name: eor-agreement
title: Exporter of Record (EOR) Agreement
description: Drafts a U.S.-compliant Exporter of Record (EOR) Agreement appointing a third party as USPPI for international export transactions. Allocates compliance obligations under EAR, ITAR, OFAC, and CBP with denied-party screening, AES/EEI filing, indemnification, and record retention. Use when drafting EOR appointments, export compliance service agreements, or logistics outsourcing for cross-border shipments.
author: CaseMark
author_url: https://github.com/CaseMark/skills/tree/main/skills/legal/eor-agreement
license: Apache-2.0
version: 0.1.0
execution_mode: open
jurisdiction: us
practice: sanctions
language: en
tags: [agreement, drafting]
Exporter of Record (EOR) Agreement
Drafts an enforceable EOR Agreement appointing a qualified third party as USPPI, allocating export compliance obligations, and managing liability under U.S. export control law.
Prerequisites
- Party details — legal names, entity types, jurisdictions, EIN numbers, CBP exporter-of-record numbers
- Goods/technology — technical specs, ECCN classifications, USML categories if defense articles, commodity jurisdiction determinations
- Destinations and end-users — countries, consignees, end-use certifications
- Scope — compliance-only vs. combined logistics; exclusive vs. non-exclusive
- Existing authorizations — BIS/DDTC licenses, license exceptions, OFAC authorizations
- Business terms — fees, term length, insurance minimums, governing law/venue
Output Structure
1. Parties & Recitals
- Full party identification with CBP registration numbers
- Recitals: principal's export need → regulatory complexity → EOR expertise
- Acknowledgment of penalty exposure under EAR, ITAR, OFAC, CBP
2. Definitions
| Term |
Definition |
| EOR / USPPI |
Party on export documentation legally responsible for the transaction |
| Export Controls |
EAR (15 C.F.R. §§ 730–774), ITAR (22 C.F.R. §§ 120–130), OFAC sanctions, anti-boycott regs (15 C.F.R. Part 760) |
| EEI/AES Filing |
Electronic Export Information via Automated Export System per 15 C.F.R. Part 30 |
| Controlled Items |
Goods, software, or technology subject to EAR, ITAR, or OFAC |
| Denied Parties Screening |
Pre-shipment check against DPL, Entity List, Unverified List, SDN List, FSE List, ITAR Debarred List |
| Export Documentation |
Commercial invoice, packing list, BOL/AWB, license/exception, EEI, certificate of origin, DCS |
3. Appointment & Scope
- Exclusive/non-exclusive; product categories, destinations, carve-outs
- Authority limits: regulatory acts only vs. authority to bind commercially
- Escalation for novel classifications, sensitive end-users, denied-party hits
4. EOR Obligations
5. Principal Obligations
6. Representations & Warranties
- Both: not on any restricted party list; no disqualifying investigations; authority to execute
- EOR: holds required licenses/registrations; maintains compliance systems and trained personnel
- Principal: information accurate and complete; no undisclosed item restrictions
- Ongoing covenant: immediate notice of restricted-party status change or material compliance issue
7. Indemnification
| Party |
Covers |
| Principal indemnifies |
Inaccurate/incomplete info; undisclosed classifications; principal-caused violations; unauthorized changes; breach of warranties |
| EOR indemnifies |
EOR negligence or willful misconduct; filing/documentation errors; unauthorized acts beyond scope |
- Procedure: written notice → indemnifying party controls defense → indemnified party cooperates
- Unlimited liability carve-outs: gross negligence, willful misconduct, fraud, intentional export violations
8. Limitation of Liability
- Cap: lesser of $[X] or [X] months fees paid
- No consequential/punitive damages (except third-party awards or willful misconduct)
9. Term & Termination
| Event |
Notice |
| Convenience |
[30–90] days written |
| Material breach |
[15–30] days + cure period |
| Immediate (no cure) |
Bankruptcy; restricted-party listing; license revocation; imminent violation risk |
Post-termination: complete in-process shipments; transfer/assign licenses per agency rules; return documents within [X] days; refund unearned fees. Surviving: indemnification, confidentiality, records, payment.
10. Governing Law & Disputes
- [State] law; federal export law supersedes on regulatory matters
- Tiered: executive negotiation [30d] → mediation [60d] → arbitration/litigation
- Injunctive relief carve-out for confidentiality breaches and imminent violations
- Jury trial waiver if litigating
11. General Provisions
- Integration; written amendments; counterparts; e-signatures
- Schedules: product/ECCN list, fee schedule, approved destinations, compliance procedures
Guidelines
- ITAR trigger: Defense articles (USML I–XXI) require ITAR-specific reps, DDTC license/TAA references, registration (22 C.F.R. § 122); consider standalone addendum
- AES threshold: EEI required for shipments >$2,500 or requiring license (15 C.F.R. § 30.2) [VERIFY]
- OFAC: Screen SDN and sectoral sanctions even absent EAR/ITAR license requirements (50 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq.)
- Anti-boycott: Required for goods destined for/transiting Arab League countries; both parties covenant compliance (15 C.F.R. Part 760)
- Insurance: Confirm E&O, bond, and GL minimums against industry standards and export risk profile
- State law: Indemnification and liability caps may face state-specific enforceability limits
- License transfers: Export licenses generally non-transferable to successor EOR without BIS/DDTC approval; flag in transition planning