Air Waybill
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://airlinefyi.com/iframe/glossary/air-waybill/" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/air-waybill/
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://airlinefyi.com/glossary/air-waybill/)
Use the native HTML custom element.
Air Waybill
Definition
Document serving as a contract of carriage between shipper and airline for cargo shipment
An air waybill is the primary document governing the carriage of cargo by air. It serves simultaneously as a contract of carriage between the shipper and the airline, a receipt for the goods, a customs declaration, and an instruction document for the handling and delivery of the shipment throughout its journey. No air cargo shipment moves without an air waybill.
What Is an Air Waybill?
The air waybill (AWB) is non-negotiable, meaning it cannot be transferred or traded the way a bill of lading for ocean freight can. This is a critical legal distinction: title to the goods does not pass through the AWB. The document is instead a straightforward transportation contract that identifies the shipper (consignor), the consignee, the nature and quantity of goods, the declared value, the origin and destination airports, the agreed handling conditions, and the charges due. Airlines issue Master Air Waybills (MAWBs) to freight forwarders, who in turn issue House Air Waybills (HAWBs) to individual shippers when they consolidate multiple shipments into a single aircraft booking.
How It Works in Practice
A shipper or freight forwarder completes the AWB with accurate commodity descriptions, dimensions, gross weight, and declared value. For regulated commodities — pharmaceuticals, live animals, valuables, dangerous goods — additional declarations and documentation are appended. The completed AWB accompanies the shipment from pickup to final delivery. At customs, it serves as the primary declaration document. If the shipment is transshipped through an intermediate hub, each handling agent records acceptance and transfer on the AWB. The consignee surrenders or references the AWB at delivery to claim the goods. Airlines use AWB numbers as the universal tracking identifier across their cargo tracking systems.
Why It Matters
The AWB establishes legal responsibility and liability limits under international law, primarily the Montreal Convention of 1999. If cargo is damaged, delayed, or lost, the AWB defines the maximum compensation the carrier owes — currently set at 22 Special Drawing Rights (approximately USD 30) per kilogram unless a higher declared value is specified. For customs authorities worldwide, the AWB is the definitive import or transit declaration. It is also the financial instrument on which freight charges are billed, making accuracy in completion essential for both regulatory compliance and revenue collection.
Key Facts and Figures
- The standard AWB format is the IATA Neutral Air Waybill (stock prefix 000), though most airlines issue their own numbered stock (for example, Lufthansa uses prefix 020)
- A complete AWB set traditionally included an original for the issuing carrier, an original for the consignee, an original for the shipper, and up to 11 additional copies for customs, agents, and handling parties
- The Montreal Convention limits carrier liability to 22 SDR per kilogram for lost or damaged cargo absent a higher declared value
- IATA's Cargo-XML and ONE Record standards are replacing paper AWBs with digital equivalents across the industry
- In 2023, approximately 60 percent of global air cargo was shipped under e-AWBs, with IATA targeting full digital migration
Related Concepts
Electronic Air Waybill, Cargo Revenue, IATA Cargo Standards, Dangerous Goods by Air, Cargo Ground Handler
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Air Waybill (AWB)?
What does AWB stand for?
Why is Air Waybill (AWB) important in aviation?
Cargo & Logistics
- Belly Freight
- Freighter Aircraft
- Unit Load Device (ULD)
- Electronic Air Waybill (e-AWB)
- Dangerous Goods by Air (DGR)
- Cargo Revenue
- Cargo Load Factor (CLF)
- Temperature-Controlled Shipping
- Cargo Hub
- Combi Aircraft
- Integrator (Express Carrier)
- Cargo Ground Handler
- Cargo Charter
- IATA Cargo Standards
- Cargo Screening
Explore on Sister Sites
-
Airport Glossary ↗
Aviation terms for airports, routes, and air traffic control
-
Aircraft Glossary ↗
150 aircraft and aviation technology terms