Freight & NVOCC

Demurrage

Demurrage is a penalty fee charged by a shipping line (or terminal) when a container or vessel remains at the port/terminal beyond the agreed "free time" — the period during which use is included in the freight rate.

For containers, demurrage typically starts after 3-7 free days from discharge and rises in tiered bands (often US$50-200/day initially, doubling after 7+ days). For vessels, demurrage is paid by the charterer to the shipowner when loading/discharge takes longer than the time allowed in the charter party (laytime).

Demurrage is often confused with detention — they are different: demurrage applies while the container is still inside the port/terminal; detention applies after the container has left the port but hasn't been returned empty to the shipping line's depot within free time.

Both are major sources of supply-chain cost leakage. AI-augmented freight platforms can predict demurrage exposure per container and trigger preventive action — earlier discharge, repositioning, or contract re-negotiation — before charges accrue.

Also known as
Container Demurrage Port Demurrage
Related terms
Where this matters at WHIZTEC
All glossary terms

Vea WHIZ en su operación.

Un Arquitecto de Soluciones adaptará un recorrido de 30 minutos a sus módulos, integraciones y plan de despliegue. Sin compromiso.

Reservar Demo Hablar con Ventas