Freight forwarding fraud, cargo theft, and incompetence cost shippers billions of dollars every year. Knowing what to look for — and what to run from — can save your business from a very expensive mistake.
Red Flag 1: No Verifiable Licence or Accreditation
Every legitimate freight forwarder should hold verifiable licences. In the USA, ocean freight forwarders must be licensed by the Federal Maritime Commission. In the UK, look for BIFA membership. Globally, FIATA membership is the recognised benchmark. If a forwarder cannot provide evidence of their licences, walk away.
Red Flag 2: Unusually Low Rates
A quote dramatically lower than all others may indicate the quote is missing key charges, the company is cutting corners on compliance, or in the worst case, it is a fraudulent operation designed to collect your money.
Red Flag 3: Vague or Evasive Answers
A competent freight forwarder should clearly explain their charges, routing, carrier relationships, and documentation process. Vague answers, avoiding direct questions, or pressure to sign quickly are serious warning signs.
Red Flag 4: No Insurance Offering
Professional freight forwarders will always offer cargo insurance. A forwarder that dismisses insurance may be cutting corners elsewhere.
Red Flag 5: No Physical Office or Contact Information
Verify that the forwarder has a real physical presence — a verifiable business address, a working office phone, and company registration details that can be independently confirmed.
Using CargoLinked for Safe Forwarder Selection
CargoLinked pre-vets every freight forwarder on the platform — verifying licences, checking accreditations, and collecting authentic shipper reviews — significantly reducing the risk of engaging with an unqualified or fraudulent operator.