What Is Container Loading Supervision?

Container Loading Supervision (CLS) is a quality control service where a trained inspector is present at the factory or warehouse during the entire process of loading goods into a shipping container. The inspector ensures that the correct products, in the correct quantities, are loaded properly and the container is sealed with a verified seal number.

Why it matters: Once a container is sealed and leaves the factory, any discrepancies in quantity, damage during loading, or incorrect products become extremely costly to resolve — often only discovered at the destination port.

What the Inspector Checks

  • Container condition — structural integrity, cleanliness, no holes or water damage, no residual odors, floor condition
  • Container number verification — matches shipping documents and booking confirmation
  • Quantity count — every carton counted against packing list and purchase order
  • Carton condition — no crushed, wet, or damaged cartons loaded
  • Shipping marks — carton labels match PO requirements (SKU, destination, handling marks)
  • Loading method — proper stacking, weight distribution, use of dunnage/bracing
  • Random spot checks — opening cartons to verify contents match outer labeling
  • Seal recording — container seal number documented with photographs
  • Final photos — loaded container interior, exterior, seal, and container number

When to Use Container Loading Supervision

  • High-value shipments — the cost of re-shipping or claims exceeds the CLS cost many times over
  • Mixed SKU orders — multiple products/sizes in one container require careful verification
  • New supplier relationships — verify the factory loads exactly what was inspected
  • After a passed final inspection — ensures the approved goods are actually what gets loaded
  • Fragile or heavy goods — proper loading technique is critical to prevent transit damage

Container Loading vs. Final Inspection

These are complementary services, not substitutes:

  • Final Inspection (PSI) checks product quality using AQL sampling
  • Container Loading (CLS) verifies that the inspected goods are properly loaded in full quantity

A common issue: goods pass final inspection, but the factory loads different (uninspected) goods, or loads fewer cartons than ordered. CLS prevents this.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does container loading supervision take?
Typically 4-8 hours depending on the container size (20ft vs 40ft) and the number of SKUs. The inspector stays for the entire loading process until the container is sealed.
Can CLS be combined with final inspection?
Yes, if goods are being loaded immediately after final inspection, both services can often be performed on the same day by the same inspector, which reduces costs.
What happens if the inspector finds issues during loading?
The inspector documents the issue (damaged cartons, quantity shortage, wrong products) and immediately notifies the buyer. Loading can be paused until the issue is resolved, preventing problematic goods from shipping.