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BOL vs POD
The practical difference
BOL and POD are the two most important load documents in trucking, and they get confused because both are connected to the same shipment. The BOL is created at pickup: it describes the freight, identifies the shipper and consignee, and travels with the load. The POD is created at delivery: it records that the receiver accepted the freight, notes any exceptions, and is what billing and factoring departments need before an invoice can be submitted. Mixing them up — or missing either one — delays payment and makes it harder to resolve disputes.
The cleanest way to separate the terms is to attach each one to a specific document, party, cost, mile type, or piece of equipment.
| Question | BOL | POD |
|---|---|---|
| Main job | Describes the freight at pickup: shipper, consignee, count, weight, commodity, and load details. | Proves delivery: receiver signature, delivery date, exceptions, and acceptance record. |
| When it is used | Before and during the trip, especially at the shipper and while freight is in transit. | At the receiver and after delivery, especially before invoicing or factoring. |
| If it is missing | The driver may not have a clean record of what was loaded. | The office may not be able to bill or close the load file. |
When each one matters
- Use the BOL at pickup and during transit to confirm what freight was loaded, where it is going, and what exceptions were noted.
- Use the POD after delivery to prove the receiver accepted the freight and to support billing or factoring.
- The difference matters most when an invoice packet is missing a signed delivery record or when a freight count, damage note, or shortage is disputed.
What to check before acting on it
Start by asking whether the problem happened at pickup, at delivery, or during billing. That usually tells you whether the office needs the BOL, the POD, or both.
- At pickup, check the BOL for shipper, consignee, count, weight, commodity, seal, and exception notes.
- At delivery, check the POD for receiver signature, delivery date, printed name, shortage notes, damage notes, and readable photos or scans.
- Before invoicing, confirm the broker wants the signed delivery page, not just the original pickup paperwork.
Example in trucking
A driver leaves pickup with a BOL showing 24 pallets and a seal number. After delivery, the receiver signs the delivery page and notes one damaged case. Billing needs the signed POD, while the BOL explains what was originally shipped.
A clean load packet often includes both: the BOL to show what moved and the POD to show it was received.
If the delivery page has shortage or damage notes, those notes matter even when the pickup BOL looked clean.
How people confuse them
- Assuming BOL controls the workflow when the broker, receiver, insurer, or agency is actually asking about POD.
- Waiting until the invoice packet is rejected to find out which term was missing or misunderstood.
- Skipping the written source because the verbal explanation sounded clear enough.
Quick questions
What is the main difference between BOL and POD?
BOL is the shipment document used around pickup and freight description; POD is the delivery evidence used to close out the load.
When should a trucking office check BOL vs POD?
Use the BOL at pickup and during transit to confirm what freight was loaded, where it is going, and what exceptions were noted. Use the POD after delivery to prove the receiver accepted the freight and to support billing or factoring. The difference matters most when an invoice packet is missing a signed delivery record or when a freight count, damage note, or shortage is disputed.
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Last updated: 2026-05-10