Fastener RFQs often focus on size, grade, material, and coating. Those details matter, but trade terms can change the final price just as much. A quotation for FOB Ningbo, CIF Manila, and DDP project site delivery may look like three prices for the same bolts, but the cost responsibility is very different.
For fastener buyers, this is important because bolts, nuts, washers, screws, anchors, and studs are heavy cargo. Freight, customs duty, taxes, port charges, and local trucking can change the real landed cost quickly.
Why Trade Terms Must Be Clear in Fastener RFQs
Price Depends on Responsibility
FOB, CIF, and DDP define different cost and risk responsibilities. If the buyer only asks for “price” without trade terms, suppliers may quote different bases. That makes comparison inaccurate.
For regular product sourcing, buyers can review standard fasteners and prepare RFQs with both technical and logistics details.
FOB Information Buyers Should Provide
FOB Requires a Loading Port
FOB means the seller is responsible for delivering the goods to the named port of loading and loading them on board the vessel. The buyer usually controls ocean freight, insurance, destination customs, and local delivery.
For fastener RFQs under FOB, include:
- Named port of loading, such as Ningbo, Shanghai, or Qingdao
- Product list with size, standard, material, grade, and finish
- Total quantity by item
- Packing method
- Estimated gross weight and CBM
- Required shipment date
- Forwarder contact if already appointed
FOB is often suitable for importers and distributors who already work with freight forwarders and want better control over shipping cost.
CIF Information Buyers Should Provide
CIF Requires a Destination Port
CIF includes cost, insurance, and freight to the named destination port. It is commonly used for sea freight. The buyer still needs to handle import customs, duties, taxes, port charges, and inland delivery unless otherwise agreed.
For CIF RFQs, provide:
| Required Detail | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Destination port | Freight cost depends on port |
| Cargo weight | Fasteners are dense and weight-sensitive |
| Cargo volume | Affects LCL or container planning |
| Required insurance | CIF includes insurance, but coverage should be clear |
| Packing type | Cartons, pallets, wooden cases, bags |
| Document needs | Invoice, packing list, B/L, CO, MTC |
For coated or corrosion-sensitive fasteners, review various coated fasteners and confirm packing protection for sea freight.
DDP Information Buyers Should Provide
DDP Needs Full Delivery Details
DDP means the seller handles delivery to the named destination and is generally responsible for import clearance, duty, and taxes. This is convenient for buyers, but it requires much more information.
For DDP fastener quotations, provide:
- Full delivery address
- Business or importer information
- Destination country and tax registration details if required
- Product description and HS code if known
- Whether unloading is required
- Whether delivery is to warehouse, jobsite, or bonded zone
- Required delivery deadline
- Any local compliance or customs documents
DDP can be useful for small project shipments or buyers without import experience. But it may not be suitable in every country if the seller cannot legally act as importer of record.
Fastener-Specific Data to Include
Technical and Logistics Details Must Match
A useful RFQ should include both product and shipping data.
| RFQ Section | What to Include |
|---|---|
| Product | Bolt, nut, washer, screw, stud, anchor |
| Стандарт | DIN, ISO, ASTM, ASME, EN, or drawing |
| Size | Diameter, length, pitch, thread length |
| Material / grade | Carbon steel, alloy steel, stainless, 8.8, 10.9 |
| Finish | Plain, zinc, HDG, zinc flake, stainless |
| Packing | Bulk, small box, pallet, private label |
| Documents | MTC, coating report, CO, inspection report |
| Trade term | FOB port, CIF port, or DDP address |
For load-bearing orders, review high-strength fasteners and confirm inspection documents before shipment. For special dimensions, use custom non-standard fasteners and provide drawings.
Common RFQ Mistakes
Avoid these problems:
- Asking for FOB price without naming the loading port.
- Asking for CIF without destination port.
- Asking for DDP without full address and import details.
- Comparing FOB and DDP prices as if they cover the same costs.
- Forgetting gross weight, CBM, and packing details.
- Not confirming customs documents before shipment.
For broader sourcing, buyers can review the full fastener products range before building the RFQ.
Final Advice
FOB, CIF, and DDP prices are not directly comparable unless the buyer understands what each term includes. A clear fastener RFQ should define product specifications, packing, weight, volume, documents, destination, and trade term.
The more complete the RFQ, the more accurate the quotation will be.