Korean Used Car Shipping Preparation: The Complete Pre-Loading Guide for RoRo & Container Export (2026)

Published: 2026-07-15 | Last Updated: 2026-07-15 | By SH GLOBAL

Korean used car shipping preparation is the set of physical steps a vehicle goes through in the days before it is loaded for export: reducing the fuel to the carrier's limit (about a quarter tank for RoRo), setting the battery correctly for the shipping method, cleaning the underbody so soil and insects do not trigger a quarantine hold, removing every personal item and valuable, handing over the right keys, and photographing the car so its exact condition is on record before it leaves Korea. Get this wrong and the car is refused at the gate or held at the destination port; get it right and it loads on schedule and clears customs cleanly.

This is the practical, hands-on side of exporting that most guides skip — separate from the booking and the paperwork. Below is exactly what happens to a Korean car before it hits the deck, why each step matters, and how it differs between roll-on/roll-off and container shipping. It sits alongside our RoRo shipping guide and container loading guide, which cover the shipping methods that preparation feeds into.

The one-line rule. A car that arrives at the terminal clean, near-empty of fuel, drivable, and stripped of personal items loads on the first available vessel. Any one of those four missed — a full tank, a dead battery, a muddy underbody, or a boot full of belongings — can push the car to the next sailing and add weeks to delivery.

Korean Used Car Shipping Preparation — 2026 Key Numbers
¼
Max Fuel Tank
for RoRo
4
Lashing Points
in a Container
0
Personal Items
Allowed Inside
1
Key Stays With
a RoRo Car
18–45
Transit Days
Korea → ME/Africa
HD
Pre-Load Photos
+ Video Record
2
Methods: RoRo
& Container
6
Core Prep
Steps

What Korean Used Car Shipping Preparation Is

When a buyer in Dubai, Nairobi, or Almaty pays for a Korean car, they picture the paperwork and the shipping line. What they rarely see is the day the car is physically handed to the carrier — and that day is governed by a strict set of rules. Shipping preparation is everything done to the vehicle itself so it complies with those rules: it is what turns a car that has just been sourced and inspected into a car that is actually ready to be loaded.

It is useful to separate preparation from the two things it is often confused with. The pre-shipment inspection grades the car's condition; the export documents prove ownership and origin. Korean used car shipping preparation is the physical readiness in between — fuel, battery, cleanliness, contents, keys, and a condition record. According to KAMA, Korea exports well over a million used vehicles a year, and every single one passes through this step, yet it is the part buyers understand least.

Preparation matters because it is the last point at which a problem can be fixed cheaply. A full tank drained at the yard costs minutes; a full tank discovered at the terminal costs a missed sailing. A muddy underbody washed in Korea costs a car wash; the same mud found by quarantine in Mombasa costs an inspection fee, a cleaning order, and days of storage. Getting the car right before it leaves is always the cheapest option.

RoRo vs Container: How Preparation Differs

The single biggest factor in how a car is prepared is how it will be shipped. In RoRo (roll-on/roll-off), the car is driven onto the vessel's deck under its own power and parked. In container shipping, the car is driven into a steel box, switched off, and immobilised for the whole voyage. Those two very different journeys demand two different preparations, summarised below.

Preparation Step RoRo (Roll-on/Roll-off) Container
Fuel level ≤ ¼ tank, must start & drive Low (¼ tank or less)
Battery Charged & connected (car is driven) Often disconnected after loading
Keys 1 key at the car; spares with docs All keys travel with the documents
Immobilisation Parked & chocked on deck by crew Wheel chocks + 4-point lashing
Mirrors / body As normal Mirrors folded; low kits noted
Personal items None allowed None (unless declared cargo)
Cleaning Clean underbody for quarantine Clean underbody for quarantine

The pattern is clear: RoRo prep is about the car being drivable at both ends, while container prep is about the car surviving weeks of immobile transit without moving or draining. Non-running vehicles and cars with very low ground clearance usually must go by container, because they cannot be driven onto a RoRo deck. Which method fits a given car and route is set at booking; see the container loading guide for how many cars share a 40-foot box and how they are secured.

Fuel & Battery: The Rules That Get Cars Rejected

More cars are turned away at the terminal for fuel and battery problems than for anything else in preparation, so these two deserve the most attention.

The fuel rule

Pure car carriers — the RoRo vessels run by lines such as EUKOR and Hyundai Glovis — park hundreds of cars deck-to-deck, so the total fuel on board is a serious fire-safety concern. The standard requirement is a quarter tank or less. The car still has to start and move under its own power because stevedores drive each unit on and off, so an empty tank is as much a problem as a full one. In practice, a quarter tank is the target. A car that shows up with a full tank is refused until it is drained, and draining fuel at a port yard is neither quick nor free.

The battery rule

Battery preparation is where RoRo and container split most sharply:

  • RoRo: the battery must be charged and connected. The car is driven, so a flat battery means it simply cannot be loaded — it will be left behind.
  • Container: after the car is driven in and secured, the battery is usually disconnected. Over a voyage of four to eight weeks (and longer for inland Central Asian destinations via multimodal routing), a connected battery slowly drains and leaves the car dead at the destination port.

For electric and hybrid cars there is a further layer: the high-voltage battery brings the shipment under dangerous-goods rules, with its own state-of-charge limits and declarations. That is a specialised topic covered in our dangerous goods declaration guide. Whatever the drivetrain, a weak battery that will not hold charge should be replaced before shipping, not discovered at arrival.

Why the fuel gauge is checked twice. Fuel evaporates and gauges drift, so a tank filled "a little" for the drive to the port can read higher at the gate. Experienced exporters bring the car in on a low tank and verify the gauge again at hand-over — because the carrier's decision is made at the ramp, not at the yard.

Cleaning & Biosecurity: Passing Quarantine on Arrival

Washing a car before export is not about presentation — it is about biosecurity. Soil, mud, plant seeds, and insects trapped in the underbody, wheel arches, and tyre treads can carry pests such as the khapra beetle across borders, and quarantine authorities inspect imported vehicles for exactly this. Korea's own Animal and Plant Quarantine Agency (APQA) sits on the export side of that same system.

A car that lands with a soiled underbody can be held for inspection, ordered to be steam-cleaned at the buyer's cost, or sent for fumigation — each adding days of storage and fees. The fix is simple and cheap: wash and dry the exterior, underbody, and wheels, and confirm there is no organic matter before loading. Preparation and paperwork work together here, because some destinations also require a formal fumigation certificate; a genuinely clean car makes that certificate a formality rather than a scramble.

Relative Risk of a Car Being Held or Rejected, by Prep Failure
Folded mirror / minor cosmetic
Low
Soiled underbody (quarantine)
Moderate
Loose personal items (customs)
High
Full tank / dead battery (RoRo)
Rejected at gate

East African ports and countries with strict biosecurity regimes are the firmest on underbody cleanliness, so buyers shipping to those lanes should treat cleaning as non-negotiable. Our fumigation guide explains which destinations demand certificates and how the two requirements interact.

Personal Effects, Valuables & Keys

When a car is exported as a vehicle, it should contain nothing but the vehicle. RoRo and pure car carriers prohibit loose personal effects for three overlapping reasons: customs treats undeclared goods inside the car as a smuggling risk, those items are not covered by the marine cargo insurance on the vehicle, and loose objects can damage the interior or shift during the voyage.

The costliest small mistake: leaving belongings in the boot or glovebox. A single undeclared item found by customs can flag the whole shipment for inspection, and anything left in the car travels entirely at the owner's risk — uninsured, and easily lost. Strip the car completely: cabin, boot, under seats, glovebox, and door pockets.

Everything of value must come out before the car leaves Korea — cash, electronics, documents, and above all spare keys. Key handling follows the shipping method:

  • RoRo: one working key stays with the car so it can be driven on and off; any spares are removed and sent with the documents.
  • Container: the car is driven in, secured, and switched off, and all keys travel with the shipping documents — never sealed inside the box.

You should receive the full set of keys the car came with, typically the main smart key plus a spare, delivered alongside the vehicle documents. If a buyer genuinely needs spare parts or accessories sent too, they must be declared and shipped as proper cargo — never simply thrown in the car, where they become both a customs and a biosecurity problem. This is the same attention to detail our guide to pre-shipment inspection looks for as a sign of a careful exporter.

The Pre-Loading Photo & Condition Record

The last preparation step is the one that protects the buyer most: recording the car's exact condition before it ships. A voyage of 18 to 45 days exposes a car to handling at two ports and weeks at sea, and disputes over who caused a scratch or dent are common in the trade. A dated set of HD photos and video taken at the point of loading settles that question before it arises.

A good pre-loading record captures the full exterior from every angle, the wheels and tyres, the interior and dashboard (including the odometer), the engine bay, and the chassis or VIN plate — the same number that appears on the loading documents. This is a core SH GLOBAL practice: the buyer sees precisely what left Korea, which both builds trust before payment clears and provides evidence if a marine cargo insurance claim is ever needed.

Pre-Loading Preparation Record — What Is Captured
Fuel Level
≤ ¼ tank confirmed
Battery State
RoRo: live / Container: off
Underbody
Washed & dried, soil-free
Cabin & Boot
Empty, no personal items
Keys
Full set with documents
Odometer
Photographed at loading
VIN / Chassis
Matched to documents
Condition Media
HD photos + video
★ Loaded Clean, Recorded, Ready to Clear ★
Korean used car shipping preparation — a Hyundai from SH GLOBAL inventory cleaned, fueled to a quarter tank, and photographed before RoRo or container loading for export to the Middle East and Africa
SH GLOBAL Hyundai inventory — every car is prepared, cleaned, and photographed before loading. Browse Hyundai inventory →

Step-by-Step Preparation Checklist

Preparation follows a fixed order, because each step depends on the last. The car is cleaned and emptied, brought to fuel and battery spec, then recorded and handed to the carrier. The flow below is the standard sequence for a Korean used car shipping preparation run.

The 6-Step Pre-Loading Preparation Flow
1
Clean
Wash exterior,
underbody & wheels
2
Empty
Remove all items
& valuables
3
Fuel
Bring tank to
¼ or less
4
Battery
Charge (RoRo) /
disconnect (box)
5
Record
HD photos, video,
odometer & VIN
6
Hand Over
Keys with docs,
car to carrier

Buyers cannot stand in the yard themselves, but they can confirm each point with the exporter before the car ships. The checklist that follows is the one to ask about directly:

  1. Cleaned for quarantine. Confirm the underbody and wheels are washed and free of soil, especially for East African and biosecurity-strict destinations.
  2. Fully emptied. Verify no personal items remain anywhere in the car and that valuables and cash are out.
  3. Fuel to spec. Ask that the tank is at a quarter or less for RoRo — enough to drive, not enough to be refused.
  4. Battery set correctly. Charged and connected for RoRo, or disconnected after loading for a container.
  5. Full set of keys. Confirm every key travels with the documents, not inside the car.
  6. Condition recorded. Insist on dated HD photos and video of the exact car before it loads, including the odometer and VIN.

Common Preparation Mistakes and Red Flags

Almost every preparation failure is small, avoidable, and expensive once it reaches a port. These are the ones that most often strand a Korean car:

  • A full or half-full tank at the terminal. The most frequent RoRo rejection; the car is bumped to a later sailing while the fuel is drained.
  • A flat or dying battery. On RoRo the car cannot be driven aboard; on a container it arrives dead and cannot be collected without a jump or a new battery.
  • A soiled underbody. Triggers a quarantine hold, cleaning order, or fumigation at the destination — entirely preventable with a wash.
  • Belongings left in the car. Flags the shipment for customs and travels uninsured; a classic way to lose valuables and time at once.
  • Missing or partial keys. A car that reaches port with no usable key is stuck until a replacement is cut — slow and costly abroad.
  • No condition record. With no pre-loading photos, any transit damage becomes an unwinnable "your word against theirs" dispute.

How thoroughly an exporter handles preparation is a reliable proxy for how carefully it runs everything else. An exporter who volunteers the fuel rule, sends underbody photos, and confirms the key count without being asked is one that ships to your market often — the same trust signal our inspection guide highlights.

How SH GLOBAL Prepares Every Car for Shipping

SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. treats shipping preparation as a fixed routine, not a last-minute task at the ramp. On every export car:

  • Cleaned for quarantine. The exterior, underbody, and wheels are washed and dried so soil and organic matter do not cause a hold or fumigation order on arrival.
  • Emptied and secured. Every personal item and valuable is removed, and the full set of keys is collected to travel with the documents.
  • Fuel and battery to spec. The tank is brought to the carrier's limit and the battery is set correctly — charged for RoRo, disconnected for a container — so the car is never refused or dead on arrival.
  • Method-matched. Preparation is tailored to whether the car goes RoRo or by container, in step with the loading plan for the route.
  • Recorded in HD. Dated photos and video of the exact car — exterior, interior, odometer, and VIN — are taken before loading, so the buyer sees what shipped and is protected against transit-damage disputes.

Because the same team also handles sourcing, inspection, booking, and documents, preparation is coordinated with the whole shipment. To see where it fits in the wider purchase, walk through our step-by-step buying process, browse Hyundai inventory or Kia inventory, or view the current stock.

Want Your Car Loaded Clean, On Time, and Ready to Clear?

SH GLOBAL prepares every export car to the carrier's exact spec — fuel, battery, cleaning, and keys — and records its condition in HD photos and video before it leaves Korea, so it loads on the first sailing and clears customs and quarantine without surprises. Request a quote with preparation handled end to end.

Request a Free Quote →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Korean used car shipping preparation?
Korean used car shipping preparation is the set of physical steps a vehicle goes through in the days before it is loaded for export. It covers reducing the fuel to the carrier's limit (about a quarter tank or less for RoRo), confirming the battery is charged and in the right state for the shipping method, cleaning the underbody and wheel arches so soil and insects do not trigger a quarantine hold, removing every personal item and valuable, handing over the correct keys, and photographing the car so its exact condition is on record before it leaves Korea. Preparation is separate from the paperwork and the booking: it is what physically readies the car so it loads on time, survives the voyage, and clears customs and quarantine on arrival.
How much fuel should be in a car shipped by RoRo from Korea?
For RoRo (roll-on/roll-off) shipping, pure car carriers such as those operated by EUKOR and Hyundai Glovis generally require the tank to be at a quarter full or less — often specified as no more than about a quarter tank. The reason is safety: hundreds of vehicles are parked deck-to-deck with the engine running only briefly during loading, so the total volume of fuel on board is strictly controlled. The car must still start and drive under its own power, because stevedores drive each unit on and off the vessel, so the tank cannot be completely empty either. A quarter tank is the practical sweet spot. Cars that arrive at the terminal with a full tank are refused until the fuel is drained, which delays the shipment.
Should the battery be disconnected when shipping a Korean car?
It depends on the shipping method. For RoRo, the battery must stay charged and connected, because each car is driven onto and off the vessel under its own power — a flat battery means the car cannot be loaded. For container shipping, where the car is switched off, chocked, and lashed for a voyage of four to eight weeks or more, the battery is usually disconnected after loading so it does not slowly drain and leave the car dead on arrival. In both cases the battery should be in good health before shipping; a weak battery that will not hold charge is a common cause of a car that will not start at the destination port, adding cost and delay to collection.
Can I ship personal items inside an exported Korean car?
As a rule, no. When a car is exported as a vehicle, RoRo and pure car carriers prohibit loose personal effects inside it, and for good reasons: customs treats undeclared goods in the car as smuggling risk, the items are not covered by the marine cargo insurance on the vehicle, and loose objects can damage the interior or become a safety hazard during the voyage. Anything of value — cash, electronics, documents, spare keys — must be removed before the car leaves Korea. If a buyer genuinely needs to send spare parts or accessories, they should be declared and shipped separately or as approved consolidated cargo in a container, never simply left in the vehicle. Leaving items in the car is one of the most common preparation mistakes and can hold the whole shipment at customs.
Why does a car need to be cleaned before export shipping?
Cleaning is a biosecurity requirement, not just cosmetics. Soil, mud, plant seeds, and insects lodged in the underbody, wheel arches, and tyre treads can carry pests such as the khapra beetle into the destination country, and quarantine authorities inspect for exactly this. A car that arrives with a soiled underbody can be held for inspection, ordered to be cleaned at the buyer's expense, or subjected to fumigation — all of which add cost and delay. Washing and drying the exterior, underbody, and wheels before shipping, and confirming there is no organic matter, is the single cheapest way to avoid a quarantine hold. It works hand in hand with the fumigation certificate that some destinations require. Countries with strict biosecurity, and several East African ports, are particularly firm on this.
What keys do I get when a Korean car is shipped?
For a RoRo shipment, one working key stays with the vehicle so stevedores can drive it on and off the ship; any spare keys are removed and sent separately with the documents, never left inside a car that ships in a container. For a container shipment, the car is driven in, secured, and switched off, and the keys travel with the shipping documents to the buyer rather than inside the sealed container. You should receive every key the car came with — typically the main key or smart key plus any spare — along with the vehicle documents. Confirming the full set of keys before shipping avoids the frustrating and costly situation of a car that reaches the destination port with no usable key.
How is RoRo preparation different from container preparation?
RoRo and container shipping prepare the car differently because the car is handled differently. For RoRo, the vehicle must be fully drivable: battery charged and connected, about a quarter tank of fuel, one key at the car, no personal items, and the exterior clean for biosecurity — it is driven straight onto the deck. For container shipping, the car is driven into the container and then immobilised: it is chocked at the wheels and lashed at four points, the battery is often disconnected to prevent drain over a longer transit, fuel is kept low, mirrors may be folded, and low body kits are noted so the car clears the container lip. Container prep protects the car from movement damage over four to eight weeks, while RoRo prep focuses on the car being ready to drive at both ports.
How does SH GLOBAL prepare a Korean car for shipping?
SH GLOBAL Co., Ltd. runs a fixed preparation routine on every export car before it is loaded. The fuel is brought to the carrier's limit, the battery is checked and set to the correct state for RoRo or container, the exterior and underbody are cleaned so the car passes quarantine, every personal item and valuable is removed, and the full set of keys is collected to travel with the documents. Before the car leaves, SH GLOBAL records its exact condition in HD photos and video, so the buyer sees what was shipped and is protected against any dispute over transit damage. Because the same team also handles the booking, documents, and inspection, preparation is coordinated with the rest of the shipment rather than left to chance at the terminal, which is why SH GLOBAL cars load on schedule and arrive ready to clear customs.
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