What Is a Bill of Entry?

Definition and purpose of bills of entry in customs clearance for import shipments.

By Tijara Editorial TeamReviewed by Tijara Trade Operations TeamPublished: Apr 14, 2026Updated: Apr 14, 20262 min read

Definition

A Bill of Entry (BOE) is a legal document filed by an importer or customs broker with customs authorities, declaring the details of imported goods for clearance. It is the formal import declaration that triggers duty assessment.

Why it matters for traders

The BOE is the primary document customs uses to assess duties, verify compliance, and release goods. Errors in the BOE can lead to duty penalties, shipment holds, or even seizure of goods.

Types of Bill of Entry

  • Bill of Entry for Home Consumption — Goods cleared for immediate use after duty payment
  • Bill of Entry for Warehousing — Goods stored in a bonded warehouse without immediate duty payment
  • Bill of Entry for Ex-Bond Clearance — Goods cleared from a bonded warehouse after duty payment

Key information required

  • Importer name and registration number
  • Vessel name and voyage number
  • Port of loading and discharge
  • Bill of lading number and date
  • Item descriptions with HS codes
  • Assessable value (CIF value)
  • Applicable duty rates and amounts
  • Country of origin

Operational example

An importer in Chennai files a Bill of Entry for a shipment of machinery from Germany. The BOE lists each machine with its HS code, CIF value in EUR converted to INR, and the applicable basic customs duty rate. Customs assesses the duty, the importer pays, and the goods are released for delivery.

FAQs

Sources

  1. [1] Import Procedures
    World Customs OrganizationAccessed: 2026-04-14

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