Korean Used Car Incoterms: FOB vs CIF vs CFR Guide for Export Buyers (2026)

Published: April 17, 2026 | Last Updated: April 17, 2026 | By SH GLOBAL

Korean used car Incoterms are standardized international trade terms (Incoterms 2020) that define exactly who pays for what and where risk transfers during the export process. The three most common Korean used car Incoterms are FOB (Free On Board), CFR/CNF (Cost and Freight), and CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight). Choosing the right Incoterm can change your landed cost by 5–15% and materially shift your risk exposure during shipping. Whether you are importing a Hyundai Tucson to Dubai, a Kia Sportage to Mombasa, or a Genesis G80 to Almaty, understanding Incoterms is one of the most important financial decisions in your step-by-step buying process. SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. offers all major Incoterms and provides transparent side-by-side quotations so buyers can compare actual costs under each option.

This guide breaks down the five most common Korean used car Incoterms, shows you exactly where risk transfers, compares total landed costs across real shipment scenarios, and gives you a decision matrix to pick the right Incoterm for your situation. For additional context on what happens after shipping, see our shipping logistics guide from Korea.

What Are Incoterms and Why They Matter for Korean Used Car Exports

Incoterms (short for International Commercial Terms) are standardized three-letter trade terms published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). The current version is Incoterms 2020, which entered force on January 1, 2020. These terms apply to international sales contracts worldwide and are universally recognized by customs authorities, shipping lines, insurers, and banks.

For Korean used car buyers, Incoterms matter because they determine:

  • Cost responsibility: Who pays for freight, insurance, customs, and port handling
  • Risk transfer: Where the seller's liability ends and the buyer's begins
  • Documentation: Which party is responsible for which shipping documents
  • Insurance coverage: Whether marine cargo insurance is mandatory and at what value
  • Delivery location: The named port or place where obligations end

Getting the Incoterm wrong can lead to costly surprises — buyers who thought they were buying "delivered" when they actually bought FOB have been hit with unexpected $1,500+ shipping bills at their destination port.

Key Fact: The ICC has published Incoterms since 1936. Incoterms 2020 is the 9th revision, and the next update (Incoterms 2030) is expected in 2030. Contracts signed after January 1, 2020, default to Incoterms 2020 unless otherwise specified.

The 5 Most Common Korean Used Car Incoterms

Incoterms 2020 defines 11 terms total — 7 applicable to any mode of transport and 4 specific to sea and inland waterway. For Korean used car exports, the following five are by far the most relevant.

EXW Ex Works (Named Place in Korea)

Under EXW, the seller's obligation is minimal — the buyer collects the vehicle from a designated location in Korea (the seller's yard, an auction site, or a warehouse). The buyer arranges everything else: inland transport to port, Korean export clearance, loading, ocean freight, insurance, and destination clearance.

  • Best for: Only experienced importers with a Korean freight forwarder
  • Rarely used in the used car trade because buyers usually cannot handle Korean export customs

FOB Free On Board (Named Korean Port)

Under FOB, the seller delivers the vehicle on board the vessel at the named Korean port of shipment (typically Busan, Incheon, or Pyeongtaek). The seller handles inland transport, Korean export clearance, port handling, and loading. The buyer handles ocean freight, marine cargo insurance, destination port handling, and customs clearance.

  • Risk transfer: When the vehicle is loaded on board the vessel in Korea
  • Typical cost: FOB price only — no freight, no insurance
  • Best for: Dealers, importers with freight forwarder relationships, and buyers who want cost transparency
  • Example quote format: "FOB Busan Incoterms 2020"

CFR Cost and Freight (Named Destination Port)

Under CFR (also written CNF, "cost and freight"), the seller arranges and pays for ocean freight to the destination port in addition to all FOB obligations. However, marine cargo insurance remains the buyer's responsibility. Many buyers mistakenly believe CFR includes insurance — it does not.

  • Risk transfer: Still at the Korean port (when vehicle is loaded on board)
  • Typical cost: FOB price + freight ($800–$1,700 depending on destination)
  • Best for: Buyers who want the exporter to handle shipping but prefer to arrange their own insurance
  • Example quote format: "CFR Mombasa Incoterms 2020"

CIF Cost, Insurance, and Freight (Named Destination Port)

Under CIF, the seller pays for ocean freight AND provides marine cargo insurance covering the vehicle during transit. The seller is required to insure the vehicle at 110% of the CIF value as minimum coverage.

  • Risk transfer: Still at the Korean port (risk transfers on loading, even though seller pays freight and insurance)
  • Typical cost: FOB price + freight + insurance (0.3–0.6% of 110% CIF)
  • Best for: First-time buyers, remote buyers, buyers without local forwarder relationships
  • Example quote format: "CIF Mombasa Incoterms 2020"

DAP Delivered At Place

Under DAP, the seller delivers the vehicle to a named place in the destination country (not just the port), ready for unloading. The seller handles ocean freight, destination port handling, and inland transport. The buyer is still responsible for destination customs duty and clearance.

  • Risk transfer: At the named destination place
  • Typical cost: Highest — includes all transport to destination
  • Best for: Buyers who want door-to-door service and have someone to clear customs
  • Example quote format: "DAP Dubai Warehouse Incoterms 2020"

⚠ Warning: CIF only covers the vehicle to the destination port. It does NOT include destination port handling, customs duty, inland trucking, or delivery to your door. Many buyers confuse CIF with "delivered" and face $1,500–$3,000+ in surprise charges at the port.

Korean used car Incoterms — Hyundai vehicles ready for FOB, CFR, or CIF export from SH GLOBAL Busan inventory

FOB vs CIF vs CFR — Side-by-Side Comparison

Here is the complete comparison of obligations and costs across the three most common Korean used car Incoterms.

Responsibility Comparison Table

Cost / Task FOB CFR CIF
Korean inland transport Seller Seller Seller
Korean export customs Seller Seller Seller
Korean port handling Seller Seller Seller
Loading onto vessel Seller Seller Seller
Ocean freight Buyer Seller Seller
Marine cargo insurance Buyer Buyer Seller
Destination port handling Buyer Buyer Buyer
Destination customs duty Buyer Buyer Buyer
Customs clearance Buyer Buyer Buyer
Inland delivery (destination) Buyer Buyer Buyer

Risk Transfer Point

All three Incoterms above (FOB, CFR, CIF) transfer risk at the same point: when the vehicle is loaded on board the vessel in the Korean port. The only difference is whether the seller pays for freight and/or insurance — but if the vehicle is damaged at sea, the buyer's insurance (or the seller's insurance under CIF) is what protects you, not the Incoterm itself.

Common Mistake: Many buyers assume "CIF = I don't bear any risk during shipping." This is wrong. Under CIF, risk transfers in Korea, but the seller's insurance policy covers the loss — you, as the buyer, must file the claim with the insurer.

How Incoterms Affect Your Total Landed Cost

The difference between FOB and CIF can meaningfully change your total cost. Here is a real-world scenario: a 2023 Hyundai Tucson 1.6T at $18,000 FOB Busan exported to five different destinations.

Landed Cost Comparison Example

Destination FOB CIF Duty (sample) Landed Cost
Dubai, UAE (Jebel Ali) $18,000 $19,010 $1,900 (10%) $20,910
Mombasa, Kenya $18,000 $19,315 $9,850 (51%) $29,165
Lagos, Nigeria (Tin Can) $18,000 $19,620 $9,810 (50%) $29,430
Tema, Ghana $18,000 $19,468 $9,150 (47%) $28,618
Almaty, Kazakhstan (rail) $18,000 $19,975 $6,990 (35%) $26,965

Freight costs are illustrative 2026 rates for RoRo service. Duty is calculated on CIF value. Insurance at 0.6% of 110% CIF. Actual figures vary by vehicle size, carrier, and season.

Key Takeaways

  • CIF markup over FOB: 5.6–11.0% depending on destination
  • Insurance cost: Small ($110–$125) but critical — covers total loss at sea
  • Duty is always on CIF: So CIF Incoterms can actually increase your duty base by $1,000–$2,000 at the destination

When to Choose FOB vs CIF

  • Choose FOB when: You have a trusted freight forwarder, you want to compare freight quotes from multiple carriers, or you are shipping in volume (dealer buying 5+ cars).
  • Choose CIF when: You are a first-time buyer, you want a single-invoice simplicity, or you don't have local freight relationships at the destination.
  • Choose CFR when: You want the seller to handle freight but you have a better insurance relationship (often through your bank or local insurer) and can save 20–30% on insurance.

For detailed port-by-port cost calculations, see our full import cost breakdown guide.

Risk Transfer: Where Seller Liability Ends

Understanding risk transfer is critical because it determines who bears the loss if something goes wrong during shipping. The Incoterm determines the geographic point where risk transfers — not always the same place where costs transfer.

Risk Transfer Points for Korean Used Car Incoterms

Incoterm Risk Transfer Point
EXW Seller's yard / warehouse in Korea
FOB Ship's rail at Korean port (Busan, Incheon, Pyeongtaek)
CFR Ship's rail at Korean port (even though seller pays freight)
CIF Ship's rail at Korean port (even though seller pays freight + insurance)
DAP Named place at destination (after transport)

What This Means in Practice

If your vehicle is damaged during the ocean voyage under CFR terms, the damage is your loss — you must claim against your own marine cargo insurance. If you didn't buy insurance under CFR, you eat the loss entirely. Under CIF, the seller's insurance policy protects you, but YOU (as the named consignee on the insurance certificate) must file the claim.

Pro Tip: Under CIF, request the actual insurance certificate from your seller BEFORE the vessel sails, verify it covers at least 110% of CIF, and confirm the insurer is reputable (A.M. Best rating A- or better). SH GLOBAL provides full marine cargo insurance certificates for every CIF shipment.

For detailed guidance on contract protections and insurance, see our buyer protection guide.

Which Korean Used Car Incoterm Should You Choose?

Your choice of Incoterm depends on your experience, relationships, volume, and destination. Here is a practical decision matrix.

Buyer Decision Matrix

Buyer Type Best Incoterm Why
First-time individual buyer CIF Simplest — one invoice, seller handles shipping and insurance
Experienced importer with broker FOB Maximum cost transparency and freight negotiation leverage
Dealer buying 3+ vehicles FOB or CFR Can consolidate shipping, negotiate better freight rates
Remote buyer with no local presence CIF or DAP Minimum local coordination required
Buyer in landlocked country CIF (to nearest port) Simplifies sea leg; buyer handles inland with broker
High-value vehicle ($30,000+) CIF with 110%+ coverage Insurance protection is essential
Bulk importer (10+ vehicles) FOB Busan Container consolidation and bulk freight discounts

Experience Level Guide

  • Never imported before: CIF — let the seller handle the complex parts
  • Imported 1–5 times: CFR — you know destination customs, but let seller handle freight
  • Regular importer (5+ shipments): FOB — you control everything, maximum savings

For a walkthrough of the complete import process that follows your Incoterm choice, see our customs clearance guide.

Common Incoterm Mistakes Korean Used Car Buyers Make

Even experienced buyers make costly Incoterm mistakes. Here are the five most common errors and how to avoid them.

Mistake 1: Confusing CIF with "Door Delivery"

What happens: Buyer agrees to CIF thinking the car will arrive at their driveway. When the vehicle arrives at the destination port, they face unexpected charges: port handling ($150–$300), customs duty (often $3,000–$10,000+), customs broker ($100–$500), inland trucking ($200–$800).

How to avoid: Remember — CIF = "delivered to your destination PORT, on the ship." Not to your home. If you want door-to-door, ask for DAP.

Mistake 2: Assuming CFR Includes Insurance

What happens: Buyer sees "C" and "F" in CFR and assumes "C" means coverage (insurance). It doesn't — "C" means "Cost." Vessel has an incident mid-voyage, vehicle is damaged or lost, and buyer has NO insurance.

How to avoid: Always explicitly ask "Does this include marine cargo insurance?" CFR/CNF does NOT. Either upgrade to CIF or buy your own insurance.

Mistake 3: Not Specifying the Named Port

What happens: Contract reads "FOB Korea" without specifying Busan, Incheon, or Pyeongtaek. Ambiguity can cause disputes.

How to avoid: Always write the Incoterm as "[Incoterm] [Named Port] Incoterms 2020" — for example, "FOB Busan Incoterms 2020" or "CIF Mombasa Incoterms 2020."

Mistake 4: Verifying Insurance Coverage Too Late

What happens: Buyer agrees to CIF, vehicle is lost at sea, and discovers the seller only insured at 100% of CIF (not 110%) or with a low-rated insurer.

How to avoid: Under Incoterms 2020 CIF rules, the minimum required insurance is Institute Cargo Clauses (C) at 110% of CIF value. Request the insurance certificate BEFORE shipment. You can also negotiate higher coverage (Clauses A with war risk) at additional cost.

Mistake 5: Not Aligning the Contract, Invoice, and B/L

What happens: The sales contract says "CIF Dubai," the invoice says "CFR Dubai," and the B/L says "FOB Busan." Customs authorities get confused, clearance is delayed, and duty valuation becomes disputed.

How to avoid: Ensure the Incoterm wording is identical across the sales contract, proforma invoice, commercial invoice, and Bill of Lading. Your exporter should double-check this before shipment.

For more on avoiding costly errors during your Korean car purchase, see our price negotiation guide.

How to Specify Incoterms in Your Korean Used Car Contract

A properly worded Incoterm has three elements:

  1. The Incoterm code: FOB, CFR, CIF, DAP, EXW
  2. The named port or place: The specific geographic location
  3. The reference to Incoterms 2020: Identifies which version applies

Correct Format Examples

  • ✅ "FOB Busan Incoterms 2020"
  • ✅ "CIF Jebel Ali Port, Dubai Incoterms 2020"
  • ✅ "CFR Mombasa Kilindini Harbour Incoterms 2020"
  • ✅ "DAP Dubai Warehouse (specified address) Incoterms 2020"

Incorrect / Risky Formats

  • ❌ "FOB Korea" (no named port)
  • ❌ "CIF Kenya" (no named port)
  • ❌ "C&F" or "C.I.F." (non-standard abbreviations)
  • ❌ "CIF Incoterms 2010" (using outdated version without mutual agreement)

What to Include in Your Sales Contract

Your sales contract should include: the agreed Incoterm, price currency (usually USD), vehicle details (VIN, year, model), delivery timeline, inspection standards, payment terms (e.g., 30% deposit, 70% before B/L), and dispute resolution clause.

SH GLOBAL's Flexible Korean Used Car Incoterm Options

SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. offers all major Incoterms for Korean used car exports and provides transparent multi-Incoterm quotations so buyers can compare real costs side by side.

Standard Quotation Format

Every SH GLOBAL quotation shows three options for the same vehicle:

  • FOB Busan (or Incheon / Pyeongtaek depending on vehicle location)
  • CFR [destination port]
  • CIF [destination port]

This lets buyers see exactly how much freight and insurance cost, making informed decisions easier.

Korean Ports Served

SH GLOBAL ships from Korea's major export ports:

  • Busan (BSA): Primary port for Middle East, Africa, Central Asia — highest volume
  • Incheon (ICN): Close to Seoul vehicle sourcing; good for Central Asia rail
  • Pyeongtaek (PTK): Secondary port; sometimes better RoRo rates
  • Masan (MAS): Less common; specific carrier routes

Destination Coverage

SH GLOBAL handles CIF/CFR shipments to over 40 destination ports across the Middle East (Jebel Ali, Jeddah, Hamad, Shuwaikh), Africa (Mombasa, Lagos Tin Can, Tema, Dar es Salaam, Douala), and Central Asia (via Vladivostok rail to Almaty, Tashkent, Bishkek).

Documentation Support

Regardless of your chosen Incoterm, SH GLOBAL provides: original Bill of Lading, commercial invoice matching bank records, Korean export declaration, de-registration certificate, vehicle inspection report, and (for CIF) marine cargo insurance certificate. To browse Hyundai inventory with FOB/CFR/CIF quotations, visit SH GLOBAL's inventory page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does Incoterms 2020 mean for Korean used car exports?
Incoterms 2020 is the current version of the International Commercial Terms published by the ICC (International Chamber of Commerce). It defines 11 standardized three-letter codes (like FOB, CIF, CFR) that specify who pays for freight, insurance, and other costs, and where risk transfers from seller to buyer. For Korean used car exports, Incoterms 2020 applies to all international sales contracts signed on or after January 1, 2020, and remains in effect until the next update.
What is the difference between FOB and CIF for Korean used cars?
Under FOB (Free On Board), the seller delivers the vehicle on board the vessel at a Korean port (Busan, Incheon, or Pyeongtaek), and the buyer pays for ocean freight and marine cargo insurance. Under CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight), the seller pays for ocean freight AND provides marine cargo insurance at 110% of CIF value. The main difference: CIF includes freight and insurance in the price, FOB does not. CIF pricing is typically 8–15% higher than FOB.
Does CIF mean the car is delivered to my house?
No. CIF means "delivered to the destination port, on the ship." The buyer is still responsible for destination port handling, customs duty, customs clearance, and inland delivery from the port to the final destination. If you want door-to-door delivery, ask for DAP (Delivered At Place) terms instead. Many first-time buyers confuse CIF with full delivery and are surprised by $1,500–$3,000+ in unexpected destination charges.
Which Incoterm is best for a first-time Korean used car buyer?
CIF is usually best for first-time buyers because it gives you a single-invoice price that includes the vehicle, ocean freight, and marine cargo insurance to your destination port. This is the simplest option — the exporter handles most of the complexity. However, you still need to arrange destination customs clearance and inland delivery separately (typically through a local customs broker).
What is CFR or CNF and how is it different from CIF?
CFR (Cost and Freight), sometimes written as CNF, means the seller pays for ocean freight but the buyer arranges marine cargo insurance. CIF includes insurance; CFR does NOT. Many buyers assume CFR includes insurance because of the "C" letters — this is incorrect. If you choose CFR, you must arrange your own marine cargo insurance covering 110% of CIF value, or you are uninsured during the ocean voyage.
Where does risk transfer under FOB, CFR, and CIF?
Under all three Incoterms, risk transfers from seller to buyer at the same point: when the vehicle is loaded on board the vessel at the Korean port of shipment. The difference is not about risk — it's about who pays for freight and insurance. If the vehicle is damaged at sea under CFR, the buyer bears the loss. Under CIF, the seller's insurance covers it, but the buyer must file the claim.
Which Korean port is best for FOB shipments?
Busan is by far the most common Korean export port for used cars, handling over 70% of Korean vehicle exports. Busan offers the most frequent RoRo services to the Middle East, Africa, and Southeast Asia, and has the lowest port handling costs. Incheon serves Central Asia routes well. Pyeongtaek sometimes offers lower freight rates but with less frequent sailings. For most destinations, "FOB Busan Incoterms 2020" is the standard choice.
Can SH GLOBAL quote multiple Incoterms for the same vehicle?
Yes. SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. provides transparent side-by-side quotations showing FOB, CFR, and CIF prices for the same vehicle to the same destination. This lets buyers compare real costs and decide which Incoterm suits their situation. For DAP (door-to-door) service, SH GLOBAL provides quotes on request with named destination address. All Incoterms are structured under Incoterms 2020 rules with proper named ports specified in the contract.

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