The commercial invoice is the financial heart of every rice export transaction. It is the primary document from which customs authorities calculate import duties, banks verify LC compliance, and buyers confirm they are receiving exactly what they ordered. Yet it is also the document most frequently prepared incorrectly - small errors in wording, value, or unit description can trigger customs disputes, LC discrepancies, or delayed payment.
This guide gives you a complete field-by-field breakdown of what a rice export commercial invoice must contain, what LC-specific requirements apply, what importers should check when they receive it, and the most common errors that cause problems downstream.
The commercial invoice is the master document - all other export documents (Packing List, Bill of Lading, Certificate of Origin) must be consistent with it. Any discrepancy between documents is a potential customs or banking problem waiting to happen.
What is a Commercial Invoice in Rice Export?
The commercial invoice is a formal billing document issued by the Indian exporter to the international buyer. It serves as the official record of the sale - describing the goods, quantity, unit price, total value, payment terms, and delivery conditions. Customs authorities at the destination port use it to assess import duties. Banks use it to verify LC document compliance. Freight insurers use it to determine insured value.
Unlike a Proforma Invoice (which is a preliminary quotation before the order is confirmed), the commercial invoice is issued after the goods are ready for shipment and represents the actual, final transaction value.
Field-by-Field Breakdown of a Rice Export Commercial Invoice
| Field | What to Write | LC / Customs Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Invoice Number | Unique sequential number e.g. DV/2026/001 | Must be referenced on all other documents |
| Invoice Date | Date of issue - must be on or before BL date | Cannot be later than the Bill of Lading date |
| Exporter Name & Address | Full legal registered name and address | Must match exactly with LC and IEC records |
| Buyer / Consignee | Full legal name and address of importer | Must match LC applicant name exactly |
| LC Reference Number | LC number issued by buyer's bank | Mandatory if paying by Letter of Credit |
| Goods Description | Full description: variety, grade, broken %, moisture, packing | Must match LC description word for word |
| HS Code | Rice HS code - e.g. 1006.30 (semi/wholly milled), 1006.20 (husked) | Required for customs classification |
| Quantity | Number of bags × weight per bag = total MT | Must match Packing List exactly |
| Unit Price | Price per MT in USD (or agreed currency) | Must match LC unit price if applicable |
| Total Value | Quantity × Unit Price | Determines customs duty base and insurance value |
| Incoterm | FOB Chennai / CIF Jebel Ali / CFR Mombasa etc. | Must match LC incoterm and named port |
| Country of Origin | India | Required for preferential duty claims (CEPA, GSP) |
| Port of Loading | Indian port from which goods ship | Must match BL port of loading |
| Port of Discharge | Destination port | Must match BL port of discharge |
| Payment Terms | LC at sight / TT advance / DP 30 days etc. | Must reflect actual agreed terms |
| Bank Details | Exporter's HDFC/SBI account, IFSC, SWIFT code | Required for TT payment |
| Authorised Signatory | Director or authorised signatory name, signature, company seal | Must be signed; unsigned invoices not accepted |
How to Write the Goods Description for Rice?
The goods description on a rice export commercial invoice must be precise and consistent with the LC. A vague description like "rice" is insufficient for most markets. Here are examples of correct descriptions for different rice types:
- RNR Samba Masuri: "Non-Basmati Raw Rice - RNR (Samba Masuri) - 5% Broken - Moisture Max 14% - Karnataka Origin - In 25 Kg PP Woven Bags - 1000 Bags - 25.000 MT"
- IR-64 Parboiled: "Non-Basmati Parboiled Rice - IR-64 Grade - 5% Broken - Moisture Max 14% - In 50 Kg PP Woven Bags - 500 Bags - 25.000 MT"
- Basmati: "Indian Basmati Rice - Extra Long Grain - 1121 Raw - Average Grain Length Min 8.3mm - In 5 Kg Retail Pouches - 5000 Pouches - 25.000 MT"
Under LC terms, the goods description on the commercial invoice must match the LC description exactly - not approximately, not in meaning, but word for word. Banks check this mechanically. "Parboiled rice" and "boiled rice" are different descriptions to a bank even if they refer to the same product.
Currency and Value Declaration
Rice exports from India are almost always invoiced in USD. If the LC is opened in USD, the invoice value must be in USD. If the actual value differs from what was quoted due to exchange rate changes, this must be communicated to the buyer before invoice issuance - never under-invoice to reduce customs duty for the buyer, as this is illegal in India (FEMA violation) and can result in export license suspension.
What Importers Should Verify on the Commercial Invoice?
- Goods description matches exactly what you ordered - variety, grade, broken %, moisture, packaging
- Quantity matches the Packing List and Bill of Lading
- Unit price and total value match the LC or agreed Proforma Invoice
- Incoterm and named port are correct
- Invoice is signed and stamped - unsigned invoices are frequently rejected by customs
- HS code is correct for your country's tariff classification
- If claiming preferential duty (India-UAE CEPA, GSP), the Certificate of Origin must reference this same invoice number
Common Commercial Invoice Errors in Rice Export
- Abbreviated exporter name - "Draba Ventures" instead of "Draba Ventures Private Limited" creates LC discrepancy
- Wrong incoterm port - "FOB India" instead of "FOB Chennai" is insufficient for most LCs
- Invoice dated after BL - not permitted under UCP 600 banking rules for LC transactions
- Under-invoicing - illegal and creates audit risk on both sides
- Missing LC reference - any invoice presented under an LC must quote the LC number
- Unsigned document - many customs authorities and banks reject unsigned invoices
- Unit mismatch - stating price "per bag" when LC specifies "per MT" causes calculation discrepancy
Clean Documentation, Every Shipment
Draba Ventures issues fully compliant commercial invoices for every shipment - matched to your LC terms, Packing List, and Bill of Lading. No discrepancies, no payment delays.
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