From a commercial standpoint, this feels simple:
But under the U.S. Foreign Trade Regulations (FTR), those simple business labels aren’t used. They’re replaced by regulatory terms that typically—but not always—mean the same thing. And the official definitions of those regulatory terms determine who controls the shipment, who files the Electronic Export Information (EEI) and who bears compliance responsibility.
Under the FTR, the foreign buyer is defined as the Foreign Principal Party in Interest (FPPI). When that buyer authorizes a U.S. agent—typically a freight forwarder—to facilitate the export and prepare and file the EEI on their behalf, the transaction becomes what the regulations call a routed export transaction.
Understanding those terms, and what they mean, is essential for small and medium-sized exporters, especially when dealing with routed export transactions.
Let’s clarify it in plain English.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, which administers the Foreign Trade Regulations, the FPPI is:
The [...] party shown on the transportation document to whom final delivery or end-use of the goods will be made. This party may be the ultimate consignee. Generally, the FPPI is the foreign buyer of the goods that are purchased or obtained for export.
In practical terms:
The FPPI is usually your foreign customer—the party abroad that purchases or ultimately receives the goods.
However, the FPPI is defined by the regulations, not what your invoice says. That distinction matters when identifying who must file the EEI through the Automated Export System (AES), which is required for most exports valued at more than $2,500 per Schedule B classification, or for any shipment that requires an export license.
Often—but not always.
The ultimate consignee is the party abroad who ultimately receives the goods.
The FPPI is the foreign party who purchases or obtains the goods for export.
In many transactions, they are the same entity. But not always. For example:
When it comes to filing the EEI through AES, this distinction is important.
For a more complete explanation of the differences, see our article Export Compliance: Who Is the Ultimate Consignee?, or watch this video:
The Foreign Trade Regulations define other parties in the export transaction as well, including the U.S. Principal Party in Interest, or USPPI.
In most cases, the USPPI is the U.S. seller. That doesn’t change depending on whether your export is a standard or routed export transaction. But the responsibilities of the two parties do shift depending on the type of transaction, so it’s important to understand who is whom.
(For more details about the responsibilities of the USPPI, see our article on Understanding U.S. Principal Party in Interest.)
The FPPI becomes especially important in a routed export transaction. A routed export transaction occurs when:
The foreign principal party in interest authorizes a U.S. agent—typically a freight forwarder—to facilitate the export and prepare and file the EEI on their behalf.
Notice something important:
Your foreign customer will not say, “This is a routed export transaction.”
Instead, you will see commercial signals:
Whether you intended it or not, those commercial decisions can change your company’s legal responsibilities.
(For a full explanation, see Standard vs. Routed Export Shipment: What U.S. Exporters Need to Know.)
Under the FTR, in a routed export transaction, the FPPI is responsible for:
However—and this is critical—the FPPI cannot file EEI directly because EEI must be filed by a party residing in the United States.
That means the FPPI must authorize either:
to file through AES.
Meanwhile, the USPPI is still responsible for providing accurate export information to the filing party, including:
Responsibility for filing may shift but responsibility for accuracy does not disappear.
In one word: compliance.
Many exporters mistakenly assume that when a foreign buyer arranges the freight, they are “off the hook.”
They are not.
Even in a routed export transaction:
In fact, the U.S. Census Bureau has repeatedly emphasized that misunderstanding routed transactions is a common source of compliance errors.
This is why many compliance professionals recommend that the USPPI request the authority to file EEI themselves, even in routed transactions, to maintain visibility and control.
In 2025, updates to the Foreign Trade Regulations clarified several definitions and reinforced filing responsibilities under routed export transactions.
Shipping Solutions hosted a one-hour webinar with Census Bureau staff outlining these changes and answering exporter questions. We also published a detailed summary of the 2025 FTR changes and provide access to the webinar recording.
The Census Bureau speaker pointed out two important updates to the regulations:
First, while Census has long said that the regulations don’t connect specific Incoterms 2020 Rules to the definition of a routed export transaction, that is now expressly stated in the FTR. It is not the term EXW that identifies a routed export transaction. It is the buyer’s responsibilities under that term that make the definition apply.
Second, a newly published Appendix C in the FTR explicitly lists which EEI data elements must be provided by the USPPI and the FPPI’s Authorized Agent in a routed export. This listing can help avoid confusion when the two parties are different.
Exporters who rely on Incoterms alone to determine filing responsibility should review these updates carefully.
Here are some real-world risk scenarios I’ve seen among small and medium-sized exporters:
The key principle is this:
Even when the FPPI controls transportation, many experienced exporters choose to:
This approach reduces compliance risk and ensures accuracy.
Shipping Solutions export documentation software simplifies this process by allowing you to file through AES while simultaneously producing required export forms and maintaining a clear compliance record.
If you would like to see how it works, sign up for a free online demo. There's no obligation.
The term “Foreign Principal Party in Interest” may not appear on your invoice. Your customer may never use the phrase.
But under the U.S. Foreign Trade Regulations, that definition determines who controls the shipment, who authorizes the filing and how compliance responsibility is assigned.
Understanding the FPPI is not about memorizing acronyms. It is about translating business practice into regulatory language and protecting your company from avoidable compliance risk.
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This article was first published in February 2015 and has been updated to include current information, links and formatting.