Every forwarder will tell you SKD saves money. Sometimes they're right. Sometimes it's irrelevant complexity that costs you more than CBU. Here's how to tell which is which.
Every freight forwarder you talk to will tell you SKD saves money. Sometimes they're right — in specific markets with specific tariff structures, SKD is a massive win. In other markets it adds complexity with no tariff benefit. The difference matters.
CBU (Complete Built Unit): the car arrives ready to drive. Factory quality control is complete. Destination-side work is customs clearance and registration. Fastest, simplest, most expensive in terms of unit duty classification in some markets.
SKD (Semi-Knocked Down): the car is partially disassembled at the factory. Typical removals are bumpers, wheels, some interior trim, sometimes the battery pack. The customer or a local assembly partner reinstalls these components after clearance. SKD classification qualifies for a lower tariff rate in markets that protect local assembly.
There are really only two questions:
If the answer to either is no, SKD is just complexity without benefit. Choose CBU.
If yes to both, run the math specifically. Local reassembly costs vary dramatically — a bonded facility in Chattogram costs something very different from a Karachi partner, and both are very different from Manila.
Cumulative CBU import taxes can exceed 150% (customs duty + supplementary duty + VAT + advance income tax + development surcharge). SKD classifications fall into a lower bracket. This is the textbook case for SKD — the tariff gap is large enough that SKD pays for itself several times over, even for a single-unit import.
The Engineering Development Board (EDB) explicitly promotes local assembly through the Automotive Industry Development and Export Policy. CBU faces prohibitive duties for most vehicle categories. Most Chinese brands selling in Pakistan do so via local assembly partners.
Thailand's EV policy rewards local assembly with incentives. Indonesia's local-content requirements effectively require SKD or CKD for scale operations. Specific models benefit more than others — confirm per quotation.
If your destination market applies flat CBU duties with no SKD preference, SKD is pure complexity. Examples:
Even in a market where SKD wins at scale, SKD doesn't make sense for 1–5 unit orders. Setting up a bonded assembly partnership requires a minimum unit volume to justify the overhead. Small dealers in SKD-favorable markets typically go CBU for the first shipment, prove demand, then switch to SKD once they're ordering 10+ units per container.
At FOBEV, we default to recommending CBU for first-time small-dealer shipments in every market. The reasons:
We recommend SKD once (a) volume justifies it, (b) the market's tariff gap makes it meaningful, and (c) you have an established local assembly partner. Jumping to SKD on shipment #1 is almost always the wrong call.
Send an RFQ via WhatsApp or email. Our Shanghai export desk will scope your requirements and return a qualified FOB / CIF / DDP quotation — typically within one Shanghai business day.