01Why Fine art and high-value needs specialised logistics
Fine art transport requires climate control, specialised crates, security escorts and climate-controlled trucks. Per-shipment insured values in the millions are common.
Requirements differ significantly from standard LCL logistics: different documents, different equipment, different safety standards.
02Typical goods and trade flows
Main commodities: Paintings, sculptures, antiques, jewellery, collectibles, banknotes.
Flows usually go from a small number of production and raw-material sources to global distribution centres. Transit time, frequency and capacity booking are therefore critical.
03Equipment and packaging
Climate-controlled crates, soft crates, wooden crates with inlays, TAPA-certified trucks, two-driver operation.
Equipment choice directly affects transport cost, CO₂ footprint and damage rate. Recommendation: agree an equipment concept with the carrier before requesting the first quote.
04Compliance and regulatory framework
Key frameworks: UNESCO Convention, CITES for ivory, EU cultural property protection, TAPA FSR for high-value.
Beyond those, industry-specific certificates and audits (e.g. supplier audits, AEO, TAPA) are typically prerequisites for market access.
Questions fréquentes
Which Incoterm should I use for Fine art and high-value?
In practice, CIP mit All-Risk-Deckung is the industry default. The final choice depends on country, sales model and tax situation — always have the term reviewed by customs and tax advisers before contract.
Which regulations are most critical?
The frameworks named above — particularly UNESCO Convention, CITES for ivory — should be embedded in your SOPs and audit programme.