If you import goods from China to Nigeria, you’ve probably heard the horror stories of cargo that never arrived, agents who vanished after collecting payment, or surprise fees that doubled your bill overnight. Logistics scams targeting Nigerian importers cost businesses billions of naira every year, and first-timers are hit the hardest.
We put together this guide because at Smoonlight.ng, we speak to importers every week who’ve already lost money before they found us. Below, you’ll find the most common scams, the red flags to watch for, how to tell a legit company from a fake one, and a printable checklist you can use before paying anyone a kobo. You may also want to read our full breakdown of the cost of importing goods from China to Nigeria before you start budgeting.
What Is a Logistics Scam?
A logistics scam is any scheme that uses fake or stolen information to trick importers, exporters, or shippers into transferring money, releasing cargo, or handing over sensitive shipment data. These range from simple upfront payment fraud to sophisticated setups involving forged documents and fake customs officials.
In the China-to-Nigeria corridor specifically, scams thrive because:
- Most deals happen remotely across time zones and language barriers
- First-time importers don’t always know what legitimate freight forwarding looks like
- The complexity of Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) procedures creates easy cover for fraudsters
- Untraceable payment methods are still widely used
10 Most Common Logistics Scams in Nigeria’s Import Industry
1. Fake Shipping Companies
Fraudsters build convincing websites, WhatsApp profiles, and Instagram pages impersonating real logistics companies. They reel you in with prices 30–50% below market rate, then disappear after payment, or keep manufacturing problems that require more money to ‘resolve’.
Red flag: Prices far below what established companies like Smoonlight.ng quote for the same route.
2. Advance Fee / Upfront Payment Fraud
This is the most common scam in Nigerian logistics. The fraudster poses as a freight forwarder, collects full payment for shipment or customs clearance, then vanishes. Watch out for invented fees like ‘NCS documentation charges,’ ‘port release fees,’ or ‘customs duty deposits.’
Red flag: Any company demanding 100% payment before sharing a service contract, tracking details, or Bill of Lading.
3. Fake Invoice / Billing Fraud
You agreed on a price, but a new invoice arrives mid-shipment loaded with extra charges like storage fees, ‘port handling surcharges,’ government levies. With your goods already in transit, you’re under pressure to pay fast or risk losing them.
Red flag: New fees surfacing after your cargo is shipped, especially with threats of seizure if you don’t pay immediately.
4. Bill of Lading Hostage Scam
The Bill of Lading (BOL) is the legal document that lets you claim your cargo at the port. Scammers withhold it and demand a ransom, knowing you’re completely stuck without it. This scam is especially painful because your goods are physically real; you just can’t access them.
Red flag: An agent who won’t share a draft BOL before full payment, or delays sending it after shipment.
5. Double Brokering
A fraudulent agent accepts your job, then secretly outsources it to another carrier without your knowledge. You pay the scammer, the scammer pays the real carrier next to nothing (or nothing at all), and your cargo ends up stranded with no single party accountable.
Red flag: Unusually low rates, evasive answers about their fleet or warehouse, and contacts that keep changing.
6. Bait-and-Switch Quality Scam
Sometimes a logistics company doubles as a sourcing ‘helper.’ They connect you to a Chinese supplier who sends perfect samples then ships inferior goods. Some agents take commissions from these suppliers and have a direct financial incentive to keep you in the dark.
Red flag: Agents recommending specific Chinese suppliers without disclosing any financial relationship.
7. Phishing and Identity Impersonation
Scammers send emails or WhatsApp messages mimicking DHL, Maersk, or even Smoonlight.ng claiming a package is held, a fee is due, or your account needs verifying. The links lead to cloned websites built to steal your payment details or personal information.
Red flag: Messages from Gmail/Yahoo addresses, or URLs with subtle misspellings like ‘smoonlight-ng.com’ instead of smoonlight.ng.
8. Fake Customs / NCS Agent Scam
Someone poses as a licensed clearing agent or NCS officer who can fast-track your customs clearance at Apapa or Tin Can Island Port. They collect fees, produce no results, and go silent once your goods are stuck. Nigeria Customs does not authorize unofficial agents. If they can’t be verified, they’re not real.
Red flag: Anyone who cannot show a CAC number, an NCS agent licence, or named clearing contacts at the port.
9. Non-Delivery After Full Payment
The simplest scam: take full payment, issue a fake tracking number, deliver nothing. By the time you realize the tracking link isn’t updating, the contact number is dead and the website is gone. Always insist on a working shipment tracking portal before committing.
Red flag: Tracking numbers that never update, or that route to unofficial third-party tracking pages.
10. Hidden Demurrage and Storage Fee Exploitation
Some unethical agents deliberately stall customs clearance, letting port storage (demurrage) fees build up on your cargo. By the time they reach out, you owe far more than you budgeted and you have no choice but to pay to retrieve your goods.
Red flag: No SLA on clearance timelines, or an agent who’s suddenly unreachable for days after your cargo lands at port.
How to Know If a Logistics Company Is Legit: 8 Verification Steps
Step 1: Check CAC Registration
Every legitimate Nigerian business must be registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission. Search the company name. If the registration doesn’t exist or doesn’t match what the company has told you, stop there.
Step 2: Verify a Physical Nigerian Office
A company handling Nigeria-bound cargo must have a physical, verifiable office ideally with named clearing agents at Apapa or Tin Can Island Port. Ask for the address and verify it. A P.O. Box or WhatsApp-only presence is not a business address.
Step 3: Confirm Their Email Domain
Legitimate companies use branded emails (e.g. info@smoonlight.ng). A company operating from Gmail or Yahoo while claiming to be a registered freight firm is hiding something.
Step 4: Request Their Bill of Lading Template or Service Contract
Ask for a sample service agreement or BOL template before paying anything. A professional company sends it without hesitation. Scammers avoid written documentation because it creates accountability.
Step 5: Ask for Client References
Request at least two or three verifiable client names you can contact independently. Check them on LinkedIn, Google, or Nairaland. Unverifiable references are no references at all.
Step 6: Search Their Name + ‘Scam’ Online
Run: ‘[Company Name] scam Nigeria’ or ‘[Company Name] review Nairaland.’ The Nigerian importing community is vocal and quick to warn each other about bad operators.
Step 7: Confirm Tracking System Access
Before signing anything, see their tracking portal. Legitimate China-to-Nigeria operators provide real-time shipment tracking. Inability to demonstrate this is a serious red flag.
Step 8: Verify Industry Memberships
Check whether the company belongs to FIATA (International Federation of Freight Forwarders Associations) or IATA for air freight. See our guide on the best shipping companies from China to Nigeria to understand how top operators are structured.
Quick Reference: Logistics Scam Red Flags at a Glance
| Red Flag | What It Means |
| Too-good-to-be-true pricing | Scammers undercut legitimate rates to lure victims |
| No physical address in Nigeria | No real office at Apapa or Tin Can Island port |
| Gmail/Yahoo email address | Legitimate companies use branded domain emails |
| Requests cash/Western Union payment | Untraceable payments = no recourse after fraud |
| No tracking system provided | Legitimate operators always offer shipment tracking |
| Vague customs clearance process | Shows no real knowledge of NCS/SON requirements |
| No CAC registration number | Company is unregistered and unaccountable |
| Pressure to pay quickly | Classic tactic to prevent due diligence |
| Fake Bill of Lading | Document fraud used to withhold or steal cargo |
Complete Checklist: How to Vet a Logistics Company Before Paying
Save this to your phone or print it. Run through it every time you engage a new logistics company for China-to-Nigeria importation:
| Verification Step | Done? |
| Verify CAC registration on CAC portal (cac.gov.ng) | ☐ |
| Confirm physical Nigerian office address (Apapa/Tin Can) | ☐ |
| Check for NAFDAC/SON/NCS clearance experience | ☐ |
| Request a sample Bill of Lading or service contract | ☐ |
| Search company name + ‘scam’ on Google | ☐ |
| Ask for 3 verifiable client references | ☐ |
| Confirm tracking portal access before payment | ☐ |
| Verify branded email domain (not Gmail/Yahoo) | ☐ |
| Check Nairaland forums for community reviews | ☐ |
| Confirm sea vs air freight options and realistic transit times | ☐ |
| Never pay 100% upfront — use milestone payments | ☐ |
| Insist on written contract/service agreement | ☐ |
| Confirm insurance coverage for your cargo | ☐ |
| Ask about consolidation options (LCL/FCL) | ☐ |
| Check if they are FIATA or freight association members | ☐ |
What to Do If You Have Already Been Scammed
Act fast, the window for recovery closes quickly:
- Stop all further payments immediately. Do not pay any additional ‘release fees’
- Document everything: emails, WhatsApp chats, receipts, screenshots of tracking
- Report to the EFCC or Nigeria Police Force Cybercrime Unit (Force CID, Abuja)
- File a report with the Consumer Protection Council (CPC) if the company is Nigerian-registered
- Warn others on Nairaland’s shipping forums because your post could save someone else
- Call your bank immediately if you paid by transfer. If it is early enough, a reversal may be possible
How to Import from China to Nigeria Safely: Best Practices
Always Use a Verified Freight Forwarder
Smoonlight.ng offers end-to-end logistics from customs clearance, real-time tracking, and transparent pricing, so you know exactly what you’re paying before you pay it. Work with established companies that have a proven track record on the China-to-Nigeria corridor, verifiable port presence, and real client testimonials.
Use Milestone Payments, Not Full Upfront
Structure payments in stages: deposit on booking, second payment on confirmed shipment, final payment on delivery. Any company that refuses milestone payments and insists on full upfront should be treated with real caution.
Insist on a Written Contract
Every legitimate logistics engagement needs a written service agreement covering: transit timelines, all fees and charges, customs clearance responsibilities, insurance, and dispute resolution. No contract, no deal.
Use Traceable Payment Methods
Pay by bank transfer to a business account, and keep your receipts. Avoid cash, Western Union, personal mobile wallet transfers, or crypto. If things go wrong, traceable payments are your paper trail.
Verify Your Chinese Supplier Independently
If your logistics company is also helping you source, verify the supplier separately via Alibaba Trade Assurance, or a third-party inspection service like SGS or Bureau Veritas and not through the same agent. Smoonlight’s sourcing and procurement service keeps supplier vetting fully separate from freight handling.
Understand Nigerian Customs Requirements
Know the basics: Form M is mandatory for all imports into Nigeria. Familiarise yourself with the NCS Single Window portal and SON requirements for regulated products. Scammers target importers who don’t know the process.
The Right Partner Changes Everything
Logistics scams are a real and growing problem for Nigerian importers sourcing from China. But they are entirely avoidable with the right knowledge, a proper verification process, and a partner who is accountable.
At Super Moonlight Logistics, we built our service around exactly the problems we hear about every week: hidden fees, missing cargo, and agents who can’t be reached when something goes wrong. We offer transparent pricing, real-time tracking, full customs clearance, and a team you can actually speak to.
Ready to import from China to Nigeria without the stress? Get in touch with Smoonlight.ng today and let us handle it the right way.
