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Updated · March 2026·10 min read

Letter of Credit Guide: How Documentary LCs Work in 2026

Complete guide to documentary letters of credit (LC). How LCs work, types (sight, usance, standby, revolving), UCP 600 rules, and when to use LC vs. open account.

A letter of credit (LC) is one of the most widely used instruments in international trade finance. When a buyer and seller are located in different countries, have no prior relationship, and operate under different legal systems, an LC provides the payment security that makes the transaction possible. In 2026, LCs remain the backbone of trade finance for transactions exceeding $500,000, particularly in emerging markets where counterparty risk is significant.

What Is a Letter of Credit?

A letter of credit is a written commitment issued by a bank (the issuing bank) on behalf of a buyer (the applicant), guaranteeing payment to the seller (the beneficiary) provided the seller presents documents that strictly comply with the terms and conditions of the LC. The bank's credit substitutes for the buyer's credit — so the seller no longer relies on the buyer's ability or willingness to pay, but on the financial strength of the issuing bank.

The legal foundation for most commercial LCs is the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (UCP 600), published by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC). UCP 600 has been in force since July 2007 and governs the rights and obligations of all parties involved.

How a Letter of Credit Works: Step by Step

1
Commercial contract signed
Buyer and seller agree on goods, price, delivery terms (Incoterms), and payment method. They agree to use an LC as the payment instrument.
2
LC application
The buyer (applicant) applies to its bank (issuing bank) to open an LC in favor of the seller. The buyer provides all LC terms: beneficiary name, amount, expiry date, required documents, and shipment details.
3
LC issuance
The issuing bank reviews the application, approves the credit line, and issues the LC. It transmits the LC to the seller's bank (advising bank or confirming bank) via SWIFT MT700 message.
4
LC advice and confirmation
The advising bank notifies the seller that an LC has been opened in their favor. If the seller requests added security, the advising bank may also confirm the LC — adding its own payment undertaking.
5
Shipment and document preparation
The seller ships the goods and prepares the required documents: commercial invoice, bill of lading, packing list, certificate of origin, insurance certificate, and any other documents specified in the LC.
6
Document presentation
The seller presents the documents to the nominated bank within the LC's presentation period (typically 21 days after shipment, and before expiry). The bank checks documents for compliance with LC terms.
7
Document examination
The examining bank has 5 banking days to determine if the documents are compliant. Under UCP 600 Article 14, documents must not be discrepant — every detail must match the LC exactly.
8
Payment or acceptance
If documents are compliant, the issuing bank (or confirming bank) pays the beneficiary at sight, or accepts a draft for future payment (usance LC). The buyer is reimbursed or their account debited.

UCP 600: The Rules That Govern Letters of Credit

UCP 600 (Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits, 2007 Revision) is the ICC rulebook that standardizes LC practice globally. Key articles every trade finance professional should know:

Article 2 defines key terms: credit, complying presentation, confirming bank, nominated bank, honour.

Article 14 — Standard for Examination of Documents: banks examine documents to determine whether on their face they constitute a complying presentation. Banks do not verify that goods actually correspond to documents; they only check document compliance.

Article 16 — Discrepant Documents, Waiver, and Notice: if documents are discrepant, the issuing bank may either refuse and return, or contact the applicant for a waiver. The bank has 5 banking days.

Article 38 — Transferable Credits: defines when and how an LC may be transferred.

For electronic documents, the eUCP (Version 2.0) supplement applies alongside UCP 600.

Common Documentary Discrepancies

According to ICC surveys, over 70% of first presentations under LCs contain discrepancies. The most common:

1. Late presentation — documents presented after the LC expiry date or after the maximum 21-day presentation period post-shipment.

2. Description of goods — the invoice description does not exactly match the LC (extra words, abbreviations, punctuation differences).

3. Bill of lading issues — "on deck" notation when LC requires clean on-board BL; BL not marked "freight prepaid" when required; incorrect consignee or notify party.

4. Inconsistency between documents — amounts or quantities differ between invoice, packing list, and BL.

5. Partial shipments — made when LC prohibits them; or transhipment when prohibited.

6. Amount errors — invoice amount exceeds LC amount; overdrawn presentation.

Discrepant documents give the issuing bank the right to refuse payment. Exporters should build an internal document checklist tied to every LC before presenting.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between an advising bank and a confirming bank?
An advising bank simply notifies the seller that an LC has been opened — it takes no payment obligation. A confirming bank adds its own independent payment undertaking to the LC, giving the seller a second source of payment. Confirmation is typically requested when the issuing bank is in a high-risk country or the seller doubts the issuing bank's creditworthiness.
Can an LC be amended after issuance?
Yes. Under UCP 600 Article 10, amendments require agreement from the issuing bank, the confirming bank (if any), and the beneficiary. Amendments are transmitted via SWIFT MT707. An amendment is only binding once the beneficiary accepts it, which is typically implied by presenting documents in accordance with the amendment.
What is a "clean" bill of lading?
A clean bill of lading is one that does not contain any clause or notation declaring a defective condition of the goods or packaging. LCs typically require a clean on-board BL. A "dirty" or "claused" BL may cause a discrepancy under the LC.
How long does an LC typically remain valid?
Most commercial LCs have validity periods of 60–180 days, covering the shipment period plus the presentation period. Standby LCs for performance purposes may be valid for 1–3 years. The expiry date is always stated in the LC and documents must be presented before this date.
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