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The Section 301 Tariff Calculator computes the additional duties imposed on Chinese imports under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, which authorizes the United States Trade Representative (USTR) to take retaliatory action against foreign trade practices deemed unfair or discriminatory. The Section 301 tariffs on China, initiated in July 2018, represent the largest unilateral tariff action in modern U.S. trade history, covering approximately $370 billion worth of Chinese imports across four distinct product lists with rates of 7.5% to 25% layered on top of existing MFN duty rates. The investigation that led to these tariffs was initiated in August 2017 by USTR Robert Lighthizer, focusing on Chinese policies regarding technology transfer, intellectual property theft, and innovation. The resulting report documented systemic practices including forced technology transfer as a condition of market access, cyber-enabled theft of trade secrets, discriminatory licensing restrictions, and state-directed acquisition of U.S. technology companies. The tariff escalation unfolded in four waves: List 1 ($34 billion, 25%, July 2018), List 2 ($16 billion, 25%, August 2018), List 3 ($200 billion, initially 10%, raised to 25% in May 2019), and List 4 (approximately $120 billion, split into 4A at 7.5% and 4B which was suspended). The Section 301 tariffs are administered through Chapter 99 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule, with specific subheadings (9903.88.01 through 9903.88.67) assigned to each list. Importers must identify whether their product appears on any of the four lists by cross-referencing the 8-digit HTS code against the published Federal Register notices. A product can appear on only one list, and the applicable Section 301 rate is added to (not substituted for) the base Column 1 General duty rate. As of 2025, most Section 301 tariffs remain in force despite the Phase One trade deal signed in January 2020. The Biden administration conducted a statutory four-year review in 2024 and maintained the tariffs while increasing rates on specific sectors including electric vehicles (100%), semiconductors (50%), solar cells (50%), and certain critical minerals. Product exclusions, which at their peak covered approximately $75 billion in trade, have largely expired, with only limited renewals for specific products lacking non-Chinese sourcing alternatives.
Total Duty = (Customs Value x Base MFN Rate%) + (Customs Value x Section 301 Rate%). For a $100,000 shipment of List 1 products (HTS 8471.30 - laptops) with 0% base rate and 25% Section 301 rate: Total Duty = ($100,000 x 0%) + ($100,000 x 25%) = $0 + $25,000 = $25,000. For a List 4A product (HTS 6110.30 - synthetic sweaters) with 32% base rate and 7.5% Section 301 rate: Total Duty = ($100,000 x 32%) + ($100,000 x 7.5%) = $32,000 + $7,500 = $39,500.
- 1Determine whether the product is of Chinese origin. Section 301 tariffs apply only to articles that are products of China (including Hong Kong for some purposes). The country of origin is determined by the substantial transformation test: the country where the last substantial transformation occurred that resulted in a new and different article of commerce with a new name, character, or use. Simply transshipping through a third country (like Vietnam or Malaysia) without substantial transformation constitutes illegal transshipment and can result in severe penalties including seizure and criminal prosecution.
- 2Identify the correct 8-digit HTS classification for the product. The Section 301 lists are defined by 8-digit HTS subheadings, and products are covered or excluded at this level of specificity. A product classified under HTS 8471.30.01 (portable computers) may be on a different list or excluded entirely compared to HTS 8471.49.00 (other digital processing units). Accurate classification is critical because the difference between covered and non-covered subheadings within the same HTS chapter can mean a 25% duty differential. Use the USTR Section 301 search tool or the HTS Chapter 99 subheading cross-reference tables.
- 3Cross-reference the HTS code against the four Section 301 lists to determine which list (if any) covers the product. List 1 (subheadings 9903.88.01-02) covers approximately 818 tariff lines at 25%, primarily industrial machinery, electronics, and aerospace components. List 2 (subheadings 9903.88.03-04) covers approximately 279 lines at 25%, including semiconductors and plastics. List 3 (subheadings 9903.88.15 and related) covers approximately 5,745 lines at 25%, the broadest list including consumer goods, furniture, and auto parts. List 4A (subheading 9903.88.15) covers approximately 3,805 lines at 7.5%, including apparel, footwear, and consumer electronics.
- 4Check whether any product-specific exclusions apply. USTR has granted and renewed exclusions for specific products within covered HTS subheadings when the product is not available from non-Chinese sources, when the tariff causes severe economic harm to the requesting party, or when the product is of strategic importance. Exclusions are published in the Federal Register and tracked by HTS code and specific product description. Most exclusions granted during 2018-2020 have expired, but some have been renewed, particularly for medical supplies, rare earth elements, and certain industrial inputs. An active exclusion reduces the Section 301 rate to 0% for the specific product described.
- 5Calculate the combined duty by adding the Section 301 rate to the base MFN rate. These rates stack additively. A product with a 3.4% base MFN rate on List 1 faces a total duty rate of 28.4% (3.4% + 25%). A product with a 12% base rate on List 4A faces 19.5% (12% + 7.5%). Additionally, check whether Section 232 tariffs (steel: 25%, aluminum: 10%) also apply, as a Chinese steel product could face base MFN rate + Section 232 + Section 301 + potential anti-dumping duties, with combined rates exceeding 300% in extreme cases.
- 6Apply the total duty rate to the customs value and add MPF and HMF. The customs value for Section 301 purposes is the same declared value used for base duty calculation. File the Section 301 duty using the Chapter 99 HTS subheading on the entry summary (CBP Form 7501), in addition to the standard product HTS code. Both codes appear on the entry: the product classification code determines the base duty, and the Chapter 99 code triggers the additional Section 301 duty. Payment is due on the same timeline as regular duties.
- 7Evaluate strategies to legally reduce or eliminate the Section 301 tariff burden. Options include: applying for product-specific exclusions (when available), restructuring supply chains to source from non-Chinese origins, establishing manufacturing in a Foreign Trade Zone to defer duties, qualifying goods under a first sale valuation to reduce the customs value, using tariff engineering to modify the product into a non-covered HTS classification, or importing components separately and performing final assembly domestically. Each strategy has specific legal requirements and cost-benefit trade-offs that should be evaluated with qualified trade counsel.
PCB assemblies have a 0% base MFN rate under the WTO Information Technology Agreement, but List 1 Section 301 tariffs add 25%. The entire $62,500 duty burden is attributable to Section 301. Many electronics companies have responded by shifting PCB assembly to Vietnam, Thailand, or Taiwan, though some high-complexity boards remain sourced from China due to specialized manufacturing capabilities.
Chinese wooden bedroom furniture faces triple jeopardy: zero base rate, 25% Section 301, and anti-dumping duties that can exceed 200% for non-cooperating exporters. The combined effective rate of 241% makes direct import from China economically impossible for most products in this category, which is precisely the intended effect of the AD/CVD orders that have been in place since 2004.
Bluetooth headphones on List 4A face the lower 7.5% rate that resulted from the Phase One trade deal de-escalation in February 2020, which halved the originally proposed 15% rate on List 4A products. At $11,250 on a $150,000 shipment, the duty is significant but manageable for most importers without requiring supply chain restructuring.
The Biden administration increased Section 301 tariffs on EV battery cells from 7.5% to 25% in 2024, with further increases to 25% taking effect in 2025. Combined with the 3.4% base rate, the total 28.4% effective rate significantly impacts the economics of Chinese battery imports and incentivizes domestic battery production aligned with the Inflation Reduction Act objectives.
Importers of Chinese goods use the Section 301 calculator daily to determine the total duty on every shipment, as the additional 7.5-25% tariff fundamentally changed the economics of China-sourced supply chains. A mid-size importer bringing in $10 million annually in Chinese goods at a 25% Section 301 rate faces $2.5 million in additional annual duties that did not exist before 2018. This calculation drives decisions about inventory levels (pre-buying before rate increases), supplier negotiations (requesting price concessions from Chinese manufacturers), and ultimately whether to maintain Chinese sourcing or shift to alternatives.
Corporate legal and compliance teams use Section 301 analysis to evaluate the risk and feasibility of supply chain restructuring strategies. When a company considers moving production from China to Vietnam or India, the compliance team must verify that the new manufacturing constitutes genuine substantial transformation, not merely minimal processing or transshipment that CBP would challenge. The calculator helps quantify the annual savings that justify the investment in supply chain restructuring, typically requiring savings of $1-5 million annually to justify the operational disruption and capital costs of a sourcing shift.
Customs brokers and trade compliance consultants use Section 301 tools to advise clients on product exclusion applications, tariff engineering opportunities, and FTZ strategies. When the USTR opens exclusion request windows, brokers help clients prepare detailed applications documenting the unavailability of non-Chinese sources, the severe economic harm caused by the tariff, and the strategic importance of continued access to the product. Successful exclusion applications can save companies millions in annual duties.
Government trade policy analysts at the USTR, Commerce Department, and Congressional Budget Office use Section 301 tariff data to estimate revenue collections, assess trade balance impacts, and model the economic effects of tariff modifications. The Section 301 tariffs generate approximately $30-40 billion in annual customs revenue, making them one of the largest single revenue sources within the customs system. Policy modelers analyze whether this revenue justifies the estimated $50-80 billion in annual consumer cost and evaluate proposals to expand, reduce, or restructure the tariff program.
De minimis shipments valued under $800 have been a major area of policy debate regarding Section 301 tariffs.
While the general de minimis exemption waives customs duties on shipments valued at $800 or less, there is ongoing legal and legislative debate about whether Section 301 tariffs apply to de minimis shipments. CBP has taken the position that de minimis exemption covers Section 301 duties for most products, which has enabled Chinese e-commerce platforms like Shein and Temu to ship millions of packages directly to U.S. consumers at prices that avoid the 25% surcharge. Legislation introduced in 2024-2025 (the SHIP Act and others) would eliminate the de minimis exemption for goods from non-market economy countries, potentially subjecting these shipments to Section 301 tariffs.
Products that undergo substantial transformation in a third country before
Products that undergo substantial transformation in a third country before importation into the United States are not subject to Section 301 tariffs because their country of origin is the third country, not China. However, CBP applies rigorous standards to determine whether genuine substantial transformation has occurred. Simply packaging, labeling, inspecting, testing, or performing minor assembly does not constitute substantial transformation. The transformation must result in a new and different article of commerce with a new name, character, or use. CBP has issued numerous rulings finding that operations such as programming firmware onto Chinese-manufactured circuit boards, or cutting and sewing Chinese fabric in Vietnam, may or may not constitute substantial transformation depending on the specific facts.
Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) treatment of Section 301 tariffs follows specific rules.
Goods admitted to an FTZ in privileged foreign status maintain their original tariff classification and Section 301 liability when they enter U.S. commerce. However, goods admitted in zone-restricted status or goods manufactured in the FTZ from Section 301 components may elect the finished product classification, which could have a different (or no) Section 301 exposure. This FTZ election strategy is particularly valuable for manufacturers who import Chinese components subject to 25% Section 301 tariffs but produce finished goods that are not on any Section 301 list.
| List | Effective Date | Rate | Tariff Lines | Trade Value | Key Product Categories |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| List 1 | July 6, 2018 | 25% | 818 | $34 billion | Industrial machinery, aerospace, tech |
| List 2 | August 23, 2018 | 25% | 279 | $16 billion | Semiconductors, plastics, chemicals |
| List 3 | Sep 2018 / May 2019 | 25% | 5,745 | $200 billion | Furniture, auto parts, building materials |
| List 4A | February 14, 2020 | 7.5% | 3,805 | ~$120 billion | Consumer electronics, apparel, toys |
| List 4B | Suspended | 0% | ~1,600 | ~$160 billion | Phones, laptops (never implemented) |
| 2024 Increases | 2024-2025 | 25-100% | Various | Various | EVs (100%), semiconductors (50%), solar (50%) |
Which products are on which Section 301 list?
List 1 (25% rate, effective July 2018) covers approximately 818 tariff lines worth $34 billion, primarily industrial machinery, aerospace, and technology products. List 2 (25%, August 2018) covers 279 lines worth $16 billion, including semiconductors, plastics, and chemicals. List 3 (25%, September 2018/May 2019) is the largest, covering 5,745 lines worth $200 billion including furniture, auto parts, and building materials. List 4A (7.5%, February 2020) covers 3,805 lines worth approximately $120 billion including consumer electronics, apparel, and toys.
Are Section 301 tariffs permanent?
Section 301 tariffs are subject to a statutory four-year review process. The USTR conducted the first review in 2022-2024 and decided to maintain and in some cases increase the tariffs. The tariffs will remain in effect until they are modified or terminated by the USTR through another review or by action of a future administration. There is no automatic sunset date. The Phase One trade agreement did not include tariff removal provisions, and subsequent administrations have maintained the tariffs as leverage in ongoing trade negotiations.
Can I get a refund for Section 301 tariffs I already paid?
Refunds are available in limited circumstances. If a retroactive product exclusion is granted that covers the period of your importation, you can file a post-summary correction or protest to recover the Section 301 duties paid. Some importers have filed suit in the U.S. Court of International Trade challenging the legality of the List 3 and List 4A tariff escalations, and if these cases succeed, affected importers could seek refunds. However, the legal challenges have faced mixed results and the timeline for resolution extends years.
How do I check if my product has an active Section 301 exclusion?
Active exclusions are published in the Federal Register and tracked on the USTR website. Each exclusion specifies the particular product by HTS subheading and a detailed product description. Search the USTR Section 301 exclusions page or the Federal Register for notices matching your HTS code. Note that exclusions are product-specific, not company-specific, so any importer can claim an active exclusion that matches their product. Verify the effective dates carefully, as most exclusions have expired.
Does Section 301 apply to goods from Taiwan, Hong Kong, or Macau?
Section 301 tariffs apply to products of China. Taiwan has its own separate country code and is not covered by Section 301 tariffs. Hong Kong and Macau present more complex questions. Following changes to Hong Kong trade policy in 2020, products of Hong Kong are treated the same as products of China for export control purposes, but for Section 301 tariff purposes, the treatment depends on the specific origin determination. Products substantially transformed in Hong Kong versus merely transshipped through Hong Kong are treated differently.
What happens if the Section 301 tariff makes my product economically unviable?
Several legal strategies exist. First, apply for a product-specific exclusion when USTR opens a request window. Second, explore tariff engineering by modifying the product to shift to a non-covered HTS classification. Third, investigate whether a Foreign Trade Zone can provide duty deferral or inverted tariff benefits. Fourth, evaluate nearshoring to Mexico (duty-free under USMCA) or other non-China origins. Fifth, consider first sale valuation to reduce the customs value. Sixth, assess whether the product qualifies for duty drawback if it will be incorporated into exports.
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Before paying Section 301 tariffs, always verify your HTS classification at the 8-digit level against the official USTR list publications. Products within the same 6-digit heading can be split between covered and non-covered subheadings at the 8-digit level. Investing in a detailed classification review (or requesting a CBP binding ruling) can reveal that your product falls in a non-covered subheading, saving 25% on every future shipment.
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Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 was used so aggressively by the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations in the 1980s against Japan, the EU, and other trading partners that it was nicknamed the 'nuclear weapon' of U.S. trade policy. The creation of the WTO dispute settlement system in 1995 was partly intended to provide a multilateral alternative to unilateral Section 301 actions. Ironically, the 2018 Section 301 tariffs on China represented the largest-ever use of this statute, eclipsing all previous Section 301 actions combined.