awbtracker
Industry Guide

Master vs House AWB: Key Differences Explained

By: AWB Tracker Editorial Team | Published: July 11, 2026

In international freight forwarding, understanding the distinction between a Master Air Waybill (MAWB) and a House Air Waybill (HAWB) is crucial for managing shipping documentation, insurance claims, and real-time cargo tracking.

What is a Master Air Waybill (MAWB)?

A Master Air Waybill (MAWB) is the contract of carriage issued directly by the airline carrier (such as 020 Lufthansa Cargo or 176 Emirates SkyCargo) to the freight forwarder. The shipper listed on a MAWB is almost always the freight forwarder (or their agent at the origin airport), and the consignee is the forwarder's destination office or break-bulk agent.

The MAWB governs the physical transportation of the consolidated cargo from the departure airport to the destination airport. The 3-digit prefix of the MAWB identifies the carrying airline.

What is a House Air Waybill (HAWB)?

A House Air Waybill (HAWB) is the contract of carriage issued by the freight forwarder to the actual owner of the goods (the real shipper) and their customer (the real consignee). It covers a specific individual shipment contained within the forwarder's larger cargo consolidation.

The HAWB outlines the transit terms, description of goods, weight, dimensions, and handling instructions between the forwarder and the buyer. HAWBs do not have standard IATA 3-digit airline prefixes; instead, they use proprietary numbering schemes generated by the freight forwarder's system.

Summary Comparison

Feature Master AWB (MAWB) House AWB (HAWB)
Issued By Airline Carrier Freight Forwarder
Shipper Listed Freight Forwarder Agent Actual Exporter / Shipper
Consignee Listed Destination Break-Bulk Agent Actual Importer / Consignee
Tracking Prefix Yes (e.g. 176 for Emirates) No (Forwarder specific format)

How to Track MAWB vs HAWB

To track a consolidated air cargo shipment, you must search the airline carrier's portal using the **Master Air Waybill (MAWB)** number. For instance, if your cargo is flown by 157 Qatar Airways, you must use their 157 prefix MAWB to see flight statuses like DEP and RCF. Tracking the HAWB requires querying the specific freight forwarder's internal system.

Track Air Cargo

Enter your 11-digit AWB number to track cargo status instantly.

Advertisement

New to Air Cargo?

Check out our step-by-step master guide explaining air waybill check-ins, transit, and final collections.

Read Master Guide