Verified Gross Mass, or VGM, has been a mandatory requirement for every packed container loaded onto a vessel since 2016. The rule itself is short, but the operational reality behind it is where shippers lose sailings and absorb avoidable cost. A container without a valid VGM does not get loaded, no matter how clean the rest of the booking looks.
Before a single container moves, a shipper should be clear on a handful of points that decide whether the VGM clears cleanly:
- Which weighing method fits the cargo and the facility
- Whether the packing site can produce certified weights
- The VGM cutoff time for the specific sailing
- How the VGM is transmitted to the carrier and terminal
- Which party is named as shipper on the bill of lading
- The weight tolerance the carrier and port apply
- What happens to the booking if the number is late or wrong
The requirement comes from the SOLAS convention, the international agreement that governs safety at sea. It was introduced after a run of incidents tied to misdeclared container weights, including stack collapses, vessel stability problems, and injuries to terminal and crew personnel. The principle was simple. The weight a carrier plans a vessel around should be the actual weight, verified by the party that packed the box.
In practice, the rule is easy to state and easy to mishandle. Most VGM failures are not arguments about the regulation. They are timing problems, process gaps, and weights that were estimated rather than verified.
Atlantic Pacific Lines manages VGM inside the booking and documentation process, so the number is captured, validated, and submitted before it can hold up a sailing.
What VGM Means Under SOLAS
VGM is the total verified weight of a packed container. It combines the weight of the cargo, the weight of all pallets, dunnage, and packing material inside the box, and the tare weight of the container itself. It is a single figure, expressed in kilograms, that the carrier uses for vessel stowage planning.
The responsibility sits with the shipper named on the bill of lading. That party is accountable for providing an accurate VGM, even when a packing facility, warehouse, or trucker handled the physical loading. This is why the name on the bill of lading matters more than most shippers assume, because it defines who owns the declaration.
The enforcement rule is blunt. If a valid VGM is not on file by the cutoff, the carrier will not load the container. There is no estimate, no benefit of the doubt, and no loading against a weight the carrier cannot rely on.
The Two Approved Weighing Methods
SOLAS recognizes two methods for arriving at the verified gross mass. Both are valid. The right choice depends on the cargo and the equipment available at the packing site.
Method 1: Weighing the Packed Container
Method 1 weighs the entire packed and sealed container as one unit, using calibrated and certified equipment such as a weighbridge. The reading is the VGM. This method is direct and leaves little room for calculation error, which makes it the cleaner option for most full container load shipments.
Method 2: Weighing and Adding the Components
Method 2 weighs each item of cargo, along with all pallets, dunnage, and packing, then adds the container tare weight printed on the door. The sum is the VGM. This method suits shippers who already weigh goods during production or packing and do not have ready access to a weighbridge.
| Factor | Method 1 | Method 2 |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Weigh the full packed, sealed container | Weigh cargo and packing, then add container tare |
| Best suited for | FCL with weighbridge access | Cargo already weighed during packing |
| Main risk | Access to certified equipment | Calculation errors or missed items |
When Method 2 Does Not Work
Method 2 is not appropriate for every shipment. Bulk cargo that cannot be weighed item by item, materials that shift or settle in transit, and commodities such as scrap or aggregates do not lend themselves to the component approach. Some national authorities also require that the Method 2 process be documented and approved before it can be used. When the cargo cannot be broken into reliably weighable parts, Method 1 is the safer route.
Where the VGM Cutoff Sits in the Booking Timeline
The VGM cutoff is one of several deadlines that govern a booking, and shippers often blur them together. Each cutoff controls a different part of the process, and missing any one of them can roll the container to a later sailing.
| Cutoff | What it controls | Typical timing |
|---|---|---|
| VGM cutoff | Filing of the verified weight | Often the earliest hard gate |
| Cargo or CY cutoff | Physical delivery of the box to the terminal | A day or two before loading |
| Documentation or SI cutoff | Shipping instructions for the bill of lading | Near or aligned with the VGM cutoff |
The point shippers miss is that the VGM cutoff frequently lands earlier than the cargo cutoff. A container can be sitting at the terminal on time and still roll because the verified weight was not filed when the carrier needed it. Treating the VGM as a last minute task is one of the most common ways a clean booking falls apart.
How the VGM Reaches the Carrier and Terminal
A verified weight only counts once it is transmitted to the carrier in the agreed format. Most carriers accept the VGM through their booking portal, through electronic data interchange, or through a shipping platform that routes it to both the line and the terminal. When an NVOCC or forwarder manages the booking, the VGM is usually submitted on the shipper's behalf as part of the documentation flow.
The submission has to identify the booking and the container, carry the verified weight, and include the name or reference of the party authorizing it. A weight sent in the wrong format, against the wrong booking, or without authorization can be treated as missing, even when the shipper believes it was filed.
What Happens When the VGM Is Wrong or Late
A late VGM has a single, predictable outcome. The container is not loaded and rolls to the next available sailing, which can mean days or weeks depending on the trade lane. The downstream effects include storage at the terminal, possible demurrage and detention, and a delivery commitment that no longer holds.
A wrong VGM creates a different set of problems. If the declared weight differs materially from what the terminal records when the box is handled, the carrier may re-weigh the container, apply a correction fee, and in some cases still roll the shipment. Carriers and ports apply their own tolerance for small variances, but a large mismatch is treated as a compliance issue rather than a rounding difference. The verified weight should also align with the figures on your customs filings and the bill of lading, because inconsistent numbers across documents invite review.
In almost every case, the party that absorbs the cost is the shipper named on the booking. That is the practical reason to treat the verified weight as a controlled data point rather than an afterthought.
Why VGM Compliance Fails
Most VGM problems are preventable. The common failures include:
- Submitting an estimated weight instead of a verified one
- Missing the VGM cutoff because it was treated as a low priority
- Sending the weight in a format the carrier does not accept
- Mismatched weights across the VGM, the customs filing, and the bill of lading
- Using Method 2 for cargo that cannot be reliably weighed in parts
- Assuming the packing facility or trucker filed the VGM when no one did
- Naming the wrong party as the responsible shipper
These failures rarely show up as a single dramatic event. They surface as a container that quietly does not make the vessel, followed by storage charges, a rolled sailing, and a customer waiting on cargo that has not moved. The cost compounds across the booking rather than landing as one clean line item.
How Atlantic Pacific Lines Handles VGM Compliance
Atlantic Pacific Lines treats the verified weight as part of the booking record, not a separate errand left to the last day. The approach covers:
- Capturing the VGM and the weighing method at the booking stage
- Confirming which party is the responsible shipper on the bill of lading
- Submitting the verified weight to the carrier and terminal in the correct format
- Checking the VGM against the cutoff for the specific sailing
- Aligning the weight across the VGM, the customs documents, and the bill of lading
- Flagging weights that fall outside expected ranges before they reach the carrier
As an FMC-licensed NVOCC, Atlantic Pacific Lines coordinates the weight, the documentation, and the carrier relationship under one booking through its ocean freight services. The value is fewer surprises at the cutoff, because the verified weight is checked while there is still time to correct it.
Final Considerations for Shippers
VGM compliance matters most on full container load exports, on shipments where the packing happens away from the shipper's own site, and on lanes where a rolled sailing carries a heavy schedule penalty. It is least forgiving when the cutoff is tight and the weight has to come from a third party.
A short checklist keeps most problems out of the booking:
- Confirm the weighing method before the container is packed
- Verify the VGM cutoff for the actual sailing, not a general assumption
- Make sure one named party owns the declaration
- Submit the weight in the carrier's required format, well ahead of the cutoff
When a verified weight has to clear customs filings, carrier requirements, and a documentation cutoff at the same time, the margin for error is small. To put VGM handling on a controlled footing across your bookings, contact our team to review how your shipments are managed today.