Importing Fresh Mangoes from Africa — Sourcing and Compliance
West Africa is a strategic bridge origin in the global mango supply calendar — filling the window between Brazil and Peru for EU buyers. Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Mali collectively deliver April to September Kent mango supply that no other region can match.
EU mango window
mango variety
standard for mangoes
EU import duty
Europe imports over 450,000 tonnes of fresh mangoes annually, and it is a market that runs year-round — by design. EU importers have built a global supply network that sequentially pulls from Brazil, Peru, Israel, and West Africa to maintain continuous availability of the fibre-free Kent and Keitt varieties that European consumers prefer. West Africa plays a specific and irreplaceable role in this calendar, delivering the bridge supply from approximately April to September that keeps EU mango shelves stocked after South American seasons end and before Brazil's next main crop arrives.
For EU importers building a resilient mango supply chain, or for importers looking to add an African origin alongside their existing South American suppliers, this guide covers the sourcing landscape, quality standards, phytosanitary compliance requirements, and documentation needed to import African mangoes successfully into the EU market.
- West Africa's Kent and Keitt mango season for the EU runs April through August — a strategic supply bridge between South American seasons
- Ivory Coast is the largest West African mango exporter to Europe; Senegal, Mali, and Burkina Faso follow sequentially through the summer
- Class I minimum quality is required for all fresh mango imports to the EU; Kent mangoes dominate EU preference due to fibre-free flesh
- Fruit fly (Bactrocera dorsalis) is the critical phytosanitary risk — exporters must provide a phytosanitary certificate confirming pest-free status from their NPPO
- Fresh mangoes enter the EU at 0% import duty — making Africa competitive on landed cost relative to South American origins
- EU fresh mango imports require pre-shipment MRL testing; pest pressure during the rainy season in West Africa increases phytosanitary risk — stop exports when trapping shows elevated fruit fly populations
- HS Code: 0804 50 — all fresh mango import documentation should reference this code for accurate customs classification
African Mango Sourcing Origins — Who Exports What and When
The Mango Season Calendar — Africa in the Global Supply Chain
The calendar above reveals why West Africa is strategically important for EU mango buyers. The window from approximately April to September — when Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Mali are in peak supply — is the period with the least competition from South American origins. EU importers who have established West African mango relationships can maintain Kent mango availability through the summer without depending on expensive spot buying from distant origins. This is not a convenience; it is a supply chain necessity for retailers who want year-round Kent mango availability.
EU Quality Requirements — What Class I Actually Means
The EU requires a minimum of Class I quality for all fresh mango imports. Class I is not a basic standard — it represents genuinely good quality fruit that meets specific criteria across multiple parameters. Understanding these criteria before you sign a supply contract with an African exporter is essential to avoiding disputes and rejections at the European importer's platform.
| Quality Parameter | Class I Requirement | Common Failure Points from Africa |
|---|---|---|
| Shape and development | Well-developed, characteristic of variety; no malformation | Immature harvest; irregular shape from pest damage |
| Colour | Characteristic of variety at the minimum degree of ripeness for transport | Uneven colouring; premature harvest at incorrect stage |
| Firmness | Firm; no bruising or soft spots | Post-harvest handling damage; inadequate cold chain in transport |
| Defects allowed | Slight defects in shape; slight skin defects up to 2cm² total; slight stem cavity; slight pressure marks | Fruit fly punctures; sunburn; mechanical bruising from poor packing |
| Flesh quality | Free from internal browning; no fibres (for EU-preferred varieties) | Overripe or chilled injury; Tommy Atkins fibres unacceptable in EU market |
| Minimum size | Minimum 200g for Class I | Undersized fruit mixed into consignments without accurate calibration |
| Labelling | Variety name, country of origin, class, size (weight range or count) | Missing or incorrect variety labelling on cartons |
Phytosanitary Compliance — The Fruit Fly Challenge
The single biggest phytosanitary risk in African mango exports to the EU is Bactrocera dorsalis — the oriental fruit fly. This pest is present throughout sub-Saharan Africa and can infest mango fruit during development, creating larvae that are invisible until the fruit begins to rot after harvest. EU Regulation 2019/2072 lists Bactrocera dorsalis as a regulated pest for which all African mango shipments must provide documented evidence of compliance.
Fruit fly pressure in West Africa intensifies significantly during the rainy season — May to September — which unfortunately overlaps with the prime EU export window. Exporters in Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Mali must operate continuous fruit fly trapping programmes across all mango production zones. When trapping data indicates elevated fruit fly population levels, the only safe action is to stop exporting from that area until pressure drops. Exporters who push through elevated-pressure periods risk shipments being rejected at EU ports, which triggers increased inspection frequency on all subsequent consignments from that exporter and potentially the entire origin country for that product.
The phytosanitary certificate issued by the exporting country's National Plant Protection Organisation (NPPO) must confirm that the consignment has been inspected and is free from Bactrocera dorsalis and other regulated pests. The certificate must reference the specific inspection method and state that any required treatments have been completed. EU guidelines for fresh mango export (COLEAD/COLEACP Fit for Market programme) provide detailed protocols for how NPPOs should conduct inspections and complete the certificate.
EU Import Documentation Checklist for African Fresh Mangoes
| Document | Issued By | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phytosanitary Certificate | National NPPO (e.g., DPVC in Ivory Coast) | Plant health clearance — confirms freedom from Bactrocera dorsalis and other regulated pests | Must be completed correctly — errors cause border delays or destruction |
| Commercial Invoice | Exporter | Customs value, HS code 0804 50, buyer and seller details | Match volume and weight precisely to packing list |
| Packing List | Exporter / packhouse | Carton count, weight, lot numbers, variety, size class | Carton labelling must match: variety, origin, class, size |
| Certificate of Origin | Chamber of Commerce | Confirms African origin for 0% EU import duty | Required to access zero-duty rate for ACP/EBA countries |
| MRL Test Certificate | ISO 17025-accredited laboratory | Confirms residue levels are within EU MRL limits | Required by EU retail buyers — arrange pre-shipment testing per consignment |
| Quality Certificate | Third-party inspector (optional but recommended) | Confirms Class I quality, size, and packaging standards at origin | SGS or Bureau Veritas at origin; reduces risk of quality disputes on arrival |
| Airway Bill / Bill of Lading | Freight forwarder | Shipping proof and tracking | Include lot numbers in shipping reference to link to test certificates |
Building a Reliable African Mango Supply Chain — Buyer Strategy
African mango supply relationships require earlier engagement than South American origins. West African exporters — particularly in Ivory Coast and Senegal — work with relatively small individual packhouse capacities compared to Brazilian or Peruvian mango operations. Contracted volumes fill up early in the season, and exporters prioritise established buyers with a history of fair dealing over first-time enquiries during the season peak.
The most reliable approach is to establish contact with your target West African mango suppliers in December or January — three to four months before the Ivory Coast season begins. Agree indicative volumes, price structures (typically agreed as a spread over a benchmark reference), quality specifications, and the documentation package required for your EU market. This also gives the supplier time to plan their GlobalGAP audit (which should ideally be current for the export season) and arrange pre-shipment MRL testing protocols.
For first-time buyers of African mangoes, working through a specialist West African produce importer based in the Netherlands, France, or Belgium is often the most practical entry route. These intermediaries have established exporter relationships, quality control protocols at origin, and the logistics infrastructure to handle the specific challenges of West African mango transit — including cold chain continuity from packhouse to EU airport and handling for the 5 to 8 day sea transit or 24 to 48 hour air transit windows.
Most West African mango exports to the EU currently travel by sea — typically 6 to 10 days from Abidjan or Dakar to Rotterdam or Antwerp. Sea freight is significantly cheaper than air ($0.15–$0.25/kg vs $1.50–$2.50/kg), but requires that mangoes are harvested at the correct green-mature stage to withstand transit and complete ripening on arrival. Air freight is used for premium or out-of-season consignments, or for buyers who require ripe product on delivery (food service, hospitality). Cold chain continuity — continuous refrigeration from 8–10°C from packing to delivery — is critical to shelf life for both modes. Confirm your exporter's cold room capacity and pre-cooling protocols before the first shipment.
Frequently Asked Questions
Building an African Mango Supply Chain?
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