Logistics

Freight Collect vs Prepaid: What's the Difference?

Read the complete guide below.

Launch Calculator

The Short Answer

Freight Prepaid means the shipper pays the carrier for transportation charges before the goods leave the origin point. Freight Collect means the consignee (recipient) pays those charges upon delivery. These terms appear on the bill of lading and determine which party is financially liable to the carrier — but they do not transfer risk of loss or title of goods, which is governed separately by Incoterms. Most LTL carriers apply a Freight Collect surcharge of 10–15% on top of base rates when billing the consignee rather than the shipper.

Understanding the Core Concept

Every freight shipment requires someone to pay the carrier. The bill of lading (BOL) — the legal contract between shipper, carrier, and consignee — must clearly state the payment terms. The three most common BOL payment designations are Freight Prepaid, Freight Collect, and Third-Party Billing. A fourth variation, Prepaid and Charge (or Prepaid and Add), means the shipper pays the carrier but invoices the buyer separately for reimbursement — effectively a prepaid billing arrangement with a downstream cost pass-through.

Launch Calculator
Privacy First • Data stored locally

Real-World Scenario: When Each Term Costs or Saves Money

Understanding the practical consequences of each billing term requires walking through a real B2B transaction.

Real World Scenario

A persistent misconception in logistics is that freight payment terms determine who owns the goods during transit, bears risk of loss, or handles customs. They do not. Freight payment terms establish only who pays the carrier. Ownership, risk transfer, and customs responsibility are governed by Incoterms — the International Chamber of Commerce's standard trade terms that appear in sales contracts for international and cross-border shipments.

Strategic Implications

Understanding these implications allows you to proactively manage your operational efficiency. Utilizing our specific tools provides the exact data points required to prevent margin erosion and optimize your strategic approach.

Actionable Steps

First, audit your current numbers using the calculator above. Second, identify the largest gaps between your actuals and the standard benchmarks. Third, implement a tracking system to monitor these metrics weekly. Finally, review your process every quarter to ensure you are continually optimizing.

Expert Insight

The biggest mistake companies make is relying on generalized industry data instead of their own precise calculations. When you map your exact costs and parameters into a standardized tool, you unlock compounding efficiencies that your competitors often miss.

Future Trends

Looking ahead, we expect margins to tighten as market pressures increase. The companies that build automated, real-time calculation workflows into their daily operations will be the ones that capture the most market share in the coming years.

Stop Guessing. Start Calculating.

Run the numbers instantly with our free tools.

Launch Calculator

Historical Context & Evolution

Historically, these calculations were done using rudimentary spreadsheets or expensive proprietary software, making it difficult for smaller operators to accurately predict costs. Modern, web-based tools have democratized this process, allowing immediate, precise calculations on demand.

Deep Dive Analysis

A rigorous analysis of this topic reveals that small percentage changes in these core metrics produce exponential changes in overall profitability. By standardizing your approach and continuously verifying against your specific constraints, you build a resilient operational model that can withstand market fluctuations.

3 Rules for Managing Freight Payment Terms

1

Read Every Vendor Routing Guide Before Your First Shipment

Large retail buyers — Walmart, Target, Home Depot, Amazon — have mandatory vendor routing guides that specify required freight payment terms, approved carriers, and BOL format requirements. Shipping on the wrong payment term triggers automated chargebacks of $150–500 per shipment. Request the routing guide from your buyer's vendor compliance portal before shipping a single unit, and update your shipping team's SOPs to enforce those terms by default for that account.

2

Always Price the Collect Surcharge Into Your Landed Cost Model

When comparing carrier quotes for a lane where you might use Freight Collect, add 12–15% to the base rate to model the true collect cost. Carriers do not always volunteer this surcharge amount upfront in spot quotes. Use MetricRig's Freight Class Calculator at /logistics/freight-class to confirm your NMFC class and density before requesting quotes, since misclassification can further inflate the base rate the surcharge is applied against.

3

Use Third-Party Billing to Consolidate Under One Account

If your company manages freight for multiple subsidiaries, brands, or vendor partners, Third-Party Billing lets all shipments flow through a single master account — capturing volume discounts across the network rather than fragmenting spend across individual shipper or consignee accounts. Set up a third-party billing authorization with your primary carriers and issue account numbers to each entity. The 10–15% third-party surcharge is almost always offset by the volume discount unlocked at consolidated spend levels.

4

Automate Tracking Integrate your calculation process into your weekly operational review to spot trends early.

5

Validate Assumptions Check your base numbers against actual invoices and costs quarterly to ensure accuracy.

Glossary of Terms

Metric

A standard of measurement.

Benchmark

A standard or point of reference.

Optimization

The action of making the best use of a resource.

Efficiency

Achieving maximum productivity with minimum wasted effort.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not necessarily — it means the buyer pays the carrier directly rather than the seller paying on their behalf. The seller may have still priced the goods lower to reflect that the buyer is bearing the freight cost, or the sales contract may specify that freight is the buyer's responsibility. In DDP sales, the seller pays all freight regardless of how the BOL is marked; in EXW or FOB sales, the buyer pays freight and typically arranges Freight Collect billing to their own account. Payment term on the BOL tells you who pays the carrier, not what the final economic allocation of freight cost is between buyer and seller.
Yes. Carriers can and do refuse to book Freight Collect shipments for consignees with no carrier account, past-due balances, or creditworthiness concerns. Most carriers require the consignee to have an established account in good standing before accepting collect billing. If a consignee's account is suspended or lacks credit authorization, the carrier will refuse to release the shipment or will require prepayment before pickup. This is a practical risk for suppliers shipping international Freight Collect to new buyers in countries where the buyer's carrier creditworthiness is unknown. Always confirm the consignee has an active account with the chosen carrier before tendering a collect shipment.
These terms are frequently confused but are operationally distinct. Freight Collect means the consignee pays the transportation charges to the carrier — the freight cost. COD (Collect on Delivery) means the carrier collects the payment for the goods themselves from the consignee on behalf of the seller — the product cost. A shipment can be both Freight Collect (consignee pays freight) and COD (consignee pays for the goods). In modern US commerce, COD for goods is largely obsolete for B2C but still exists in certain B2B industrial, agricultural, and wholesale markets where buyers lack credit terms with a supplier. Freight Collect remains common in B2B logistics where buyer-controlled freight programs offer cost advantages.
By optimizing this metric, you directly improve your operational efficiency and bottom line margins.
Yes, these represent standard best practices, though exact figures will vary by your specific market conditions.

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only.

Related Topics & Tools

USPS 2026 Rate Increases: Impact on Ecommerce Sellers

USPS implemented two rate adjustments in 2026, with the January increase averaging 7.8% across commercial parcel services and a secondary adjustment effective July 1. Ground Advantage commercial base rates now start at $4.13 for a 1-lb package in Zone 1-2, up from $3.82 in 2025. Priority Mail saw increases of 5.9% to 9.4% depending on weight and zone. For a seller shipping 500 packages per month, these increases translate to roughly $400–$900 in additional annual shipping spend before any mitigation strategies.

Read More

EOQ With Quantity Discounts: How to Adjust the Formula

The standard EOQ formula — Q* = √(2DS / H) — assumes a fixed unit price. When suppliers offer quantity discounts, you must calculate a separate EOQ for each price tier, adjust upward to the minimum qualifying quantity if the EOQ falls short of the discount threshold, and then compute total annual cost for each valid option. The quantity with the lowest total annual cost — including purchase cost, ordering cost, and holding cost — is the true optimal order quantity. Ignoring discounts typically means either over-ordering to chase savings that don't exist, or under-ordering and missing genuine holding-cost-adjusted savings.

Read More

UPS vs FedEx Shipping Rates: Which Carrier Is Cheaper in 2026?

UPS and FedEx both implemented a 5.9% General Rate Increase effective in late December 2025, but the two carriers diverge meaningfully on surcharge structures, dimensional weight application, and specific service tiers. UPS is approximately 13–14% cheaper than FedEx on Large Package Surcharge (LPS) commercial shipments, while FedEx tends to be slightly more competitive on lightweight residential packages in Zones 2–4. Neither carrier is universally cheaper — the right answer depends on your specific package weight, dimensions, zone distribution, and residential vs. commercial delivery mix.

Read More

HTS Code Lookup: How to Find Your Code in 2026

Every product imported into the United States requires a 10-digit Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) code, which determines the applicable duty rate, admissibility requirements, and statistical reporting obligations at US Customs and Border Protection. The HTS code is not the same as the global HS code — the first 6 digits match, but the final 4 digits are US-specific and carry different duty rates than other countries' extensions. Wrong HTS codes result in incorrect duty payments, CBP holds, and penalty exposure. The Landed Cost Calculator at /logistics/landed-cost uses HTS duty rates to compute the true landed cost of imported goods.

Read More

3PL vs In-House Fulfillment: Full Cost Comparison 2026

3PL fulfillment in 2026 costs $8–$15 per domestic order and $11–$19 for cross-border, covering receiving, storage, pick and pack, and carrier handoff. In-house warehousing at 5,000 square feet locks in $20,000–$30,000 per month in fixed overhead (rent, labor, WMS, utilities) before a single order ships. The break-even volume — the order rate at which in-house and 3PL costs are equivalent — sits at approximately 1,500–2,500 orders per month for most DTC brands, with 3PL being cheaper below that threshold and in-house becoming cost-competitive above it, assuming efficient warehouse management and favorable lease terms. Seasonal businesses almost always benefit from 3PL's variable cost model regardless of volume.

Read More

US Import Tariff Calculator: How to Estimate Duties in 2026

US import duties in 2026 are calculated by multiplying your goods' customs value (typically CIF or FOB price depending on method) by the applicable tariff rate derived from three stacked layers: the base MFN rate from the HTS code, plus any Section 232 tariffs (50% for steel and aluminum products effective April 2026), plus Section 301 tariffs (25–145% on Chinese-origin goods), plus the Section 122 across-the-board 10% surcharge on most non-exempted imports (effective February 24, 2026, through approximately July 24, 2026). Use MetricRig's Landed Cost Calculator at /logistics/landed-cost to model the full duty and landed cost impact on your import orders.

Read More