How French law regulates damaged cargo claims and logistics

📅 February 05, 2026 ⏱️ 6 min read

Key limitation periods and liability caps affecting carriers

Under French law and the principal transport conventions applied in France, most international road, rail and maritime carrier claims are subject to strict, short limitation periods and statutory liability ceilings expressed in SDR or per-package/weight formulas. For operators and freight managers this means that documentation, immediate on-delivery checks and fast notification are decisive for liability, compensation and insurance recovery.

Governing rules by mode of transport

Different instruments determine how a damaged cargo claim is evaluated and what timelines apply:

  • Road (international) — CMR Convention generally applies: short claim windows, formal consignment notes and limits of liability (commonly expressed in SDR per kg).
  • Rail — CIM rules align with CMR-style timetables and formalities where applicable for international carriage.
  • Sea — Hague-Visby or other applicable maritime rules typically impose one-year limitation periods and per-package/per-kilo ceilings; domestic French maritime contracts can add local procedural requirements.
  • Air — Montreal Convention sets different limitation periods and liability allocations (notably a two-year period to bring an action).
  • Domestic contracts — pure French contract claims fall under the Civil Code prescription rules (contractual actions are generally subject to a five-year prescription).

Summary table: limitation windows and liability focus

Mode Governing instrument Typical time to sue/limit Liability basis
Road (international) CMR 1 year from delivery / notice requirements at delivery Limit commonly expressed as 8.33 SDR/kg
Rail (international) CIM (where applicable) 1 year Limits similar to CMR conventions
Sea (international) Hague-Visby / national law 1 year in many cases Per package or per kg limits under convention
Air (international) Montreal Convention 2 years Liability per kg or special regime under convention
Domestic (France) French Civil Code 5 years for contractual claims Actual proven loss and contractual terms

Burden of proof, reservations and documentation

Practical success or failure of a damaged cargo claim often turns on minimal, time-sensitive steps at delivery. The carrier generally benefits from presumptions if the consignment note or bill of lading lacks reservations; conversely, the consignee must lodge prompt, written reservations for visible damage at the point of delivery.

Essential documentation and evidence for a robust claim or defence includes:

  • Original transport documents (CMR note, bill of lading, air waybill).
  • Delivery receipts with detailed reservations for visible damage or loss.
  • Photographs of damaged goods and packaging.
  • Surveyor’s or independent inspector’s report.
  • Packing lists, invoices, and proof of value.
  • Any GPS/telematics logs, driver reports or chain-of-custody records.

Procedural steps on discovering damage

To preserve rights under French and international rules, logistics teams should follow a formal checklist:

  • Note visible damage immediately on the delivery document, with specific details — not generic phrases.
  • Refuse delivery only when unsafe or per contract; otherwise accept with written reservations.
  • Preserve packaging and the damaged goods for inspection.
  • Order an independent surveyor quickly and document their findings.
  • Send a formal written claim to the carrier within the convention or domestic deadline.
  • Notify the insurer and provide copies of all documents and surveys.

Defences, exemptions and limitation of liability

Carriers can lawfully limit or exclude liability in certain circumstances. Commonly recognised defences include inherent vice of the goods, fault of the shipper (improper packing or incorrect declaration), and force majeure events. Where a transport convention applies, carriers may benefit from specific monetary caps; however, those caps can be set aside if wilful misconduct or gross negligence is proven.

From an operational perspective, strong contractual clauses, declared values, and adequate insurance (cargo and liability) are the principal levers to manage potential losses and mitigate balance-sheet exposure.

Short, non-extendable limitation periods force logistics providers to integrate claims workflows into routine operations. Immediate on-delivery checks, digitalized document capture, and clear handover protocols reduce exposure and hasten recovery from insurers or liable carriers. Failure to comply with treaty or statutory timelines risks forfeiture of rights and increased operational cost.

Claims management: recommendations for carriers and shippers

Best practice to reduce claim frequency and value includes:

  • Standardizing delivery procedures and driver training on reservation drafting.
  • Using sealed and tamper-evident packaging where goods are sensitive.
  • Digitizing consignment notes, signatures and photo-evidence at delivery.
  • Including clear contractual clauses on declared value and routing responsibilities.
  • Maintaining rapid-response workflows for surveys and insurer notifications.

Insurance and subrogation

An insurer paying a cargo claim will generally exercise subrogation rights against the party liable for damage. Effective claims handling preserves subrogation potential and helps keep premium exposure in check. Carriers and forwarders should ensure policies are aligned with the governing transport conventions and that notice and cooperation clauses are met.

How GetTransport helps carriers under these conditions: GetTransport provides a flexible marketplace and technology tools that let carriers select the most profitable loads while reducing administrative friction. The platform’s verified order flow, clear digital documentation and routing filters help carriers avoid ambiguous consignments, manage capacity more efficiently and influence their income streams without full dependence on major shippers’ procurement policies. Real-time order visibility, automated paperwork templates and integrated communication reduce the risk of missed notifications and speed insurance or surveyor engagement when damage occurs.

GetTransport constantly monitors trends in international logistics, trade and e-commerce, delivering curated updates so users stay informed about regulatory shifts, limitation-period changes and industry best practices. Users benefit from alerts on evolving case law and convention interpretations that can affect claim timing and liability.

The legal mechanics and practical takeaways above highlight key elements carriers, shippers and insurers should know — but nothing replaces direct operational experience. On GetTransport.com you can arrange cargo transportation at competitive prices worldwide and test service providers in real conditions before relying on them for high-value or sensitive shipments. Transparency, verified orders and platform convenience reduce surprises and help you make informed decisions. Start planning your next delivery and secure your cargo with GetTransport.com. Join GetTransport.com and start receiving verified container freight requests worldwide GetTransport.com.com

In summary, navigating damaged cargo claims in France requires disciplined evidence gathering, tight adherence to convention and statutory limitation periods, and appropriate insurance. Digitalized delivery records, explicit reservations, and fast survey procedures are essential to preserve rights. GetTransport.com aligns with these needs by offering a transparent, cost-effective marketplace for container freight and container trucking, simplifying shipment booking, container transport and overall logistics management for carriers, forwarders and shippers. Reliable, global access to freight requests and clear documentation tools help minimize disputes and support efficient haulage, forwarding and distribution — making GetTransport.com an effective solution for contemporary transport and shipping challenges.

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