An internal railroad document derived from the bill of lading that travels with or ahead of a car and contains all information needed to route, classify, and deliver the shipment. The waybill is the operational document used by railroad employees to handle a car through the system. It may be electronic in modern railroad IT systems.
The primary shipping document that serves as a contract of carriage between the shipper and the railroad, a receipt for the goods tendered, and sometimes a document of title. The bill of lading describes the commodity, weight, origin, destination, routing, and any special terms. It is issued by the railroad or its agent when freight is accepted for transportation.
The invoice issued by a railroad to a shipper or third party for transportation services rendered, including linehaul, fuel surcharge, and any applicable accessorial charges. Freight bills may be prepaid (paid by the shipper at origin) or collect (paid by the consignee at destination). Freight bill auditing is a significant function in large shipping operations.
The complete list of equipment making up a train, including locomotives and each railcar in order, with car numbers, commodities, weights, and destinations. A consist document (also called a train list) travels with the train and is transmitted electronically ahead of arrival. Consists are essential for safety planning and crew briefings.
The transfer of freight cars and the accompanying waybills between two connecting railroads at a junction point. Interchange rules, governed by AAR circulars, define responsibilities for car condition, billing, and liability. It is the mechanism that enables single-bill, multi-railroad shipments across the North American network.