SHIPPING DEFINITIONS · PLAN TIMING
DIRECT ANSWER
Carrier portals and terminal portals frequently display different ERD or CY Cut times for the same vessel. The two systems pull from different sources and update on different rhythms. When they disagree, the executable schedule at the gate usually follows the terminal.
SAME VESSEL, TWO DIFFERENT CY CUTS
On Friday morning, the carrier portal shows CY Cut as Friday at 5:00 PM. The terminal portal shows the same vessel's CY Cut as Friday at noon. The exporter checks the carrier portal and dispatches at 11:00 AM expecting six hours of margin.
The truck arrives at 12:30 PM. The terminal gate enforces the terminal-side cut. The container is refused. The carrier portal said yes. The terminal said no. The terminal won at the gate.
EXPORTER
Operators who default to the carrier portal as the source of truth lose access to the terminal-side rhythm. The disagreements that matter most cluster inside the final 72 hours.
FREIGHT FORWARDER
The forwarder communicates the date that was current at the time of communication. The customer plans against it. When the date diverges between sources, the customer absorbs the cost without seeing the change.
DRAYAGE OPERATOR
Drayage shops keep the terminal portal open in one tab and the carrier portal in another. Reconciling the two by eye is the structural workaround for a system gap.
When the carrier portal and the terminal portal disagree, the gate reconciles in the terminal's direction.
OBSERVED ACROSS U.S. EXPORT VESSEL SCHEDULES
Based on aggregated shipment observations across major U.S. ports:
A single-source view of the schedule is structurally incomplete. Operators reading both sources catch most disagreements; operators reading one absorb them as cost.
TradeLanes analysis of U.S. export vessel schedules. Observed schedule behavior based on published carrier and terminal data.
IN SIMPLE TERMS
Carrier portals and terminal portals are two views of the same vessel. They are rarely identical, and the differences matter at the gate. The terminal source is closer to operational reality; the carrier source is closer to customer-service updates. Reading both is the cheapest insurance against a missed cut.
Caption: The carrier portal and the terminal portal are two views of the same vessel. They are rarely identical, and the differences matter at the gate.
They draw from different source systems on different update cycles. The carrier portal reflects the carrier customer-service system; the terminal portal reflects the terminal operating system. They reconcile against operational reality at different speeds.
Both, ideally. When they disagree, the terminal portal more often aligns with what the gate enforces. Operators who track both catch disagreements early; operators who track only one absorb them as cost.
Disagreement is common, especially inside the final 72 hours before vessel sailing. Frequency varies by carrier-port pair.
The terminal's gate clock governs at the moment of in-gate. If the carrier portal shows a later cut and the terminal shows an earlier one, the earlier one is what the gate clerk will read.
The terminal reconciles against operational reality at the gate continuously. The carrier customer-service system updates behind that. The driver sees the executable schedule before the carrier portal catches up.
No. The booking confirmation reflects the dates at the time of booking. Both ERD and CY Cut typically revise at least once before sailing. Re-pull both sources before dispatch.
Yes. Some pairs reconcile their portals quickly; some lag. The pattern is observable and varies by lane.
TradeLanes is the system that determines whether a plan will hold before execution. Each booking is evaluated against both carrier-side and terminal-side schedule data, and the call is delivered before the window closes.