UPS will increase its Paper Commercial Invoice Services Surcharge from $25.00 to $40.00 per shipment, effective May 11, 2026. The surcharge applies to international shipments where a paper commercial invoice is submitted rather than being provided digitally through UPS Paperless® Invoice services. The increase represents a 60% jump in per-shipment cost and is designed to further incentivize adoption of electronic invoicing.
The current UPS Service Guide assesses a $25.00 per shipment fee when a commercial invoice is included with a shipment but the shipper has not provided the invoice digitally via UPS Paperless® Invoice services prior to UPS processing. Effective May 11, that fee rises to $40.00 per shipment—a $15.00 increase. This is a straightforward rate change with no structural modification to the surcharge's scope or applicability. The surcharge continues to apply on a per-shipment basis for international services and can be entirely avoided by submitting commercial invoices electronically through UPS Paperless® Invoice.
Shippers still relying on paper commercial invoices for international shipments will see a meaningful per-shipment cost increase. For high-volume international shippers processing hundreds or thousands of shipments monthly, the $15.00 per-shipment increase compounds quickly. The change does not affect shippers already using UPS Paperless® Invoice services, making this effectively a penalty for non-digital compliance.
💡 The Paper Commercial Invoice Services Surcharge increases from $25.00 to $40.00 per shipment effective May 11, 2026.
💡 The surcharge applies only when shippers fail to provide commercial invoices digitally via UPS Paperless® Invoice prior to UPS processing.
💡 Shippers can eliminate this surcharge entirely by adopting UPS Paperless® Invoice for all international shipments.
💡 At $40.00 per shipment, the cost incentive to migrate to electronic invoicing is now significantly stronger, and shippers still on paper workflows should prioritize the transition.
💡 No changes were made to the surcharge's scope or applicability—this is purely a rate increase on an existing fee.