What Documents Are Required for Seafood Export Products? Indonesia’s Complete Export Checklist for 2026

by | Jun 24, 2026 | Uncategorized

Indonesia is a top supplier of fish to American kitchens, restaurants, and retailers. In 2024, Indonesia exported USD 5.95 billion in seafood export products, with the United States as its main buyer at USD 1.9 billion. That means one of every three dollars’ worth of Indonesian seafood lands in American ports.

Behind every successful shipment of shrimp, tuna, snapper, or octopus is a stack of paperwork that must be perfect. One missing certificate, a mismatched HS code, or an outdated license can cause your shipment to sit at a US port. You’ll face storage fees while your buyer’s freezer space goes empty.

This checklist walks you through every document you need to legally ship seafood from Indonesia to the United States, whether you’re a US importer vetting your supply chain or a new buyer working with a trusted Indonesian seafood supplier for the first time.

Why Seafood Export Documentation Is Different (and Stricter)

Seafood isn’t like exporting furniture or textiles. It’s a perishable, high-risk commodity regulated under three overlapping frameworks:

  1. Indonesian export law is overseen by the Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (KKP) and Indonesian Customs (Bea Cukai).
  2. US import law is enforced by the FDA, NOAA Fisheries, and US Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
  3. International traceability standards, including the Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP), the Catch Documentation Scheme (CDS) for tuna, and IUU (Illegal, Unreported, Unregulated) fishing prevention rules.

For frozen seafood export products, especially the bulk of what an experienced frozen seafood exporter ships, the cold chain documentation must match the cargo physically. If the temperature log says -25°C and CBP inspectors find -15°C, the shipment can be refused entry.

The Master Checklist: 11 Documents Every Indonesian Seafood Exporter Must Provide

A professional seafood export company should prepare all required documents before the container leaves the Port of Makassar, Tanjung Priok, or Surabaya.

1. Commercial Invoice

The foundational document. It lists the buyer and seller, Incoterms (typically FOB, CIF, or CFR), unit price, total value, and a clear product description with the species name in Latin (e.g., Thunnus albacares for yellowfin tuna). US Customs uses this to calculate duty.

2. Packing List

Itemises every carton: net weight, gross weight, dimensions, carton count, master cartons, and product form (whole round, fillet, IQF, block frozen). The packing list must reconcile exactly with the bill of lading and commercial invoice.

3. Bill of Lading (B/L) or Air Waybill (AWB)

The shipping line or airline issues this title document, such as a B/L or AWB. For US shipments, it must list the importer’s IRS or EIN number and a clear consignee. Telex-released or express B/L is common for trusted buyer-supplier relationships.

4. Certificate of Origin (Form COO)

The Indonesian Ministry of Trade or an authorized chamber of commerce issues the Certificate of Origin. This document confirms that Indonesia harvested and processed the seafood. Exporters claiming preferential tariff treatment under trade agreements must use the correct form.

5. Health Certificate (HC)

BKIPM (Badan Karantina Ikan, Pengendalian Mutu dan Keamanan Hasil Perikanan), Indonesia’s Fish Quarantine and Quality Control Agency issues the Health Certificate. This certificate confirms that the seafood is fit for human consumption and free of pathogens. The US FDA requires this for every seafood consignment.

6. Catch Certificate / SIMP Documentation

Many new exporters get tripped up here. NOAA’s Seafood Import Monitoring Program (SIMP) requires traceability for 13 priority species, such as tuna, grouper, snapper, and mahi-mahi. All seafood exporters to the US must supply:

  • Vessel name and flag
  • Fishing license/permit number
  • Catch area (FAO fishing zone, typically 71 for Western Central Pacific)
  • Date and method of harvest
  • Landing port and date

The US importer files this data into NOAA’s ITDS system before the cargo arrives.

7. HACCP Plan and Processing Plant Approval

The FDA requires all seafood processing plants to follow a written HACCP (Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points) plan. The processor must also register with the FDA under the Food Facility Registration system and hold a current FDA Food Facility Registration Number (FFRN). A reputable seafood supplier company will hold this certification and provide a copy on request.

8. Cold Chain & Temperature Log

For all frozen seafood products, the exporter must provide a temperature log showing that the cargo was maintained at or below -18°C from processing to loading. Most professional exporters freeze at -40°C using ABF (Air Blast Freezer) and store at -20°C, the standard practiced by CV Anugerah Bahari Mandiri’s processing facility.

9. Customs Declaration (PEB)

The exporter files the Pemberitahuan Ekspor Barang electronically through Indonesia’s INSW (Indonesia National Single Window). This declaration states the goods, value, destination, and applicable HS codes (typically Chapter 03 for fish and Chapter 16 for prepared seafood). The exporter must secure PEB approval before loading the cargo onto the vessel.

10. Insurance Certificate

For CIF shipments, marine cargo insurance is mandatory. Even for FOB shipments, sharing a copy of the insurance policy is best practice. This covers cargo damage, theft, or temperature-related issues during transit.

Quick Reference: Who Issues What?

DocumentIssued ByRequired For US Entry?
Commercial InvoiceExporterYes
Packing ListExporterYes
Bill of LadingShipping LineYes
Certificate of OriginMinistry of TradeYes
Health CertificateBKIPMYes
SIMP DataExporter / VesselYes (13 species)
HACCP PlanProcessing PlantYes
Temperature LogExporterYes (frozen)
PEB (Customs Declaration)Indonesian CustomsYes (export side)
Insurance CertificateInsurerFor CIF terms

Species-Specific Requirements You Cannot Skip

seafood export product

Different fishery products have different paperwork. Here’s a quick guide:

Tuna (Yellowfin, Skipjack, Albacore, Bigeye)

Tuna exports require a Catch Documentation Scheme (CDS) certificate, especially for the EU and for shipments watched closely by NOAA. Bigeye tuna also needs ICCAT-compliant documentation. CV Anugerah Bahari Mandiri ships all tuna exports with CDS documentation.

Demersal Species (Grouper, Snapper, Coral Trout)

Reef-associated species, such as grouper and snapper, require additional traceability under SIMP. CITES listings may apply to certain grouper species; always check before quoting a US buyer.

Cephalopods (Squid, Octopus, Cuttlefish)

Cephalopods require sanitary certificates documenting the water quality of the harvesting water. The US has strict heavy-metal limits (cadmium especially) for octopus.

Milkfish and Pelagic Species (Mackerel, Sardine, Marlin, Mahi-Mahi)

Pelagic species are generally lower-risk but still require the full health certificate and SIMP data for mahi-mahi. Marlin requires special documentation in some regions due to its IUCN status.

The 5 Most Common Documentation Mistakes That Delay US Shipments

  1. Mismatched weights between the commercial invoice, packing list, and B/L. CBP flags this immediately.
  2. Missing or incorrect SIMP data is the most common reason for refusal of entry for tuna and shrimp.
  3. Expired FDA Food Facility Registration must be renewed every two years.
  4. Incorrect HS codes using Chapter 03 (raw) versus Chapter 16 (prepared) can trigger anti-dumping reviews.
  5. Temperature log gaps, even a 30-minute gap in the cold chain log can lead to FDA detention.

How to Vet Your Indonesian Seafood Supplier in 4 Steps

If you’re a US buyer evaluating a new seafood supplier in Indonesia, here’s the quick due diligence framework:

  1. Ask for the FDA FFRN number and verify it on the FDA Industry Systems portal.
  2. Request a sample HC and SIMP packet from a recent US shipment.
  3. Verify the BKIPM approval number of the processing facility.
  4. Confirm cold chain capability; look for ABF freezing at -40°C and storage at -20°C as the minimum standard.

Timeline: How Long Should the Documentation Process Take?

For a regular US-bound container of frozen seafood from a well-organized exporter:

  • Day 0: Order confirmed, processing begins.
  • Days 1–3: Production, freezing, packing, and internal QC.
  • Days 4–5: BKIPM inspection and Health Certificate issuance.
  • Day 6: Customs declaration (PEB) filed.
  • Day 7: Container loaded and B/L issued.
  • Days 8–25: Sea transit to US West Coast (LA/Long Beach) or 28–35 days to East Coast (Newark, Miami).
  • Arrival: CBP and FDA review documents; cleared cargo is typically released within 3–7 days.

Partner with a Compliant Indonesian Seafood Exporter

Documentation is only as reliable as the company preparing it. Choosing the right partner means choosing a seafood distributor who treats paperwork with the same precision as the catch itself.

CV Anugerah Bahari Mandiri is based in Makassar, South Sulawesi, at the heart of Indonesia’s richest fishing grounds. We supply fresh and frozen seafood export products for export to importers across the United States, Asia, and Europe, with complete documentation, FDA-registered processing, and cold-chain integrity from net to port.

Whether you’re importing tuna loins for sushi-grade buyers, frozen grouper for Asian-American grocery chains, or octopus for upscale seafood restaurants, our team handles every certificate, log, and customs filing so your container moves through US ports without surprises.

Contact CV Anugerah Bahari Mandiri today to request a quote, a sample documentation packet, or a product specification sheet, and ship your next seafood container with full peace of mind.

Frequently Asked Questions

  1. What documents do I need to export seafood from Indonesia to the US?

    You need 11 core documents: commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, certificate of origin, BKIPM health certificate, SIMP data, HACCP plan, sanitary certificate, temperature log, PEB customs declaration, and insurance certificate.

  2. Is SIMP required for all seafood imports into the US?

    No. SIMP applies to 13 priority species, including tuna, shrimp, grouper, snapper, mahi-mahi, swordfish, blue crab, sea cucumber, abalone, red king crab, and sharks, as well as Atlantic and Pacific cod.

  3. How long is an Indonesian Health Certificate valid?

    BKIPM health certificates are issued per shipment, not on a recurring basis. Each container or air consignment receives its own HC linked to the specific lot and inspection.

  4. What is the FDA Food Facility Registration Number?

    It’s a unique number every seafood processing plant exporting to the US must hold and register through the FDA Industry Systems portal. It must be renewed every two even-numbered years.

  5. Can I import seafood without a US customs broker?

    Technically, yes, for small shipments, but a licensed customs broker is strongly recommended. They handle CBP filings, FDA Prior Notice, and SIMP data submission accurately.

  6. What HS codes apply to frozen fish from Indonesia?

    Most frozen whole or filleted fish fall under HS Chapter 03 (specifically 0303 and 0304). Prepared or canned seafood is covered under Chapter 16. Always confirm the exact 10-digit code with your broker.

  7. Why was my seafood shipment held by the FDA?

    Common reasons include missing documentation, incorrect labeling, suspected adulteration, the presence of banned antibiotics, or the exporter being on the FDA Import Alert list. A trusted exporter prevents all of these.

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