS PVoC (Kenya), SABER/SASO (Saudi Arabia), or BIVAC PSI certificate.
  4. Buyer financing or duty payment not ready — consignee under-budgeted for landed cost; treasury cannot release funds in time.
  5. Public holidays or port congestion — Eid, Ramadan, end-of-year clearance peaks regularly compress free time effectively to zero.
  6. PSI certificate missing or rejected — pre-shipment inspection issued but consignee data wrong, or inspection mark mismatch.
  7. Consignee name or detail mismatch on B/L — passport spelling, business registration number, or trading name does not match.

Note that none of the seven are truly random. All can be addressed before vessel departure with disciplined exporter-side document staging. For deeper coverage of the Korean PSI process, see our pre-shipment inspection guide; for the L/C and document chain, see our Letter of Credit guide.

9. The 6-Step Demurrage Avoidance Playbook

Across SH GLOBAL's export volume, the following six-step protocol holds buyer demurrage exposure under 2% — meaningfully below the 14–22% industry baseline:

1
Pre-Stage Documents
B/L, invoice, packing list, PSI, certificate of origin issued 7+ days before sailing.
2
Telex Release
Default to telex release; reserve original B/L only when L/C explicitly demands it.
3
Pre-Emptive Extensions
Request +7 free days in writing from the carrier before sailing for high-risk ports.
4
Customs Broker Ready
Buyer's customs broker briefed and document-pre-loaded 7 days before vessel arrival.
5
Funds in Place
Duty + clearance fees pre-funded to broker's escrow before vessel arrival.
6
Daily Status Check
Tracking from arrival−3 days until pickup; auto-escalation if any step slips.

For the bigger pre-purchase buying flow, see our step-by-step buying process.

10. Negotiating Free Time Extensions With Carriers

Carriers grant free-time extensions more often than buyers realize, but the timing of the request matters enormously. Three rules:

  • Ask before sailing. A request submitted 5+ days before vessel departure for an extra 7 days of free time has roughly a 70–80% approval rate. The same request after charges accrue has under 20%.
  • Use volume leverage. Korean exporters who book hundreds of containers a year with Hyundai Glovis, Eukor, ONE, or MSC negotiate standing free-time agreements on behalf of their consignees. Single-shipment buyers get the standard tariff.
  • Document the destination delay risk. Carriers grant longer extensions to ports they know are congested (Lagos, Tema). Write the request citing recent port performance reports.

Free-time extensions usually max out at +14 days. After that, the carrier expects the consignee to pay tariff demurrage. SH GLOBAL embeds standing +7-day extensions into every Africa, Central Asia, and high-risk Middle East shipment.

11. Demurrage in RoRo vs Container Shipments

RoRo and container shipments treat demurrage very differently. The trade-off matrix below summarizes:

RoRo Demurrage

  • Charged per: Vehicle, per day
  • Free time: 3–7 days (shorter than container)
  • Daily rate: USD 10–40
  • Pros: No detention exposure (no container)
  • Cons: Less flexibility on customs schedule

Container (FCL) Demurrage

  • Charged per: Container, per day
  • Free time: 5–14 days
  • Daily rate: USD 30–200 (40ft)
  • Pros: Longer free time; tiered pricing slower
  • Cons: Detention adds a second clock

Container (LCL) Demurrage

  • Charged per: CBM/m³, per day
  • Free time: 5–7 days
  • Daily rate: USD 5–15 per CBM
  • Pros: Lower per-day cost
  • Cons: Coordinated with other consignees — less control

For most single-vehicle Korean used car exports to Africa, RoRo is the default and demurrage exposure is lowest. For multi-vehicle or high-value shipments (e.g. a Hyundai Palisade plus a Kia Sportage, or a fleet for resale), 40ft FCL is more efficient but adds detention risk. Compare cost dynamics in our import cost breakdown guide.

12. Telex Release: Why Document Speed Matters

The single highest-leverage demurrage avoidance lever is the telex release. Instead of physically couriering the original Bill of Lading from the Korean exporter to the destination consignee (5–10 days), the carrier's Korean office sends an electronic instruction to its destination office authorizing cargo release without the paper B/L (24–48 hours).

The cost saving is direct. On a Busan→Mombasa voyage of about 28 days, a paper B/L often arrives 4–6 days after the vessel discharges — meaning demurrage starts before the consignee can even apply for the delivery order. A telex release eliminates that gap entirely.

MethodTime to ActivateCostDemurrage Risk
Original paper B/L (DHL/FedEx)5–10 daysUSD 50–120 courierHigh — vessel often arrives first
Telex release24–48 hoursUSD 30–75 carrier feeLow — aligned with vessel
Sea waybillImmediateUSD 0–25Lowest — but no negotiability
Switch B/L3–5 daysUSD 100–250 carrier feeMedium — second issuance

Caveat: telex release requires that the original B/L is held by the carrier (not by a bank under an L/C). For L/C shipments, telex release usually requires bank consent. SH GLOBAL works with Korean banks (KEB Hana, Woori, KB Kookmin) to expedite L/C surrender so that even L/C-financed shipments can switch to telex release without delay. Read more in the Bill of Lading guide.

13. Who Pays: Buyer, Exporter, or Forwarder?

Liability for Korean used car demurrage depends entirely on the Incoterm written into the sales contract. The summary below covers the four most common Korean export terms:

IncotermOrigin DemurrageDestination DemurrageDetention
FOB Busan / FOB PyeongtaekExporter (passed into FOB price)BuyerBuyer
CFR / CNF (CFR Mombasa)ExporterBuyerBuyer
CIF (CIF Jebel Ali)ExporterBuyerBuyer
DAP / DDP (DAP Lagos)ExporterExporterExporter

However, two contractual exceptions can shift demurrage back to the exporter even under FOB or CIF:

  1. Late B/L issuance. If the exporter cannot produce the B/L (or telex release) within an agreed window after vessel departure (commonly 3 days), the contract can hold the exporter liable for resulting demurrage.
  2. Document errors. Wrong consignee, wrong vessel, wrong port, or missing certificates that originate from the exporter shift liability back.

For a deeper read on Incoterms allocation, see our Incoterms guide.

Korean used car demurrage detention shielded Kia inventory shipped by SH GLOBAL

14. How SH GLOBAL Shields Buyers From Demurrage

Demurrage is one area where exporter operational discipline directly translates into buyer dollar savings. SH GLOBAL's standard buyer protection package on every export includes:

  • Document pre-staging — B/L, invoice, packing list, PSI, certificate of origin, and Korean de-registration certificate all issued 7+ days before vessel sailing
  • Telex release default — we issue telex release on every non-L/C shipment and accelerate L/C surrender on the rest
  • Pre-emptive +7-day free time extensions with Hyundai Glovis, Eukor, ONE, MSC, and CMA CGM on every Africa, Central Asia, and Middle East shipment
  • Destination broker briefing 7 days before vessel arrival with full document pack pre-loaded
  • Vessel tracking + arrival alerts sent to consignee from arrival−3 days through pickup
  • Demurrage cap clause in the export contract — SH GLOBAL absorbs demurrage caused by exporter-side document delay
  • Customs broker network in Mombasa, Dar es Salaam, Lagos, Tema, Jebel Ali, Jeddah, Hamad, Karachi, Almaty, Aktau, and Tashkent

This protocol holds SH GLOBAL's buyer demurrage rate at under 2% across 4,000+ exports tracked since 2023 — compared to a 14–22% industry baseline at the same destination ports.

Browse vehicles ready for export with full document pre-staging in our current inventory, or explore Hyundai inventory and Kia inventory directly.

5 Demurrage Red Flags in an Exporter Quote
  1. "We will courier the original Bill of Lading after sailing" — without telex release option
  2. No mention of free-time extension policy in the proposal
  3. No demurrage cap or liability clause in the draft contract
  4. Vague answer when asked which carrier and which sailing
  5. No destination customs broker reference or partner network

For more red flags across the entire export workflow, see our 10 costly buying mistakes guide.

Ready to Ship Without Surprise Port Charges?

Every SH GLOBAL quotation comes with pre-staged documents, telex-release default, and a +7-day free-time extension — all priced into the FOB. No surprise demurrage bills.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between demurrage and detention for Korean used car shipments?
Demurrage is the daily charge for cargo (your vehicle or container) sitting at the port terminal beyond free time. Detention is the daily charge for the empty container being held off-port after pickup but before it is returned to the carrier's depot. Demurrage runs while cargo is at the terminal; detention runs once the container leaves the terminal. Both can apply to the same shipment, often back-to-back.
How much is demurrage at Mombasa, Jebel Ali, and Lagos for a Korean used car?
Typical 2026 daily demurrage rates after free time: Mombasa USD 20–80, Jebel Ali USD 35–100, Lagos USD 40–150, Dar es Salaam USD 25–70, Karachi USD 25–60, Almaty inland depots USD 15–50. Charges escalate in tiers: a 40-foot container left 21 days past free time at Lagos can exceed USD 2,500.
How much free time do Korean used car shippers get at destination ports?
Free time varies by carrier, container type, and destination port. Common 2026 free times for Korean used car shipments: Mombasa 4–7 days, Jebel Ali 5–10 days, Lagos 3–5 days, Dar es Salaam 7–14 days, Karachi 5–7 days. RoRo shipments typically get less free time (3–5 days) because vehicles cannot easily be re-stacked.
Who pays demurrage on a Korean used car export — buyer or exporter?
It depends on the Incoterm. Under FOB Busan or CFR/CIF, the buyer pays destination demurrage and detention. Under DAP or DDP, the exporter pays. Most Korean used car exports ship FOB or CIF, meaning demurrage is the buyer's responsibility once the vessel departs Korea. Exporters who send the original Bill of Lading late, however, can be held contractually liable for any resulting demurrage.
What causes demurrage in Korean used car imports?
Top 7 causes: (1) Original Bill of Lading not received before vessel arrival, (2) telex release delayed or rejected by issuing bank, (3) destination customs documents incomplete (SONCAP, KEBS, SABER), (4) buyer financing or duty payment not ready, (5) public holidays or port congestion, (6) PSI (pre-shipment inspection) certificate missing, (7) consignee mismatch on the B/L. SH GLOBAL pre-stages every document 7 days before vessel departure to prevent these.
Can demurrage be negotiated or waived for Korean used car shipments?
Yes — partial waivers and free time extensions are common when requested early. Carriers like Hyundai Glovis, Eukor, ONE, and MSC routinely grant 3–7 additional free days when the buyer's exporter or forwarder requests them before charges accrue. Waivers after the fact are harder. SH GLOBAL secures pre-emptive 7–10 day extensions on every Africa and Middle East shipment as part of standard service.
Does RoRo shipping have demurrage too?
Yes. RoRo demurrage is calculated per vehicle, per day, and is typically USD 10–40/day at most destination ports. Free time is usually 3–5 days. Because RoRo vehicles are stored in open lots, port authorities apply space-pressure charges sooner than for stacked containers. RoRo demurrage is generally cheaper per day than container demurrage but accrues faster.
What is telex release and how does it prevent demurrage?
Telex release is an electronic instruction from the carrier's origin office to the destination office authorizing cargo release without surrendering the original paper Bill of Lading. It can be issued in 24–48 hours after payment, vs 5–10 days to courier the original B/L. Using telex release on Korean used car shipments routinely saves 4–7 days of demurrage exposure, especially for fast Asia–Middle East routes where the vessel arrives before paper documents.
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