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Pillar guide14 min readUpdated 15 de abril de 2026

IMDG Code: pack, declare and ship dangerous goods by sea correctly

The operational guide to the 2026 IMDG Code: classification, packaging, marking, documents, stowage and container certificates.

Shipping dangerous goods by sea is its own rulebook with serious sanctions for mistakes. The IMDG Code implements the IMO rules for all parties – from shipper, packer, forwarder, carrier to port. This pillar is the practitioner cheat sheet.

IMDG amendment
Current: 41-22 (2024/2025), 42-24 optional from 2026
9 classes
plus subclasses 1.1–1.6, 2.1–2.3, 4.1–4.3, 5.1–5.2, 6.1–6.2, 7 A–C
Packing groups
I (high danger), II (medium), III (low)
Mandatory document
Multimodal Dangerous Goods Declaration (MDGD)
CTU pack certificate
Container Packing Certificate per IMDG 5.4.2

01Hazard classes and UN numbers

IMDG groups hazardous goods into 9 classes:

  • Class 1: Explosives (1.1–1.6)
  • Class 2: Gases (flammable/non-flammable/toxic)
  • Class 3: Flammable liquids
  • Class 4: Flammable solids / spontaneously combustible / dangerous when wet
  • Class 5: Oxidising / Organic peroxides
  • Class 6: Toxic / Infectious
  • Class 7: Radioactive
  • Class 8: Corrosive
  • Class 9: Miscellaneous (incl. lithium batteries, magnetised material, environmentally hazardous)

Each item has a 4-digit UN number and an official proper shipping name that drive packaging, marking, stowage and segregation rules.

02Packaging, UN marking and packing groups

Only UN-tested packaging is allowed. The UN code (e.g. 4G/Y20/S) encodes type, material, design, density and year. Packing groups I (high), II (medium), III (low) drive drop tests and stack pressure.

03Marking, hazard labels and package inscription

Each package shows UN number, proper shipping name, hazard labels (10×10 cm), orientation arrows, marine pollutant mark where relevant, and sender/consignee. Containers carry placards (25×25 cm) and UN tablet.

04Documents: MDGD, CTU certificate and SDS

Document set:

  • MDGD: Shipper declaration signed by trained personnel.
  • CTU Packing Certificate: Proof of correct stowage/securing.
  • SDS: Manufacturer safety data sheet.
  • EmS: IMDG emergency schedules (fire, spill).

Liability is layered across shipper, packer, forwarder, carrier. Fines range EUR 2,000–250,000 (EU), substantially higher in the US.

05Stowage, segregation and compatibility

Stowage categories A–E define deck vs. under-deck, passenger ships and marine-pollutant rules. Segregation table (7.2.4) defines spacing: "away from", "separated from", "separated by a complete compartment or hold", "separated longitudinally". Strictest rule wins.

06Common mistakes and incidents

Top 5 causes of IMDG rejections:

  1. Misclassified lithium batteries
  2. Wrong packing for the group
  3. Missing marine pollutant mark
  4. Undeclared hidden DG (perfumes, aerosols, batteries in e-com)
  5. MDGD signed by unauthorised person

Frequently asked questions

Who may sign the MDGD?
The shipper or a trained appointed person (often the DGSA). The signer must be technically competent and accountable for content, not just formalities.
How to ship lithium batteries correctly?
Use UN 3480/3481 (Li-ion), UN 3090/3091 (Li-metal), UN 3171 (electrically powered equipment). UN 38.3 testing, watt-hour and packaging rules apply. Misdeclaration causes fines and fires on board – carriers deploy screening technology.
What is the CTU Code?
The IMO/ILO/UNECE Code of Practice for Packing of Cargo Transport Units. Not law, but baseline for insurance and B/L terms. Referenced by the CTU Pack Certificate (5.4.2).
What changes with IMDG 42-24?
Lithium battery test updates, refilled pressure-gas packaging standards, DG list updates and cybersecurity for electronic declarations. Each amendment has a one-year overlap with the predecessor.
Do I need a DGSA?
A DGSA is mandatory in the EU and many countries for companies shipping, packing, handling or transporting dangerous goods. SMEs often use external DGSAs. Without one, fines and criminal liability escalate.

Topics

IMDGdangerous goodssea DGUN numberpacking groupMDGDCTU pack certificateDGSAlithium batteriesmarine pollutant

Further resources