Bill of Lading (UK)
Shipping Document — Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 — England and Wales
BILL OF LADING
Subject to the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 and the Hague-Visby Rules
Bill of Lading No: [Bill of Lading Number]
SHIPPER / CONSIGNOR
[Shipper Name]
[Shipper Address], [Shipper City], [Shipper Country], [Shipper Postcode]
Shipper’s Reference: [Shipper Reference]
CONSIGNEE
Type: [Consignee Type]
[Consignee Name]
[Consignee Address], [Consignee City], [Consignee Country]
NOTIFY PARTY
[Notify Party Name]
[Notify Party Address]
CARRIER
[Carrier Name]
[Carrier Address]
VESSEL AND VOYAGE DETAILS
- Vessel: [Vessel Name]
- Voyage No: [Voyage Number]
- Port of Loading: [Port of Loading]
- Port of Discharge: [Port of Discharge]
- Place of Final Delivery: [Place of Delivery]
- Date Shipped On Board: [Date of Shipment]
DESCRIPTION OF GOODS
Received by the Carrier from the Shipper in apparent good order and condition (unless otherwise stated herein) the goods described below, for carriage from the Port of Loading to the Port of Discharge, to be delivered in like good order and condition, subject to the terms and conditions of this Bill of Lading:
- Description: [Goods Description]
- Marks and Numbers: [Marks and Numbers]
- Number of Packages/Units: [Number of Packages]
- Gross Weight: [Gross Weight]
- Measurement: [Measurement]
FREIGHT AND CHARGES
Freight: [Freight Payment]
Freight Amount (if stated): [Freight Amount]
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
1. CONTRACT OF CARRIAGE. This Bill of Lading constitutes evidence of the contract of carriage between the Shipper and the Carrier, and is a document of title to the goods described herein. Delivery of the goods will be made only upon surrender of a duly endorsed original Bill of Lading to the Carrier or their authorised agent at the Port of Discharge.
2. CARRIAGE OF GOODS BY SEA ACT 1992. This Bill of Lading is subject to the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992. A lawful holder of this Bill of Lading shall have transferred to, and vested in them, all rights of suit under the contract of carriage as if they had been an original party thereto.
3. HAGUE-VISBY RULES. The carriage of goods is subject to the [Liability Regime]. The Carrier’s liability for loss of or damage to the goods is limited to 666.67 SDR per package or unit or 2 SDR per kilogram of gross weight, whichever is the higher, unless the nature and value of the goods have been declared by the Shipper before shipment and inserted in this Bill of Lading.
4. IDENTITY OF CARRIER. The contract evidenced by this Bill of Lading is made with [Carrier Name] as carrier. The Carrier shall be entitled to sub-contract the whole or any part of the carriage.
5. DANGEROUS GOODS. The Shipper warrants that the goods are not dangerous goods as defined by SOLAS or IMDG Code regulations, unless disclosed to the Carrier and approved in writing before shipment. The Shipper indemnifies the Carrier against all loss, damage, or liability arising from any failure to comply with this warranty.
6. APPARENT ORDER AND CONDITION. The Carrier does not warrant the accuracy of any description of the goods, their marks, number, quantity, weight, or measurement stated herein, and accepts no liability in respect thereof. The goods are received in apparent good order and condition unless clauses to the contrary are endorsed hereon.
7. SET OF ORIGINALS. This Bill of Lading is issued in a set of [Number of Originals] original(s). In accomplishment of this contract of carriage, one original Bill of Lading must be surrendered, duly endorsed, in exchange for the goods or delivery order. Upon surrender of one original, all other originals shall be void and of no effect.
8. THIRD PARTIES. Save as provided by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992, no third party shall have any right to enforce any term of this Bill of Lading under the Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999.
9. GOVERNING LAW AND JURISDICTION. This Bill of Lading shall be governed by and construed in accordance with [Governing Law]. All disputes arising under or in connection with this Bill of Lading shall be resolved by [Dispute Resolution].
ISSUED BY THE CARRIER
Place of Issue: [Place of Issue]
Date of Issue: [Date of Issue]
Carrier: [Carrier Name]
Address: [Carrier Address]
Signed for and on behalf of the Master and/or the Carrier as agents only.
Carrier / Agent
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
Shipper
________________
Signature
Date: ________________
What Is a Bill of Lading (UK)?
A Bill of Lading in the United Kingdom acts as the receipt and contract of carriage for goods shipped and records the consignor, carrier, and delivery terms, as regulated by the Sea Act 1992.
As a receipt for goods, the bill of lading is issued by the carrier — or the carrier's agent — to the shipper (the exporter or seller) when the goods are loaded on board a vessel. The bill acknowledges that the goods described therein have been received in apparent good order and condition. Section 4 of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 provides that a bill of lading in the hands of a lawful holder is conclusive evidence of the shipment of the goods — meaning the carrier cannot deny, as against the lawful holder, that the goods were shipped as described.
As a document of title, an order bill of lading can be transferred by endorsement and delivery to a third party, who then becomes entitled to demand delivery of the goods from the carrier. This property makes the bill of lading uniquely valuable in trade finance: a bank that holds an endorsed original bill of lading holds security over the goods themselves and can control their release by retaining the bill until the buyer pays for the goods or the letter of credit is drawn. No other transport document — not an airway bill, a sea waybill, or a consignment note — has this function.
As evidence of the contract of carriage, the bill of lading incorporates the terms and conditions of carriage, either by printing them on the reverse of the document or by incorporating standard terms by reference. For UK shipments, those terms must comply with the mandatory requirements of the Hague-Visby Rules as enacted by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971.
Our UK Bill of Lading template is drafted to comply with the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 and 1971, and includes standard clauses covering the identity of the carrier, the Hague-Visby liability limits, container shipper's load and count clauses, the rights of the lawful holder, a Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 exclusion, and the governing law and dispute resolution provisions.
The legal framework governing the Bill of Lading (UK) in United Kingdom draws on several key statutes and regulatory bodies. Under the Companies Act 2006, Companies House maintains the register of UK companies. Section 386 of the Companies Act 2006 sets accounting record obligations. The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) enforces the Consumer Rights Act 2015. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) regulates financial services under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000. The High Court of Justice has jurisdiction under the Senior Courts Act 1981. Parties executing a Bill of Lading (UK) in United Kingdom should confirm the document reflects current law, including any amendments enacted since the original drafting date. The Companies Act 2006 sets the foundational requirements.
When Do You Need a Bill of Lading (UK)?
A Bill of Lading is needed whenever goods are carried by sea between the United Kingdom and another country (or between international ports generally) and the parties to the transaction need a document that serves simultaneously as a receipt for the goods, evidence of the contract of carriage, and — for order bills of lading — a negotiable document of title.
The bill of lading is required in the following common situations:
International trade transactions: A bill of lading is required in virtually all international sales of goods carried by sea where the goods are sold on terms that require the seller to procure and present a bill of lading (for example, under CIF — Cost, Insurance and Freight — and FOB — Free on Board — Incoterms). Under a CIF contract, the seller must ship the goods, insure them, and present the buyer with a clean shipped on board bill of lading as part of the shipping documents.
Letters of credit (documentary credit transactions): Banks financing international trade transactions under a letter of credit (governed by the UCP 600 rules of the International Chamber of Commerce) typically require the seller to present a shipped on board bill of lading as one of the documents required for payment. The bank holds the original bill of lading as security against the goods until the buyer reimburses the bank.
Cargo insurance claims: When goods are damaged or lost in transit, the bill of lading is one of the primary documents required by the cargo insurer to process a claim. The bill of lading evidences the quantity and condition of the goods when loaded, and the carrier's receipt of the goods creates the baseline against which any loss or damage is assessed.
Port release and customs clearance: The carrier at the port of discharge will only release the goods to the person who presents an original bill of lading (duly endorsed if it is an order bill). Customs authorities in most countries also require a copy of the bill of lading for clearance purposes.
Disputes about cargo: If goods are lost, damaged, short-shipped, or delayed, the bill of lading is the primary contractual document governing the rights of the cargo owner against the carrier. Under the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992, the lawful holder of the bill has all rights of suit under the carriage contract, including the right to sue the carrier for damages under the Hague-Visby Rules.
What to Include in Your Bill of Lading (UK)
A legally effective Bill of Lading under English law must contain the following key elements, as required by the Hague-Visby Rules (incorporated by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971) and the standard requirements of international trade practice.
Identification of the parties: The bill of lading must clearly identify the shipper (consignor), the consignee (or 'to order' for a negotiable bill), the notify party, and the carrier. The carrier must be identified as the entity with which the shipper has contracted for the carriage of the goods — typically the shipping line or the ship owner.
Bill of lading number: A unique reference number assigned by the carrier identifies the specific contract of carriage. This number is cross-referenced on all other shipping documents (commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin, and the letter of credit).
Vessel and voyage details: The name of the vessel, the voyage number, the port of loading, and the port of discharge must be clearly stated. For a shipped on board bill of lading, the date on which the goods were actually loaded on board the vessel must be stated. This date is particularly important under UCP 600 for letters of credit.
Description of goods: Under Article III Rule 3 of the Hague-Visby Rules, the carrier must, on demand of the shipper, issue a bill of lading showing: the leading marks necessary for identification of the goods; the number of packages or pieces, or the quantity or weight; and the apparent order and condition of the goods. The carrier's obligation to issue an accurate description is the basis of the receipt function of the bill of lading. Where goods are packed in containers by the shipper (a 'shipper's load and count' situation), the carrier typically adds a clause to the bill noting that the container was sealed by the shipper and that the carrier has no knowledge of or responsibility for the contents.
Container details: For containerised shipments, the bill of lading should identify each container by its unique BIC code number and its seal number. This identifies the specific container unit in which the goods are carried and is essential for customs clearance and cargo tracking.
Freight terms: The bill should clearly state whether freight is prepaid (paid by the shipper before shipment) or collect (payable by the consignee at the port of discharge). Some bills state the freight amount; others simply state 'freight as agreed' or 'freight as arranged'.
Liability terms — Hague-Visby Rules: The bill must incorporate the Hague-Visby Rules. Under the Rules, the carrier is entitled to limit its liability to 666.67 SDR per package or unit or 2 SDR per kilogram of gross weight, whichever is higher. This limit is defeated if the shipper declares the nature and value of the goods and this is inserted in the bill. The Hague-Visby Rules also set out the carrier's defences, including the 'nautical fault' exception (navigation errors by the crew).
Number of originals: Bills of lading are typically issued in a set of three original signed copies. Once one original is surrendered to the carrier at the port of discharge in exchange for the goods, the remaining originals become void. This 'set of originals' mechanism is fundamental to the security function of the bill of lading.
Governing law and jurisdiction: English law bills of lading typically specify the laws of England and Wales as the governing law, with disputes to be resolved in the English courts or by LMAA arbitration in London. This gives the parties the benefit of a sophisticated commercial law jurisdiction with extensive expertise in maritime disputes.
Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 exclusion: Standard English law bills of lading exclude third-party rights under the 1999 Act, to confirm that rights under the bill can only be transferred through the mechanism of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992. The forms-legal.com Bill of Lading (UK) template covers the mandatory elements under Companies Act 2006.
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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Bill of Lading (UK) (United Kingdom) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/uk/business/shipping/bill-of-lading-uk
"Bill of Lading (UK) (United Kingdom)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/uk/business/shipping/bill-of-lading-uk.
@misc{formslegal-bill-of-lading-uk,
author = {{Forms Legal}},
title = {Bill of Lading (UK) (United Kingdom)},
year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/uk/business/shipping/bill-of-lading-uk}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Companies Act 2006}
}Frequently Asked Questions
A Bill of Lading is a shipping document that performs three distinct legal functions under English law, all of which are recognised by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992. First, it is a receipt for goods: the carrier acknowledges in the bill that it has received the goods described therein in apparent good order and condition (unless clauses are added to the contrary). This receipt creates an evidential presumption in favour of a holder of the bill as to the quantity and condition of the goods shipped, under section 4 of the 1992 Act. Second, it is a document of title to the goods: the holder of an original bill of lading (if the bill is made out 'to order' or 'to bearer') has the right to demand delivery of the goods from the carrier at the port of discharge. The goods can be transferred in transit by endorsing and delivering the bill of lading, which is why bills of lading are used in international trade finance — a bank holding the bill holds security over the goods as collateral. Third, it is evidence of (or, in some cases, the contract itself) the contract of carriage between the shipper and the carrier. The terms and conditions printed on the back of the bill of lading (incorporating the Hague-Visby Rules by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971) govern the rights and obligations of the parties.
The Hague-Visby Rules are an international set of rules governing the rights and liabilities of carriers and shippers for the international carriage of goods by sea. They are based on the original Hague Rules of 1924 (the International Convention for the Unification of Certain Rules of Law Relating to Bills of Lading) as amended by the Visby Protocol of 1968 and the SDR Protocol of 1979. In English law, the Hague-Visby Rules have the force of law by virtue of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1971. The Rules apply mandatorily to any contract for the carriage of goods by sea evidenced by a bill of lading issued in the United Kingdom, or where the bill of lading specifies a UK port of loading, or where the parties have agreed that the Rules shall apply. The Rules impose on the carrier a non-delegable duty to exercise due diligence to make the ship seaworthy, properly man and equip it, and make the cargo holds fit and safe for the reception, carriage, and preservation of the goods (Article III, Rule 1). They also require the carrier to properly and carefully load, handle, stow, carry, keep, care for, and discharge the goods (Article III, Rule 2). The carrier's liability for loss or damage is limited to 666.67 SDR per package or 2 SDR per kilogram of gross weight of the goods lost or damaged, whichever is higher (Article IV, Rule 5). This limit is nullified if the loss or damage was caused by the carrier's own fraud or recklessness.
A straight bill of lading (also called a non-negotiable bill of lading) is issued to a named consignee. Delivery of the goods can only be made to that named person — the document cannot be transferred to another party by endorsement. Straight bills of lading are typically used where the seller and buyer have an established relationship and the buyer's identity is known and fixed before shipment. They may be acceptable as a document of title in some jurisdictions, though under English law the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 distinguishes between 'bills of lading' (which can be negotiable) and 'sea waybills' (which are essentially receipts but are not documents of title). An order bill of lading (negotiable bill of lading) is made out 'to order' or 'to order of [named party]'. It can be transferred by endorsement and delivery to a third party — typically used in trade finance transactions where a bank takes a security interest in the goods by holding the original bill of lading as collateral against a letter of credit. The person holding the endorsed original bill of lading ('the lawful holder' under section 5(2) of the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992) is entitled to demand delivery of the goods. Under section 2 of the 1992 Act, the lawful holder of an order bill of lading has all rights of suit under the contract of carriage vested in them.
The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 replaced the Bills of Lading Act 1855 and fundamentally reformed the law governing the transfer of rights and liabilities under bills of lading in English law. Under section 2 of the 1992 Act, a person becomes the 'lawful holder' of a bill of lading by: being the person identified as the consignee (for a straight bill); or becoming the holder by endorsement and delivery (for an order bill); or in any other case where the bill has been transferred in accordance with the terms of the bill. Once a person becomes a lawful holder, section 2(1) vests in them all rights of suit under the contract of carriage as if they had been an original party to that contract. This means the lawful holder can sue the carrier for loss of or damage to the goods as if they had entered into the original contract with the carrier. Section 3 of the 1992 Act provides that a person who takes delivery of the goods, or makes a claim under the contract of carriage, or takes steps to enforce the contract, becomes subject to the same liabilities under the contract as if they had been an original party — including liability to pay freight charges. The 1992 Act also removed the requirement (under the 1855 Act) that the property in the goods must have passed to the endorsee at the time of endorsement — a step that removed a significant technical barrier to the use of bills of lading in modern trade finance.
The Contracts (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999 gives third parties who are not parties to a contract the right to enforce a contractual term if the contract expressly provides for it or if the term purports to confer a benefit on the third party. In the context of bills of lading, this could potentially allow third parties to enforce certain terms of the carriage contract without going through the specific regime established by the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992 for the transfer of rights under a bill of lading. To avoid uncertainty and to confirm that rights under a bill of lading are transferred only through the established mechanism of the 1992 Act (by endorsement and delivery), it is standard practice in bills of lading issued under English law to include an express exclusion of third-party rights under the 1999 Act. This exclusion prevents any third party from claiming rights under the bill of lading other than through the specific mechanism set out in the Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992. The exclusion does not prevent the lawful holder of the bill of lading from exercising their rights under the 1992 Act — it simply ensures that those rights can only arise through the correct legal mechanism.
A 'shipped on board' bill of lading (also called an 'on board' bill of lading) is one that certifies that the goods have actually been loaded onto a named vessel on a specified date. This is to be contrasted with a 'received for shipment' bill of lading, which only certifies that the carrier has received the goods for the purpose of shipment but does not confirm that the goods have yet been loaded onto a vessel. The distinction is critically important in international trade finance, particularly where the transaction is governed by a letter of credit issued under the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (UCP 600) published by the International Chamber of Commerce. Under UCP 600, banks will generally only accept 'shipped on board' bills of lading as compliant documents — a 'received for shipment' bill of lading will not be accepted under a standard letter of credit and will prevent the seller from drawing on the credit. Our Bill of Lading template is issued as a 'shipped on board' bill of lading, certifying that the goods were loaded on board the named vessel on the date specified.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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