Escrow payment service ensures that
seller gets paid for shipment and buyer receives what
has been ordered for. Thus, it reduces potential risk
of fraud by acting as a trusted third party that collects,
holds and disburses funds according to buyer and seller
instructions. Escrow services are provided by licensed
and regulated escrow agents.
When Escrow Service is to be used ?
Escrow is well suited for small to medium value merchandise
or intellectual property where conventional payment
system (e.g. letter of credit) is either unsuitable
or un-economic. It is typically used for items purchased
on auction sites, Small value shipments, domain names,
source code etc.
Tell me one good application of Escrow
for Exporters
Exporters can use escrow for collecting payment of
small export shipment where buyer is unwilling to
pay in advance and Letter of Credit is an expensive
option.
It is frequently used for first-time transaction
where buyer and seller are conducting business for
the first time (consequently mutual trust level low)
and the value of shipment is small.
Another area is collection of payment for samples
that exporters send for approval. Still, a third area
could be payment for domain name or source code for
service exporters, specially in software export.
For exporter, escrow is safer than receiving payment
through credit card, as there is no scope for 'chargeback'.
For importer, paying by credit card to an unknown
party always entails some risk. A credible intermediary
can help buyer and seller to start business and build
trust in each other.
How Seller is Protected
The financial risk of seller in an international
transaction is greatly reduced in escrow payment as
buyer has to deposit the agreed value of shipment
with escrow before seller ships the ordered product.
So, seller knows buyer has capacity to pay and has
already paid for the shipment.
How Buyer is Protected
Escrow service tracks the shipped merchandise and
verifies that it has been delivered to buyer. Buyer
then has an inspection period to check the merchandise
and decide its acceptability. The seller isn't paid
until the buyer accepts the merchandise, or the inspection
period expires.
What Happens If Buyer Refuses to Accept
the Merchandise ?
Different escrow services may follow slightly different
procedure in this respect - I am describing below
a typical one:
If the buyer is not satisfied with the merchandise,
he/she can inform escrow service that the goods will
be returned to the seller. It is now the responsibility
of buyer to ship the merchandise back to seller in
good condition and pay seller his/her cost of shipment.
The seller has an inspection period to verify that
the returned goods are in original condition. After
the seller has confirmed the receipt and that the
condition of the goods are to his/her satisfaction,
escrow will return buyer's funds after deducting seller's
shipping costs and the escrow fees. The seller will
then be reimbursed for his/her shipping costs.
So, in the instance of buyer refusing to accept merchandise,
he/she will have to bear the cost of shipping back
the merchandise to seller, reimburse seller his/her
shipping cost and pay escrow fee.
If the buyer fails to inform escrow of his/her decision
within the inspection period - escrow service will
make the payment to the seller.