SPIL bill of lading tracking
Opens the carrier’s tracking page — paste your number there
Track SPIL shipments at the source: we keep the verified link to SPIL’s own tracking page and route your bill of lading number to it. SPIL’s tracking form doesn’t accept numbers passed in a link, so we open the correct page for you to paste your number into. A valid number looks like SPNU6430616.
SPIL at a glance
- B/L prefix (SCAC)
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SPNU - Also known as
- Salam Pacific Indonesia Lines
- Tracking link type
- Carrier tracking page — paste your number
- Official website
- myspil.com
- Tracking link verified
- 2026-07-12
How to read a SPIL bill of lading number
SPNU6430616 format-valid example — not a live shipment
A bill of lading number identifies the transport document, not the box: it usually starts with the carrier’s four-letter code (its SCAC) — SPNU for SPIL — followed by the document number, e.g. SPNU6430616.
You’ll find it top-right on the B/L or sea waybill. It’s different from the container number (which identifies the physical box and can cover several containers on one B/L) and from your booking reference — if one identifier returns nothing, try the other on the carrier’s page.
SPIL numbers usually carry this carrier code:
SPNU If your SPIL tracking isn’t working
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1 Check the number format first
Bill-of-lading numbers start with the carrier’s letter code followed by the document number (like SPNU6430616). Make sure you’re using the B/L number, not the container number or the booking reference — they’re three different identifiers on the same paperwork.
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2 Make sure the number was issued by this carrier
If your shipment was booked through a freight forwarder or NVOCC, the number on your paperwork may be the forwarder’s own reference, which SPIL’s system won’t recognise. Ask the party that issued your documents which carrier number to use — or paste the number on our homepage and let the prefix detector identify the issuer.
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3 Too early or too late
Timing matters: a number that was only just issued may not show results yet, and carriers remove old shipments from public tracking a few weeks after delivery. If the shipment is very new or long delivered, an empty result doesn’t mean the number is wrong.
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4 Paste carefully on SPIL’s page
Because SPIL’s form can’t be pre-filled from a link, paste the number exactly — with no leading or trailing spaces and no extra characters copied from an email. If the page shows a security check, complete it and search again.
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5 Still nothing?
Contact whoever sold you the freight service (your forwarder, broker, or SPIL directly) with the bill of lading number and the booking reference — they can see internal status that public tracking doesn’t show.
Frequently asked questions
- How do I track a SPIL bill of lading?
- Enter your bill of lading number in the box above and select Track. We open SPIL’s official tracking page so you can paste your number. SPIL bill of lading numbers usually begin with SPNU.
- What does a SPIL bill of lading number look like?
- Bill-of-lading numbers usually start with the carrier’s four-letter code (its SCAC prefix) followed by the document number — for example COSU6285551440. For SPIL the carrier code is SPNU. A format-valid example is SPNU6430616.
- Why does the SPIL page open without my number filled in?
- SPIL’s tracking form is protected (captcha, login, or a non-shareable form), so the number can’t be passed in the link. We open the correct page — just paste your number there.
- What if my number doesn’t start with SPNU?
- Then it probably wasn’t issued by SPIL — shipments booked through a freight forwarder or partner carrier often travel under a different issuer’s bill of lading number. Paste the number on our homepage and the prefix detector will suggest the right carriers and forwarder, or check your shipping documents for who issued them.
- Is this SPIL’s official tracking site?
- No — this is an independent directory of official carrier tracking pages. We keep a verified link to SPIL’s own tracking page and send you there; the tracking data you see comes directly from SPIL, and we never see or store it.