Verified Gross Mass (VGM)
Verified gross mass (VGM) is the total weight of a packed container, including cargo, packaging, and the container itself, verified by an approved method before the container can be loaded on a vessel.
The VGM rule comes from the SOLAS (Safety of Life at Sea) Convention and is enforced globally to prevent misdeclared weights that can cause vessel stability issues, stack collapses, or terminal accidents.
For export operations, VGM is a gating requirement: if the VGM is missing or late, the container can be refused at the terminal or held from loading even if the booking and documentation are otherwise complete.
What is Verified Gross Mass (VGM)?
VGM is a shipper-declared, verified weight for a container. It is not an estimate; it must be determined using a certified weighing method and transmitted to the carrier or terminal before the container is loaded.
The rule applies to all loaded containers moving by sea, including FCL and LCL shipments. The responsible party is typically the shipper of record, though forwarders may submit on a shipper’s behalf.
Many jurisdictions require a signature or electronic acknowledgement on the VGM submission, confirming that the value was determined using an approved method.
Why VGM Matters in Shipping
Accurate container weight verification protects safety, improves vessel planning, and reduces operational disruptions. It also minimizes the risk of costly delays caused by terminals refusing to load containers with missing or questionable VGM.
Incorrect weights can lead to stowage imbalances, overstressed lashing systems, and unsafe crane operations. Over time, inaccurate weights also distort carrier capacity planning and equipment utilization.
For Freight Forwarders
Forwarders coordinate multiple shippers and load plans. A missing or late VGM can break a consolidation plan, cause rollovers, or trigger additional storage and rehandling fees at the container yard.
Because forwarders often submit VGM for multiple clients, standardizing data capture and timing is critical to avoid exceptions during peak cutoff windows.
For Shippers/Exporters
Exporters are legally responsible for submitting a correct VGM. If the VGM is wrong or late, cargo can miss the intended sailing, affecting delivery commitments and penalties with overseas buyers.
For project cargo or heavy commodities, misdeclared weight can also result in equipment damage claims and insurance disputes.
For Carriers and Terminals
Carriers rely on accurate VGMs for stowage planning and vessel stability calculations. Terminals use VGM to gate containers and load them safely, reducing the risk of crane incidents or stack collapses.
When VGM data is reliable, carriers can improve bay planning and reduce last-minute stowage adjustments that create delays at the port.
How VGM Works
SOLAS allows two approved methods: (1) weigh the packed container on a certified scale, or (2) weigh all cargo and packing materials separately and add the container tare weight. The chosen method must be certified by local authorities.
Most shippers use Method 2 for warehouse-based packing operations, while some ports or terminals provide Method 1 weighing at the gate or within the terminal.
- Shipper determines the verified gross mass using Method 1 or Method 2
- VGM is transmitted to the carrier or terminal before the VGM cutoff
- Carrier confirms receipt and uses VGM for stowage planning
- Terminal validates VGM at gate-in or before loading
- Container is cleared to load once VGM is accepted
Many regions allow electronic VGM submission through carrier portals or EDI messages (e.g., VERMAS). Terminals may also provide onsite weighing, but timing and fees vary by port.
In practice, export teams often track three time-sensitive milestones together: VGM cutoff, documentation cutoff, and cargo cutoff. Misalignment between them is a common source of rollovers.
Key Data Elements in a VGM Submission
A typical VGM transmission includes the container number, booking number, verified gross mass, method used, date/time of weighing, and the responsible party’s name and signature or electronic credential.
Some carriers also request the equipment tare weight or the weighbridge ticket number for audit purposes, especially when Method 2 is used.
Example: Export Electronics Shipment
A forwarder books a 40’ container of consumer electronics from Los Angeles to Busan. The warehouse uses Method 2, weighing each pallet and all packing materials, then adds the container’s tare weight from the equipment record.
- Total cargo + packaging: 21,800 kg
- Container tare weight: 3,900 kg
- Verified gross mass submitted: 25,700 kg
The VGM is transmitted via the carrier portal 24 hours before cutoff. The terminal accepts the VGM, and the container loads on the scheduled vessel without exception.
Common Challenges
The most frequent issues are late or missing VGM submissions, inconsistent tare weight data, and using non-certified scales. These problems often surface at the terminal gate, where containers may be rejected or required to be reweighed.
Another challenge is data handoff between shippers, forwarders, and carriers. If the VGM is submitted to the forwarder but not transmitted to the carrier in time, the container can miss the vessel despite being physically ready.
In peak seasons, VGM cutoffs can tighten. A 2–3 hour delay in VGM submission can be the difference between loading and rolling to the next vessel.
Best Practices
- Use certified weighing equipment and keep calibration records current
- Submit VGM early and confirm receipt by the carrier or terminal
- Standardize tare weights and verify against equipment interchange records
- Track VGM status alongside gate-in and vessel cutoff milestones
- Set escalation alerts when VGM is missing for containers approaching cutoff
- Audit VGM accuracy periodically to reduce disputes and reweighing
For forwarders managing multiple clients, a centralized VGM workflow reduces exceptions and standardizes submission quality. Many teams attach weighbridge tickets to their internal job files for audit readiness.
VGM and Visibility
Visibility platforms can connect VGM status to export milestones. If a container is gated in but lacks a VGM, teams can intervene before cutoff rather than discovering the issue after the vessel departs.
Terminal49’s container tracking helps teams monitor export container movement and timing so VGM submission aligns with gate-in and sailing schedules without adding operational noise.
Related Terms
- SOLAS – International maritime safety convention that mandates VGM
- Tare Weight – Empty weight of the container itself
- VGM Cutoff – Deadline for submitting verified gross mass
- Gate-In – Process of delivering a container into a terminal
- Stowage Plan – Carrier’s plan for loading containers on a vessel
- VERMAS – EDI message format commonly used for VGM submissions