Who it is for
Importer, carrier, agent, supplier
If you are involved in preparing a Great Britain import and need a clear view of the document pack before clearance.
Check which documents and readiness items are usually needed for a Great Britain import case. The tool gives value first, then offers review support if you need it.
What this page does
The page is built for search intent like “UK import documents” or “customs documents checklist UK”, so it explains the value, guides the user, and only asks for contact details after the result.
Who it is for
If you are involved in preparing a Great Britain import and need a clear view of the document pack before clearance.
When to use it
The generator is useful for one-off imports, repeat flows, urgent shipments and cases that are already moving.
What you get
No fake lock. No lead gate before value. The tool gives the result first and then lets the user decide whether they want manual review.
Import checklist generator
This flow is designed primarily for imports into England, Scotland and Wales. Northern Ireland and unusual cases are intentionally pushed into manual review.
Generator result
Disclaimer
This generator is operational and informational only. It does not replace legal, tariff or sector-specific advice. Regulated goods, Northern Ireland, urgent cases and shipments already moving require manual review.
Use your browser print dialog to save the result as a PDF.
You have the result. What next?
That is especially useful for regulated goods, urgent shipments, missing GB EORI, unclear commodity codes or preference-claim scenarios.
Optional next step
The form appears only after value is delivered.
How to read the result
These are the items that should normally be ready before a standard Great Britain import proceeds to clearance.
These are the items that commonly show up in real import cases and are worth preparing early.
This is the point where a safe MVP flow ends and a real operational review starts.
FAQ
Commonly: a commercial invoice or proof of value, commodity code, customs value data, transport details, often a packing list, and sometimes origin evidence or regulated-goods documentation.
For a standard commercial Great Britain import, usually yes. A missing GB EORI is one of the most common blockers before clearance.
No. It is an operational planning tool. Regulated goods, special procedures and urgent cases still need manual review.
Yes. The result is built for browser print, including Save as PDF.
Final CTA
Easy Clearance can review the case, flag the gaps and confirm whether the import pack looks strong enough for the next operational step.