Commercial Letters of Credit Texas Capital Bank in USA
Commercial Letters of Credit (LC)
Meta description: Discover how Commercial Letters of Credit (LC) provide payment certainty for exporters and importers. Learn about types of LCs, key parties, required documents, risk mitigation and best practices under UCP 600 to streamline international trade.
What is a Commercial Letter of Credit?
A Commercial Letter of Credit (often abbreviated as LC) is a bank-issued payment undertaking designed to support cross-border trade. It converts the buyer’s credit into a bank’s binding promise to pay the seller once specified documents, presented in accordance with the LC terms, are found compliant. For businesses that need documentary certainty, reduced counterparty risk and clear procedural control, the LC remains one of the most reliable trade-finance instruments available.
Key parties and the LC lifecycle
A standard LC transaction involves four principal participants:
- Applicant (buyer): requests the issuing bank to open the LC in favour of the seller.
- Issuing bank: issues the LC and undertakes to pay against presentation of compliant documents.
- Beneficiary (seller): ships goods or renders services and presents the required documentation to obtain payment.
- Advising/confirming/negotiating bank(s): local banks in the seller’s jurisdiction that advise the LC, may add confirmation, and can negotiate or pay against compliant documents.
The transaction sequence typically follows these steps: LC issuance by the issuing bank, shipment and performance according to the sales contract, presentation of the commercial invoice and shipping/insurance certificates, documentary examination by the banks, and payment, acceptance or negotiation if documents are compliant. Banks focus strictly on documentary compliance, not on the underlying commercial dispute between buyer and seller.
Types of Commercial Letters of Credit
Different LC structures address varying commercial needs and risk profiles:
- Sight LC: payable immediately upon presentation of compliant documents.
- Usance / Term LC: payment is deferred to a specified future date to accommodate buyer cash-flow planning.
- Confirmed LC: a second bank (usually in the seller’s country) adds its guarantee, reducing beneficiary bank/country risk.
- Transferable LC: allows the beneficiary (often an intermediary or trader) to transfer part or all of the credit to another supplier.
- Back-to-back LC: uses two linked credits to finance transactions where an intermediary requires separate LCs for their supplier.
- Standby LC: functions primarily as a guarantee and is invoked only if payment obligations under the underlying contract are not met.
Benefits for exporters and importers
- Exporters: gain a high degree of payment certainty, access to confirmation facilities and the ability to use the LC as collateral for invoice financing or discounting.
- Importers: retain control over shipment and documentation before payment is released and can obtain favourable payment terms while maintaining seller confidence.
- Both parties: benefit from widely accepted rules (notably UCP 600 for documentary credits and ISP98 for standby LCs) and the professional, rule-based handling offered by banks, which reduces ambiguity and dispute risk.
Essential documents and documentary compliance
Letters of Credit require precise documents. Typical requirements include a commercial invoice, transport documents (bill of lading, sea waybill or air waybill), insurance certificate, packing list, certificate of origin and any inspection or quality certificates specified in the LC. Banks perform strict documentary checks against the exact wording of the credit. Even minor mismatches — incorrect dates, inconsistent descriptions, typographical errors or missing stamps — can lead to refusal of payment. Accurate drafting of the LC and meticulous preparation of shipping and trade documents are therefore essential.
Common risks and practical mitigation
- Documentary discrepancies: Work with experienced freight forwarders, customs brokers and document specialists; allow buffer time for corrections and use pre-check services where available.
- Bank and country risk: When trading with higher-risk jurisdictions, request a confirmed LC or choose an issuing bank with strong correspondent relationships.
- Fraud and compliance risk: Implement robust KYC and sanctions screening, verify trading counterparties, and ensure documentary authenticity to avoid payment blocks.
Best practices when structuring an LC
- Draft LC wording precisely — avoid vague terms and ensure product descriptions, shipping dates and the document list mirror the underlying sales contract.
- Set realistic expiry and presentation periods to accommodate logistics delays and transit time variability.
- Discuss the need for confirmation early — beneficiaries in jurisdictions with higher banking or sovereign risk usually require confirmed credits.
- Engage banks and advisors experienced in documentary credits and internationally accepted rules (UCP 600 for commercial LCs; ISP98 for Standby LCs).
- Consider pre-shipment or post-shipment document checking and discounting services to improve cash flow for exporters.
Products and services we provide
Our trade finance offering includes issuance and advising of LCs, confirmation facilities, negotiation and discounting of documentary credits, transferable and back-to-back LC structures, amendments and cancellations, comprehensive documentary checking and bespoke trade finance solutions for SMEs and large corporates. We combine regulatory compliance, operational excellence and market expertise to minimise turnaround time and ensure documentary conformity.
Why choose a Letter of Credit?
Letters of Credit are ideal when transaction size, counterparty risk or regulatory complexity requires dependable payment assurance. A well-drafted LC separates payment from performance disputes by placing reliance on banks' documentary undertakings rather than on commercial litigation. For exporters seeking liquidity and importers needing control, the LC provides a bank-backed mechanism that balances security, flexibility and predictable execution.
Next steps talk to our trade finance specialists
Contact our trade finance team to design an LC structure that fits your supply chain, reduces risk exposure and accelerates international transactions with transparent, bank-backed payment mechanisms. We provide practical guidance on documentation, confirmation options and financing solutions to make Letters of Credit a workable and efficient part of your cross-border trade toolkit.




