Reading supplier's declarations with AI: origin proofs, EUR.1 and HS codes
In international trade, the proof of origin determines duties, preferences and compliance. But the documents required for it — supplier’s declarations, certificates of origin, EUR.1 certificates — come in countless variants, often as scans, PDFs or paper. Capturing and checking them by hand ties up experienced customs and export staff.
AI-based reading automates this step: the relevant details are extracted in structured form, reconciled against other documents and handed over to customs or ERP systems.
The relevant documents
- A supplier’s declaration is a supplier’s statement about the customs origin of the goods — the basis for preferential proofs, often as a long-term supplier’s declaration (LTSD).
- The EUR.1 movement certificate documents preferential origin under free trade agreements and enables reduced or zero duties.
- The certificate of origin certifies the country of origin of goods and is often issued by chambers of commerce.
A common data field runs through all three: the HS code, which classifies the goods internationally.
What AI does here
An AI model reads these documents template-free and recognises the decisive fields even on unseen layouts:
- Extract. Country of origin, goods description, HS codes, quantities and referenced documents are captured in structured form — whether the document is a scan, PDF or structured file.
- Reconcile. The details are checked against commercial invoices, delivery notes and freight documents, so discrepancies surface early.
- Hand over. The validated data flows into customs software, ERP or accounting — with visual grounding that traces every value back to its original location.
Connecting to freight processing
Proofs of origin rarely stand alone: they belong to a case made up of a freight invoice, customs documents and a delivery note. feld.ai automates customs documents and connects them within freight invoice processing into an end-to-end, auditable process — sovereign and running on our own servers in Austria.
Get new blog posts delivered to your inbox
Occasional notes on sovereign AI and document automation. No spam.