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Export & International Orders Policy

GPU Mart · Policies

Effective date: 17 June 2026 · Last updated: 17 June 2026 · Version 1.0

Terms for international buyers: Incoterms, duties and taxes, export controls, sanctions, FEMA, and delivery for cross-border GPU Mart orders.

1. International availability

International orders are accepted at RDP’s discretion and confirmed at quotation. Serviceability, lead times, and support coverage vary by destination.

2. Incoterms, duties and taxes

Cross-border shipments are supplied on agreed Incoterms (default: Ex-Works (EXW), RDP facility, Hyderabad, unless otherwise agreed in the quotation). Unless stated, import duties, destination taxes, customs clearance, and local charges are the buyer’s responsibility. Title and risk transfer per the agreed Incoterms and the Shipping & Delivery Policy.

3. Export controls and sanctions

AI hardware may be subject to export-control and sanctions regimes. Exports from India are governed by the Foreign Trade (Development and Regulation) Act, 1992, the Foreign Trade Policy and DGFT regulations, and SCOMET controls where applicable. You agree not to export, re-export, or divert products in violation of applicable laws, and confirm that you and the end-use/end-user are not subject to restrictions. We may require end-use/end-user documentation and may decline or cancel orders where controls or licensing requirements are not met.

4. Foreign exchange

Cross-border payments are subject to the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) and RBI regulations, and are settled per the Payment, Billing & GST Policy, typically by bank transfer in US Dollars (USD).

5. Documentation and certifications

We provide standard export documentation (commercial invoice, packing list, and, as applicable, certificate of origin). Destination-specific certifications and documents may be the buyer’s responsibility (see Compliance & Certifications).

6. Force majeure and logistics

Cross-border deliveries are especially exposed to customs, port, and supply-chain disruption; the force-majeure terms in the Terms of Sale apply.