May 25, 2016 08:37
8 yrs ago
19 viewers *
English term

FH

Non-PRO English Law/Patents Law (general) Debit Memo
currency: xx
terms of payment: up to 2015 without deduction
terms of delivery: FH

Debit Memo
customer no.: xxx
document number: xx
site/sales office: xx
sales person: xxx
Change log

May 25, 2016 08:37: changed "Kudoz queue" from "In queue" to "Public"

May 25, 2016 08:46: Yana Dovgopol changed "Vetting" from "Needs Vetting" to "Vet OK"

Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

PRO (2): philgoddard, Steffen Walter

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Discussion

Irina Serkova May 25, 2016:
Hello,
Terms of delivery are specified in INCOTERMS. Please see the reference in my previous letter.
Armorel Young May 25, 2016:
In response to your question ... "terms of delivery" means the conditions upon which delivery is made - it's not the delivery date or deadline. Similarly with "terms of sale", "terms of supply" and so on.

Responses

+4
37 mins
Selected

free house

Lots of definitions of this on the internet, e.g.:

Delivered Duty Paid (DDP) - Is an international trade term (Incoterms 2000) in which the seller/consignor clears the goods for export and is responsible for making them available at consignee's/buyer's named destination not cleared for import. Seller is also responsible for import clearance, duties, and administrative costs. This term is used for any mode of transportation and is used when the destination is other than a port. Also known as "free domicile" or "free house."

http://www.priorityworldwide.com/resources/industry_terms.as...
Note from asker:
Thank you, so terms of delivery here means (conditions not period)?
Thank you for your help
Peer comment(s):

agree Yasutomo Kanazawa
1 hr
agree BrigitteHilgner
1 hr
agree philgoddard
4 hrs
agree acetran
7 days
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "thank you "
+1
45 mins

free-house

Many of the airfreight forwarders tend to use the term "free-house delivery," but this does not tell us exactly who is going to pay for the import duty and tax. You might be better off using either "DDU" or "DDP" to be more specific.
http://www.analink.com/bulletin/content2.asp?m=0_1&cate3=Log...
Note from asker:
Thank you
Peer comment(s):

agree Yasutomo Kanazawa
59 mins
Something went wrong...
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