SHIPPING DEFINITIONS · PLAN TIMING
DIRECT ANSWER
ERD opens the cargo receiving window; CY Cut closes it. ERD is the first day a loaded container can be delivered to the terminal. CY Cut is the deadline before vessel sailing. The two are set by different parties on different rhythms. Operators who treat them as one signal miss the changes happening to the other.
SAME VESSEL, BOTH DATES MOVE INDEPENDENTLY
An exporter's booking confirmation lists ERD as Monday morning and CY Cut as Friday at 5:00 PM. By Wednesday, the carrier has pulled CY Cut in to Friday at noon because of vessel sailing time. ERD remains Monday. By Thursday, the terminal has shifted ERD forward to Sunday afternoon because of berthing changes. CY Cut remains Friday at noon.
The window the exporter planned against (Monday-to-Friday-5PM) and the window the truck actually has (Sunday-PM-to-Friday-noon) are different windows shaped by different forces. ERD and CY Cut moved on independent rhythms, and the operator who tracked only one missed the change in the other.
EXPORTER
Production is sequenced against ERD. Dispatch is sequenced against CY Cut. Operators who watch only the opening of the window get caught when the closing pulls in.
FREIGHT FORWARDER
Customers ask "when can I deliver?" and the forwarder answers with ERD. The customer plans against the opening and is surprised when the closing limits the same plan.
DRAYAGE OPERATOR
The T-3 appointment book is keyed to CY Cut. The T-1 dispatch decision is keyed to ERD. When the two move differently, the appointment and the dispatch can become decoupled.
ERD and CY Cut are different deadlines on different rhythms. Plans that treat them as one signal tend to fail.
OBSERVED ACROSS U.S. EXPORT VESSEL SCHEDULES
Based on aggregated shipment observations across major U.S. ports:
The two dates are not symmetric. They behave differently and need to be tracked separately, then reconciled into the executable window.
TradeLanes analysis of U.S. export vessel schedules. Observed schedule behavior based on published carrier and terminal data.
IN SIMPLE TERMS
ERD is the start of the cargo receiving window. CY Cut is the end. Both can change before vessel sailing, and they do not change on the same rhythm. ERD reflects terminal and vessel-side reality; CY Cut reflects carrier and manifest-side reality.
Caption: ERD moves on a terminal rhythm. CY Cut moves on a carrier rhythm. They are not the same signal.
ERD is when the terminal will start accepting a loaded container for a specific vessel. CY Cut is when it will stop. ERD opens the window; CY Cut closes it.
No. ERD is set by the terminal in coordination with the vessel operator, based on yard capacity and berthing. CY Cut is set by the carrier in coordination with vessel sailing time. The terminal enforces both at the gate.
No. ERD must always come before CY Cut for the same vessel. The receiving window between them is the only period in which delivery is possible. If revisions cause ERD to approach CY Cut, the window compresses but does not invert.
Both can move multiple times before sailing. CY Cut more reliably moves in one direction (earlier). ERD can move either way. The frequency varies by carrier-port pair.
No. Missing ERD means the truck arrives before the terminal will accept the container, so it is turned away. You can still deliver after ERD, as long as you meet CY Cut.
The container is rolled to the next available vessel, often 7 to 14 days later. Storage, demurrage, detention, and rebooking costs land on the shipper.
Both are dates on the same booking, both relate to terminal acceptance, and both can be communicated as "the cut." Inside a busy operation, the two dates can blur into a single mental "deadline" even though they are operationally distinct.
TradeLanes is the system that determines whether a plan will hold before execution. Each booking is evaluated against the executable receiving window, not the published one, before the dispatch decision is made.