Who this guide is for
This corridor guide is for operators running shipments from Uae to Morocco who want a repeatable process for documents, customs clearance, and margin control.
If you’re new to trade terms, start with these definitions and then come back for execution:
- HS classification: /glossary/hs-code
- Incoterms: /glossary/incoterms
- Bill of lading: /glossary/bill-of-lading
Corridor workflow (the repeatable version)
A corridor becomes easy when you treat it like a standard operating procedure:
- Lock item master (SKU description + HS code + UOM)
- Lock commercial terms (Incoterm + named place + payment method)
- Generate documents from one source of truth
- File customs with consistent line-level data
- Capture costs as they occur and reconcile per shipment
Documentation checklist
Most shipments require some combination of:
- Commercial invoice
- Packing list
- Transport document (BL/AWB)
- Certificate of origin (when required by buyer/bank or preferential claim)
- Product-specific permits/certificates (commodity-dependent)
Practical control: the invoice, packing list, and transport document must agree on names, quantities, weights, and descriptions.
Customs and duty basics (don’t guess)
Duties and border controls typically depend on HS classification and customs value rules. Treat HS code ownership as a permanent responsibility, not a one-time setup task.
Landed cost discipline
If you want predictable margin on Uae → Morocco, the operating rule is simple:
- keep a shipment cost ledger (freight, duty/tax, clearance, handling, inland delivery), and
- allocate consistently down to SKU unit cost.
Start with: /resources/how-to-calculate-landed-cost
How Tijara helps on this corridor
Tijara keeps your items, documents, costs, and payments connected to the same deal, so you can:
- reduce document rework,
- calculate defensible landed cost, and
- track status and exceptions as a timeline.