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The Tariff Classification Calculator helps importers, customs brokers, and trade compliance professionals determine the correct Harmonized System (HS) code and corresponding Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS) classification for goods entering a country's customs territory. Tariff classification is the foundational step in international trade compliance: the assigned code determines the duty rate, whether the product is eligible for preferential trade agreements, whether it is subject to antidumping or countervailing duties, whether it requires special licenses or permits, and whether it faces quotas or embargoes. The Harmonized System is maintained by the World Customs Organization (WCO) and used by more than 200 countries and territories. It classifies all traded goods into approximately 5,000 commodity groups organized in a hierarchical structure: 21 Sections, 99 Chapters (2-digit), Headings (4-digit), and Subheadings (6-digit). The first six digits are internationally harmonized, meaning that HS 8471.30 refers to the same category of goods (laptop computers) in every WCO member country. Beyond six digits, each country adds its own statistical suffixes: the United States uses a 10-digit HTS code, the EU uses an 8-digit Combined Nomenclature (CN) code, and other countries have their own extensions. Classification is governed by the six General Rules of Interpretation (GRI), which provide a systematic methodology for assigning codes. GRI 1 states that classification is determined by the terms of the headings and section or chapter notes. When GRI 1 is insufficient, the remaining rules address incomplete or unfinished articles (GRI 2a), mixtures and composite goods (GRI 2b and GRI 3), goods classifiable under two or more headings (GRI 3a through 3c), cases and containers (GRI 5), and classification within subheadings (GRI 6). Mastering these rules is essential for accurate classification. Incorrect classification can result in overpayment or underpayment of duties, penalties from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) of up to four times the unpaid duties under 19 U.S.C. Section 1592, seizure of goods, denial of preferential duty rates, and criminal prosecution in cases of willful misclassification. The calculator guides users through a structured decision tree based on the GRI rules, suggests candidate HTS codes, and flags common classification pitfalls for the product category.
Duty Amount = Customs Value (Transaction Value per WTO Valuation Agreement) x Ad Valorem Duty Rate (from HTS Column 1 General). Example: An importer brings in 1,000 units of stainless steel cookware (HTS 7323.93.00) valued at $5.00 per unit (FOB). Customs value = 1,000 x $5.00 = $5,000. The Column 1 General duty rate for 7323.93.00 is 2.0% ad valorem. Duty = $5,000 x 0.02 = $100.00. If the cookware originates in China and is subject to Section 301 additional duties of 25%, total duty = $100 + ($5,000 x 0.25) = $100 + $1,250 = $1,350.
- 1The user describes the product to be classified, including its material composition, function, method of manufacture, and end use. The calculator uses a structured questionnaire rather than free-text input to ensure that classification-relevant attributes are captured. For example, for a textile product, the questionnaire asks about fiber composition (cotton, polyester, silk, blend), construction method (woven, knitted, nonwoven), weight per square meter, and whether the article is a garment, household textile, or industrial fabric.
- 2The calculator applies GRI 1 by searching the Section and Chapter Notes and the heading terms for the most specific description matching the product. Section Notes and Chapter Notes are legally binding and take precedence over heading text. For example, Chapter Note 1 to Chapter 64 (footwear) excludes disposable foot coverings of flimsy material, which must instead be classified in Chapter 39 (plastics) or Chapter 40 (rubber). The calculator's database includes all Section Notes, Chapter Notes, and Subheading Notes from the current HTS edition.
- 3If the product cannot be classified by GRI 1 alone, the calculator walks through subsequent rules. GRI 2a extends headings to cover incomplete or unfinished articles that have the essential character of the finished product. GRI 2b extends material-specific headings to mixtures and combinations. GRI 3 resolves conflicts when goods are prima facie classifiable under two or more headings: GRI 3a chooses the most specific description, GRI 3b applies the essential character test (by weight, value, or role), and GRI 3c defaults to the heading that occurs last in numerical order.
- 4The calculator presents a shortlist of candidate HTS codes (typically 2 to 5) ranked by confidence, displaying for each: the full 10-digit HTS code, the official tariff description at each level (Chapter, Heading, Subheading, Statistical Suffix), the Column 1 General duty rate, the Column 1 Special rate (for goods qualifying under free trade agreements such as USMCA, CAFTA-DR, or the Generalized System of Preferences), and any additional duties (Section 201, 232, or 301).
- 5For each candidate code, the calculator shows relevant CBP Customs Rulings (binding classification decisions published in the Customs Rulings Online Search System, or CROSS). These rulings provide legal precedent for how CBP has classified similar merchandise. A ruling classifying a product substantially similar to the user's product carries significant weight, although only a binding ruling obtained by the specific importer for the specific product is legally binding on CBP.
- 6The user selects the appropriate code and the calculator computes the estimated duty based on the declared customs value. The duty computation includes the standard ad valorem rate, any specific or compound rates (per unit or per kilogram plus a percentage), any additional Section 201/232/301 duties, and any applicable preferential rates if the goods qualify under a free trade agreement. The calculator also flags whether the product requires any special permits (FDA, FCC, CPSC, EPA, USDA) based on the HTS chapter.
- 7An optional advanced module allows the user to request a prospective ruling from CBP. The calculator generates a draft ruling request letter in the format specified by 19 CFR Part 177, including the product description, material composition, manufacturing process, photographs, and the importer's proposed classification with supporting rationale. A binding ruling from CBP eliminates classification uncertainty and protects the importer from penalties for reliance on the ruling.
GRI 1 directs classification by function. The principal function is sound reproduction (loudspeaker), not wireless communication (which would fall under Chapter 85.17). The Bluetooth receiver is ancillary to the speaker function. Chapter 85, Note 3 states that machines with multiple functions are classified by principal function. The 4.9% duty applies to most-favored-nation origins. If subject to Section 301 China duties, an additional 7.5% to 25% may apply depending on the specific List.
GRI 1 applies directly. Chapter 73 covers articles of iron or steel. Heading 7323 covers table, kitchen, or household articles. Subheading 7323.93 specifies stainless steel. The vacuum insulation does not change the classification because the essential character remains a stainless steel household article. An alternative candidate, 9617.00 (vacuum flasks), applies only to flasks with glass inners, per the Explanatory Notes. Steel-walled bottles are excluded from 9617.
Textile classification depends critically on fiber composition. Chapter Note 2 to Section XI states that products of mixed fibers are classified by the fiber that predominates by weight. At 60% cotton, this T-shirt is classified as cotton (Chapter 61, Subheading 6109.10) rather than as synthetic fiber (6109.90). Bangladesh is a Generalized System of Preferences beneficiary, but textile articles are generally excluded from GSP. The 16.5% duty rate applies.
This is a GRI 3 classification problem because the appliance performs multiple functions classifiable under different headings (8516.60 for ovens, 8516.79 for other electrothermic appliances). GRI 3a selects the most specific description. Since the product is fundamentally an oven (enclosed heating chamber) with additional features, 8516.60 is most specific. CBP Ruling HQ H301245 classified a similar multi-function appliance under 8516.60, establishing precedent.
Every commercial import into any WCO member country requires tariff classification. In the United States alone, CBP processes over 33 million import entries per year, each requiring at least one HTS code. Licensed customs brokers spend a significant portion of their work on classification, particularly for novel products, composite goods, and merchandise that straddles heading boundaries. The calculator streamlines this process by automating the GRI analysis and surfacing relevant rulings.
Trade compliance departments at multinational corporations maintain classification databases for thousands of SKUs across dozens of importing countries. A single misclassification can cascade across hundreds of shipments, resulting in duty underpayments, CBP audits (Focused Assessment or Compliance Assessment), and penalties under 19 USC 1592 that can reach four times the lost revenue for negligent violations and the domestic value of the merchandise for fraud. The calculator serves as a first-pass classification tool and documentation aid for compliance programs.
Free trade agreement utilization depends entirely on correct tariff classification. USMCA, for example, determines origin based on tariff shift rules: a product qualifies as originating only if the non-originating materials undergo a specified change in tariff classification during manufacturing. If the finished product is misclassified, the tariff shift analysis may yield an incorrect origin determination, causing either lost preferential treatment (paying duties unnecessarily) or false claims of preference (risking penalties and loss of preferential treatment privileges).
E-commerce sellers importing goods from overseas suppliers (particularly from China via platforms like Alibaba) often misclassify products, sometimes intentionally to avoid duties and sometimes out of ignorance. CBP has increased enforcement of e-commerce imports, including lowering the de minimis threshold scrutiny and targeting commonly misclassified product categories. The calculator helps small importers achieve correct classification without the expense of a customs broker for every shipment, though professional consultation is recommended for high-value or high-risk products.
Products shipped in sets for retail sale (e.g., a gift basket containing food,
Products shipped in sets for retail sale (e.g., a gift basket containing food, wine, a candle, and a mug) must be classified under GRI 3b by the component that gives the set its essential character. If no single component predominates, GRI 3c applies and the set is classified under the heading that occurs last in numerical order among the competing headings. Sets are one of the most frequently disputed classification issues, and CBP rulings on sets are highly fact-specific. Importers of retail sets should consider obtaining a binding ruling before the first shipment.
Parts and accessories present complex classification challenges.
General Note 2 to the HTS provides that parts of goods described in a heading are classified in that heading unless the part is specifically provided for elsewhere. For example, a replacement screen for a laptop (8471) might seem to belong in 8471 as a laptop part, but LCD display panels are specifically provided for in heading 9013. The rule of specific provision (GRI 1) overrides the general parts rule. Always check whether the part has its own dedicated heading before classifying it as a part of the finished product.
Goods imported from countries subject to US sanctions (Cuba, North Korea, Iran,
Goods imported from countries subject to US sanctions (Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Syria, Russia under certain conditions) face Column 2 duty rates, which are substantially higher than Column 1 rates and in many cases prohibitive (e.g., 45% versus 2% for the same product). Additionally, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) may prohibit importation entirely regardless of the tariff classification. The calculator flags products originating in sanctioned countries and warns users to consult OFAC's Specially Designated Nationals list and country-specific sanctions programs before proceeding with the import.
| Product Category | HTS Chapter | Typical Duty Rate (Col. 1 General) | Section 301 Additional (China Origin) | Common Regulatory Agency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electronics (computers, phones) | 84-85 | 0-5% | 0-25% | FCC |
| Apparel (woven) | 61-62 | 10-32% | 7.5-25% | CPSC (flammability) |
| Footwear | 64 | 6-48% | 7.5-25% | CPSC |
| Furniture | 94 | 0-5% | 25% | CPSC, EPA (if wood) |
| Toys and games | 95 | 0-6.8% | 7.5-25% | CPSC |
| Food and beverages | 01-24 | 0-35% (varies widely) | 0-25% | FDA, USDA, TTB |
| Cosmetics and personal care | 33 | 0-6.5% | 7.5-25% | FDA |
| Steel and aluminum articles | 72-76 | 0-12% | 25% (Section 232) | None typically |
What is the difference between an HS code and an HTS code?
The HS (Harmonized System) code is a 6-digit international classification maintained by the World Customs Organization and used by over 200 countries. The HTS (Harmonized Tariff Schedule) is the US-specific 10-digit extension of the HS. The first 6 digits are identical worldwide (e.g., 8471.30 = laptop computers everywhere). Digits 7-8 are US-specific rate lines that determine the duty rate, and digits 9-10 are statistical suffixes for Census Bureau trade data.
Who is responsible for correct classification?
Under US law, the importer of record is ultimately responsible for the correct classification of imported goods, even if a customs broker prepares the entry. This is established under 19 USC 1484 (entry of merchandise) and 19 USC 1592 (penalties for fraud, gross negligence, or negligence in classification). Customs brokers act as agents of the importer but do not assume legal liability for classification decisions unless they act negligently.
What are Section 301 tariffs?
Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 authorizes the US Trade Representative to impose duties on goods from countries that engage in unfair trade practices. Since 2018, the US has imposed Section 301 additional duties on Chinese-origin goods in four Lists, covering approximately $370 billion in annual imports at rates of 7.5% to 25%. In 2024-2025, rates on certain categories (EVs, batteries, semiconductors, solar cells, steel, aluminum, medical products) increased to 25-100%. These duties are added on top of the normal Column 1 General rate.
How do I get a binding ruling from CBP?
Submit a ruling request to CBP's National Commodity Specialist Division under 19 CFR Part 177. The request must include a complete product description, material composition, manufacturing process, photographs or samples, and your proposed classification with legal justification. CBP typically responds within 90 days. A binding ruling is legally enforceable: CBP must apply the ruling's classification to your entries, and you are protected from penalties if you follow it in good faith.
What is the essential character test under GRI 3b?
When goods cannot be classified by GRI 3a (most specific description), GRI 3b classifies composite goods or sets by the component that gives the article its essential character. Essential character can be determined by the nature of the material, its bulk, quantity, weight, value, or the role of the constituent material in relation to the use of the goods. For example, a pencil case containing pencils, an eraser, and a ruler is classified by the case (essential character) because the case is what makes it a set for retail sale.
Do I need a customs broker to classify goods?
A customs broker is not legally required, but is strongly recommended for complex classifications, high-value shipments, and products subject to additional duties or regulatory requirements. Importers may self-file entries using CBP's Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) system. However, classification errors are the single most common cause of CBP penalties, and the cost of a broker (typically $150-$400 per entry) is far less than the cost of a penalty, which can range from the duty shortfall to four times the lost revenue.
How often does the HTS change?
The WCO updates the international HS nomenclature every five years (most recently in 2022, with the next revision in 2027). The US International Trade Commission publishes HTS revisions annually, effective January 1, incorporating WCO changes, presidential proclamations, and legislative modifications. Interim modifications can occur at any time through executive action (such as Section 301 duty changes) or ITC determinations. Always use the HTS version in effect on the date of importation.
Pro Tip
Before importing any product, search the CBP Customs Rulings Online Search System (CROSS) at rulings.cbp.gov for rulings on similar products. Even non-binding rulings on comparable merchandise reveal how CBP thinks about classification in your product category. A 10-minute CROSS search can prevent a classification error that costs thousands of dollars in penalties. Search by product description, HTS heading, or keywords.
Did you know?
The Harmonized System contains some surprisingly specific classification codes. HS 0106.19.01 covers live primates (other than those for research). HS 9705.00 covers collections of zoological, botanical, mineralogical, or anatomical interest. And the longest-running tariff dispute in US history involved the classification of X-Men action figures: Marvel successfully argued that the X-Men were not human and therefore classifiable as toys (duty 6.8%) rather than dolls representing human beings (duty 12%). The Court of International Trade agreed in Toy Biz v. United States (2003).