Shipping Documents Checklist for Custom Plush — What You Need, Who Owns Each Field, and When to Lock It

Most shipping delays are caused by missing fields or inconsistent documents.

To build a correct shipping documents pack, please you share:

  • Consignee / ship-to / notify party (legal name + contacts)
  • Incoterms + destination/channel type (3PL / retail DC / e-commerce)
  • PO / Program ID + SKU list
  • Carton mark template + mixed-SKU rule (allowed or not)
  • Forwarder/broker contact + SI format (if buyer-managed)

So you will get:

  • Draft-ready pack: CI + PL draft fields aligned
  • SI/BL(AWB) draft check: parties + carton totals + description line matched
  • Document lock plan: when to confirm estimate vs final, and what changes trigger re-check

Last updated: [Feb. 8th, 2026] · Applies to: Ocean / Air · Channels: 3PL / Retail DC / E-commerce · Built for: custom plush shipments

Shipping Documents Stack, by Scenario

A “standard document set” doesn’t exist. Your checklist depends on who controls freight, where inventory is received, and which mode (ocean/air) is used.

Buyer-managed freight (FOB / Ex-works-like)

If you control the forwarder or booking, this is your stack.

Always needed (Core Stack)

  • Commercial Invoice (CI)

  • Packing List (PL)

  • Carton Marks

  • Packing Data Summary (ctn count / dims / weights)

Usually needed (Ops Stack)

  • Shipping Instructions (SI) for your forwarder

  • BL/AWB draft check (parties + carton totals + description line)

Only when triggered (Requirement Stack)

  • Certificate of Origin (COO) (if required)

  • Third-party inspection evidence (if used)

  • Compliance/testing references (if required)

  • ISF / EORI (market/broker-driven)

Buyer Forwarder, Factory Supports Booking

If your forwarder books, and we support document control, this is your stack.

Always needed (Core Stack)

  • Commercial Invoice (CI)

  • Packing List (PL)

  • Carton Marks

  • Packing Data Summary (ctn count / dims / weights)

Usually needed (Ops Stack)

  • SI + booking cut-off handoff pack (estimate → final packing data)

  • BL/AWB draft consistency check (cross-document must-match fields)

Only when triggered (Requirement Stack)

  • Same as above (COO / inspection / compliance refs / ISF/EORI as required)

Delivered-to-Destination Programs (CIF / DDP-Like, Scope Varies)

If the shipment is arranged to destination, the stack depends on destination and broker/channel rules.

Always needed (Core Stack)

  • Commercial Invoice (CI)

  • Packing List (PL)

  • Carton Marks

  • Packing Data Summary (ctn count / dims / weights)

Usually needed (Ops Stack)

  • Carrier/forwarder coordination pack (draft fields + release workflow alignment)

Only when triggered (Requirement Stack)

  • Add-ons depend on destination + broker + channel (COO / inspection / compliance refs / local filing needs)

Ownership System: Who Owns Each Document AND Each High-Risk Field?

Document ownership is not enough. Smooth clearance requires field ownership: who supplies, who drafts, who confirms, and who is the final approver.

Shipping documents come from multiple parties. Buyers confirm consignee and import requirements; the factory prepares commercial documents and packing data; the forwarder/carrier issues transport documents; and brokers file entry based on those documents. This matrix prevents gaps and delays.

A) Buyer-Readable Document Ownership Matrix

Document / ItemBuyer ConfirmsFactory Drafts / FinalizesForwarder/Carrier IssuesBroker / Import Team UsesLock Point
Consignee / Ship-to / Notify Party✅ (legal name)Inserts into CI/PLInserts into BL/AWBBefore booking
Incoterms + delivery location line✅ (reflects on CI)Uses for scopeBefore production ends
PO / Program ID / SKU listUses for booking notesOftenBefore packing rules
Commercial Invoice (CI)Approves draftPre-dispatch
Packing List (PL)Approves logicPre-dispatch
Carton marks template✅ (format)✅ (apply)SometimesBefore packing starts
Carton totals (ctn count / units / weights / dims)Approves rules✅ (estimate → final)Rates freightBefore booking + final pre-dispatch
BL / AWB draftConfirms partiesSupports SIPre-dispatch draft check
HS code / item descriptionConfirms with brokerProvides product infoBefore CI draft
COO / origin statementsRequestsSupportsPlan early
Inspection report (if used)Defines standardSupports on-siteSometimesBefore dispatch
Compliance/testing references (if required)Defines scopeOrganizes packSometimesPlan early, finalize pre-dispatch

B) High-Risk Field Owners (This Prevents 80% of Delays)

High-risk fieldOwner of Source DataOwner of Draft EntryFinal ApproverWhat triggers re-check
Consignee legal name + addressBuyer / Import teamFactory (CI/PL) + Forwarder (BL/AWB)BuyerAny party change, any BL draft update
HS code / item descriptionBuyer + BrokerFactory provides product infoBuyer/BrokerAny material/function change; any new SKU
Carton totals (ctn count / dims / weights)FactoryFactory + Forwarder for ratingBuyer (rules)Any packing rule change; any SKU mix change

The 12 Must-Match Fields Across CI / PL / Carton Marks / SI / BL(AWB)

If these fields don’t match exactly, your shipment can stall at booking, release, clearance, or receiving. This table is designed to be copied into your internal checklist.

Must-Match 12 Fields Table

Field (must match exactly)Appears inCommon mismatchTypical impactControl action
Consignee legal nameCI / BL(AWB) / SIspelling, punctuation, entity suffixBL draft hold, clearance delaylock from buyer once; reuse everywhere
Notify partyBL(AWB) / SImissing / wrong contactrelease delayconfirm early; approve BL draft
Shipper nameCI / BL(AWB) / SIfactory legal name variationdoc rejectionuse one legal template
Incoterms line + locationCI / booking notesmissing locationduty scope confusionlock responsibility + location
PO / Program IDCI / PL / carton marksdifferent PO referencereceiving disputesone program ID everywhere
SKU naming / variant logicCI / PLSKU aliasingclaims / inventory mismatchcreate “SKU mapping” once
Total cartonsPL / SI / BL(AWB)estimate vs final not updatedbooking reworktwo-step: estimate + final lock
Units/carton rulePLremainder carton missingreceiving counts offinclude remainder logic in PL
Carton numbering (1/xx)carton marks / PLgaps / wrong denominatorchargebackslock numbering rule before packing
Weights (GW/NW)PL / SI / BL(AWB)rounding differencesre-rating, disputesdefine rounding rule (kg, 1 decimal)
Carton dimensionsPL / SIcm/in conversion errorschargeable weight spikeslock units + conversion once
Item descriptionCI / BL(AWB)too vague or inconsistentclearance questionsuse one approved description line

Proof & Templates: Redacted Examples + Copy Templates

High-performing programs don’t “explain” document control—they show it. Use these redacted examples and templates to align your team in one pass.

A) Redacted Example Previews

Example Preview #1 — Cross-Document Consistency (CI ↔ PL ↔ Carton Marks ↔ BL Draft)

consignee block, PO/SKU summary, carton totals, weight/dims line, approved description line.

Example Preview #2 — Forwarder Handoff Pack (SI + Packing Estimate + Lock Notes)

SI fields, estimate vs final confirmation, cut-off time note, contact chain.

B) Template Pack Contents

  • Commercial Invoice Draft Field List
  • Packing List (Receiving-grade) Field Table
  • Carton Marks Copy Template + Placement Rules
  • Shipping Instructions (SI) Field Table
  • Draft Check Checklist (BL/AWB vs CI/PL)
  • Add-On Pack Builder (COO / Inspection / Compliance References)

Section A — Core Commercial Documents (Customs + Receiving)

High-performing programs don’t “explain” document control—they show it. Use these redacted examples and templates to align your team in one pass.

Customs Valuation + Classification Anchor

Part 1: Commercial Invoice (CI)

The CI is the primary reference for customs value and declared item description. Drafting it early prevents last-minute rework and keeps the BL/AWB draft consistent.

CI minimum draft fields (buyer-approval required):

  • consignee / ship-to / notify party (exact legal name)
  • shipper legal name
  • PO / Program ID + SKU summary
  • item description line (approved wording)
  • unit price, total value, currency
  • Incoterms + location line (where applicable)
  • country of origin statement (when needed)
  • HS code field (confirm with broker/import team)

Non-negotiables (system boundary):

  • Any change to consignee / item description / carton totals triggers a full draft re-check (CI ↔ PL ↔ SI ↔ BL/AWB).
  • HS code is final-approved by importer/broker; factory provides product info and suggested descriptions.

Receiving Map + Claims Boundary

Part 2: Packing List (PL)

The PL is the receiving “map” that determines what a warehouse accepts and what can be claimed. A receiving-grade PL prevents chargebacks and post-delivery disputes.

Receiving-grade PL minimum :

  • SKU/variant quantity summary
  • carton count, units/carton, remainder cartons logic
  • carton dimensions + GW/NW (with unit rules)
  • carton numbering (1/xx) + mixed-SKU disclosure
  • pallet info (only if used): pallet count + label rule

Common failure points (and the fix):

  • Mixed SKUs without disclosure → add a “mixed-carton rule line”
  • Remainder cartons not shown → show remainder as separate line items
  • Weight/dims in wrong units → lock unit system once (cm/kg or in/lb)

Warehouse Compliance, Not Optional Labels

Part 3: Carton Marks / Shipping Marks

Carton marks are the warehouse’s operational truth. They must match the PL logic, carton numbering, and any scanning/label placement rules.

Carton mark template:

  • PO / Program ID
  • SKU / variant (or “Mixed Carton” indicator)
  • Carton No.: 1/50
  • Qty per carton
  • GW / NW
  • Destination code (if required)

Placement rules (keep it consistent):

  • Place marks on two adjacent sides (or per warehouse rule)
  • If barcodes are used, lock: barcode type + size + placement + “do not cover seam” rule
  • If pallet labels are required: pallet label rule must be confirmed before packing starts

Section B — Transport Documents + Shipping Instructions (Draft Control)

Ensure repeat orders feel the same every time

Draft Control Before Release

BL / AWB + Shipping Instructions (SI)

BL/AWB is issued by the carrier/forwarder, but it only stays correct when SI is built from locked fields. SI is where most draft errors start.

What you should control (system deliverable):

  • One SI form per shipment version (no parallel threads)
  • SI must reuse: consignee block, PO/program ID, carton totals, weights/dims, item description line

Shipping Instructions (SI) Field Table (Copy/Paste)

SI FieldSourceMust match withLock point
Shipper legal nameFactoryCIPre-dispatch draft
Consignee + notifyBuyerCI + BL/AWBBefore booking
Cargo description lineBuyer approvesCI + BL/AWBBefore CI draft
Total cartonsFactoryPL + BL/AWBBefore booking estimate; final pre-dispatch
Total GW / dimsFactoryPL + BL/AWBBefore booking / final
Freight termsBuyerCIOrder kickoff
Release instructionBuyer/ForwarderBL workflowPre-dispatch

BL/AWB draft check (1-minute checklist):

  • parties block (shipper/consignee/notify) matches CI
  • carton totals match final PL
  • description line matches approved CI wording
  • release workflow confirmed (destination handling)

Section C —Broker / Import-Team Filings (Only When Required)

Some holds happen even when CI/PL are perfect—because an importer-side filing or ID is missing. This section tells you what to confirm early without turning this page into legal advice.

What You Must Confirm Early (ISF / EORI / Broker Checklist)

Import Filings & Numbers

Confirm early with your broker/import team (examples):

  • US ocean shipments: ISF (10+2) filing timing and required data fields (broker/importer-side)
  • EU clearance: whether an EORI number is needed for your entity and shipment type
  • Broker format requirements: item description style, HS code validation, consignee formatting

What we provide to support filings (factory-side):

  • product info for HS code validation (materials/function/usage)
  • draft CI/PL with stable must-match fields
  • estimate → final packing data for cut-offs

Section D —Requirement-Driven Add-On Packs+Timing + Change Control

1. Add-On Pack Builder: COO / Inspection / Compliance References (Only When Triggered)

Add-on documents aren’t “extra certificates.” They are requirement-driven packs triggered by destination rules, channel rules, or internal QA policy.

TriggerAdd-on packWho defines requirementWhat we can supportLock point
Destination/broker requests origin proofCOO / origin statementBuyer + brokerprepare/support documentsplan early
Buyer requires third-party inspectionInspection reportBuyeralign scope + timing + packing readinessbefore dispatch
Market/channel requires compliance referencesCompliance/testing references packBuyerorganize version-linked referencesplan early, finalize pre-dispatch

Related internal links :

2. When to Confirm Each Document (Milestone Timeline + Change Control)

Timing is the difference between clean dispatch and rebooking fees. This timeline shows what must be locked early and what changes trigger re-check.

MilestoneWhat must be lockedWhy it mattersIf late
M1: Order kickoffdestination type + Incotermsdefines responsibilitywrong scope assumptions
M2: Packing rules setcarton marks + mixed-SKU rules + numberingreceiving compliancerelabel/repack/chargebacks
M3: Before bookingestimate carton totals + dims/weightsrates + cut-offsmissed cut-offs / rebooking
M4: Pre-dispatch draftsCI/PL drafts + SI fieldsBL/AWB draft accuracydraft mismatch hold
M5: Dispatchfinal CI/PL/carton marksclearance-readyclearance delay / disputes
M6: After dispatchBL/AWB release workflowprevents storage riskdemurrage/storage exposure

Change control (high-end rule):

  • After M2, any change affecting carton totals automatically triggers CI/PL/SI draft re-check.
  • After M4, any change requires an “exception approval” (single thread, single approver).

What We Need From You to Prepare Drafts Fast?

Drafts move fastest when inputs arrive as one consolidated pack. This handoff list is designed so your team can approve internally without re-quoting or re-drafting loops.

Part 1 — Parties & Responsibility

  • consignee / ship-to / notify party (exact legal name + contacts)
  • Incoterms + delivery location line (if applicable)
  • broker contact + “must follow” formatting notes (if any)

Part 2 — Product & Declaration

  • PO / Program ID + SKU list (final naming)
  • approved item description line (one version)
  • HS code direction from broker (if available)

Part 3 — Packing Rules & Receiving

  • carton mark template + barcode rules + placement constraints
  • mixed SKUs allowed? (yes/no + rule)
  • channel type (3PL / retail DC / e-commerce) + receiving requirements

Part 4 — Forwarder Handoff (If buyer-managed)

  • forwarder contact + SI format (or required SI fields)
  • target cut-offs / target arrival window (if any)

FAQs about Shipping Documents for Custom Plush

Q1: What’s the difference between CI and PL?

CI anchors customs value and declaration wording; PL anchors receiving counts and carton reconciliation. They must share the same must-match fields.

Q2: What causes the most BL/AWB draft mistakes?

Incorrect consignee block, outdated carton totals, and description wording that doesn’t match the approved CI line.

Q3: Who decides the HS code?

The importer/broker is the final approver. We provide product material/function info and keep descriptions consistent with the approved declaration line.

Q4: Can you provide a “standard doc set” for every country?

We provide the core commercial stack and draft-control system. Requirement-driven filings and add-ons depend on destination, broker, and channel rules.

Q5: When should carton marks be finalized?

Before packing starts. Late carton mark changes often trigger relabel/repack and can break warehouse receiving rules.

Ready to lock shipping documents before booking cut-offs?

Share your shipping essentials once. We return a reviewable document pack that keeps CI/PL/SI/BL(AWB) consistent—so booking, clearance, and receiving don’t stall.

Step 1 — Share Inputs (5 items)

Consignee block, Incoterms + destination/channel, PO/SKU list, carton mark rules, and forwarder/broker contact (SI format if buyer-managed).

Step 2 — We Build the Draft Core

We align Commercial Invoice + Packing List fields and packing logic (mixed-SKU, carton numbering, units, rounding rules).

Step 3 — We Run Draft Consistency Checks

We apply the Must-Match 12 Fields check across CI/PL/carton marks/SI and flag any conflicts before BL/AWB drafting.

Step 4 — Handoff + Lock Plan

You receive a draft-ready handoff pack for your forwarder and a document lock plan showing when estimate→final happens and what changes trigger re-checks.

What you’ll receive (deliverables)

  • Draft-ready pack: CI + PL fields aligned (buyer-review format)
  • SI/BL(AWB) draft check: parties + carton totals + description line matched
  • Document lock plan: lock points + change triggers (re-check rules)
  • CTAs: Request your Shipping request

If you have questions or need a quote, leave us a message. We’ll reply within 12 hours with the best-fit solution for your requirements.

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