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The Anti-Dumping Duty Calculator computes the additional AD (anti-dumping) and CVD (countervailing duty) rates imposed on imports that are sold in the United States at less than fair value or benefit from foreign government subsidies. These trade remedy duties are layered on top of normal customs duties and can range from 0% to over 500%, effectively blocking imports from countries and producers subject to the orders. The U.S. currently maintains approximately 500 active anti-dumping and countervailing duty orders covering products from over 40 countries. Anti-dumping duties address price discrimination: when a foreign producer sells goods in the U.S. market at prices below what it charges in its home market (or below its cost of production), the price differential constitutes the 'dumping margin' and the AD duty is set to offset this margin. Countervailing duties address government subsidies: when a foreign government provides subsidies (tax breaks, below-market financing, land grants, or direct payments) that benefit exporters, the CVD rate is set to offset the subsidy amount. Both types of duties are authorized under WTO agreements and U.S. law (Title VII of the Tariff Act of 1930). The investigation and determination process involves two agencies: the U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC) investigates and determines the dumping margin or subsidy rate, while the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) determines whether the domestic industry has been materially injured or threatened with material injury by the dumped or subsidized imports. Both affirmative determinations are required for an AD/CVD order to be issued. Investigations are initiated by petition from the domestic industry and typically take 12-18 months from initiation to final order. AD/CVD rates are specific to individual foreign producers. Investigated companies receive individual rates based on their actual pricing and cost data. Companies not individually investigated receive an 'all others' rate (typically a weighted average of individual rates). Companies from non-market economies (primarily China) that do not cooperate with the investigation receive the 'China-wide rate,' which is typically based on adverse facts available and can exceed 200%. These rates are reviewed annually through administrative reviews, which can significantly change the rates based on updated pricing and subsidy data.
Total Duty = Normal Customs Duty + (Customs Value x AD Rate%) + (Customs Value x CVD Rate%). Dumping Margin = (Normal Value - Export Price) / Export Price x 100%. Example: Chinese steel wire rod at $800/ton, Normal Value (home market price) $1,200/ton: Dumping Margin = ($1,200 - $800) / $800 = 50%. If CVD rate is 35% and base duty is 0%: Total Duty per ton = $0 + ($800 x 50%) + ($800 x 35%) = $400 + $280 = $680/ton, an effective rate of 85%.
- 1Check whether your product is subject to an active anti-dumping or countervailing duty order by searching the Commerce Department's AD/CVD case database (enforcement.trade.gov/frn/). The database is searchable by product, country, and case number. Also check CBP's AD/CVD module in ACE, which provides the current deposit rates for each order. Products are defined by specific scope language in the order, which may not align perfectly with HTS codes. Reading the scope language carefully is critical because products at the edges of the scope may or may not be covered.
- 2Determine the applicable AD and/or CVD deposit rate for your specific foreign producer or exporter. Rates vary significantly by company: investigated companies may have individual rates ranging from 0% to over 100%, while the all-others rate applies to companies not individually examined. For Chinese products, the China-wide rate (applied to non-cooperative and unidentified companies) frequently exceeds 200%. Check whether your supplier has received an individual rate in the most recent administrative review or the original investigation. Deposit rates are published in Federal Register notices and updated annually.
- 3Calculate the AD/CVD duty deposit at the time of importation. Unlike regular customs duties that are assessed and collected at a fixed rate, AD/CVD duties operate on a retrospective assessment system. At the time of import, the importer deposits estimated duties based on the current deposit rate. These deposits are later adjusted (up or down) after the Commerce Department conducts an annual administrative review and determines the actual dumping margin or subsidy rate for the review period. The liquidation of AD/CVD entries can take 2-4 years after importation.
- 4Understand the cash deposit and bonding requirements. AD/CVD duty deposits must be paid in cash or by continuous bond at the time of entry. Unlike regular duties where a continuous bond covers most obligations, AD/CVD deposits often require additional bonding capacity. The bond amount is based on the deposit rate times the expected annual import value. For high-rate orders (100%+ AD/CVD), the bonding requirement can be prohibitively expensive, effectively blocking imports even before the duty is formally assessed.
- 5Monitor annual administrative reviews and rate changes. Commerce conducts administrative reviews upon request, typically covering a 12-month period of review (POR). Any interested party (domestic industry or foreign exporter) can request a review. The review examines actual sales data during the POR and calculates updated dumping margins and subsidy rates. New rates from completed reviews become the deposit rates for future entries. Reviews frequently result in significant rate changes: a company with a 25% deposit rate might receive a 5% assessed rate or a 75% assessed rate depending on actual pricing behavior during the review period.
- 6Evaluate whether a scope ruling or circumvention inquiry affects your product. Commerce issues scope rulings to determine whether a particular product falls within the scope of an existing AD/CVD order. If your product is similar to but not identical to the products described in the order scope, you may need a scope ruling for clarity. Separately, Commerce can find circumvention when imports of subject merchandise are slightly modified, shipped through third countries, or assembled in the U.S. or third countries from subject components. A circumvention finding extends the AD/CVD order to cover the circumventing imports.
- 7Calculate the total duty burden by summing the base customs duty, any Section 301 or 232 tariffs, the AD rate, and the CVD rate. Each rate is applied independently to the customs value (entered value for AD/CVD purposes). A Chinese steel product could face: base duty (0-6.5%) + Section 232 (25%) + Section 301 (25%) + AD (50-265%) + CVD (35-256%). Combined rates exceeding 300% are not uncommon, making import economically impossible and effectively excluding the product from the U.S. market.
Chinese cold-rolled steel faces one of the most extreme combined duty rates in the U.S. tariff schedule. The individual AD rate of 265.79% and CVD rate of 256.44% reflect Commerce findings of massive dumping and substantial government subsidies. Combined with Section 232, the effective rate exceeds 547%, meaning the duty is over 5x the value of the steel. This makes Chinese steel imports into the U.S. economically impossible.
This Vietnamese shrimp exporter received a favorable individual AD rate of 4.58% based on its actual sales data during the most recent administrative review. No CVD order exists. At 4.58%, the AD duty adds a modest cost that the exporter can partially absorb through competitive pricing. However, the Vietnam-wide rate for non-reviewed companies is significantly higher, demonstrating the importance of participating in administrative reviews.
Indian welded steel pipe faces moderate AD/CVD rates because cooperating Indian producers demonstrated relatively competitive pricing and limited subsidies. The Section 232 tariff is actually the largest single duty component. Some Indian producers have received even lower rates through active participation in administrative reviews and by maintaining accurate records of home market sales and cost data.
U.S. steel producers and their trade associations (including the American Iron and Steel Institute) use AD/CVD analysis as a primary competitive strategy. The domestic steel industry has filed more AD/CVD petitions than any other sector, with over 150 active orders covering steel products from dozens of countries. These orders, combined with Section 232 tariffs, have effectively blocked low-priced steel imports from China, India, South Korea, and other countries, allowing domestic producers to maintain pricing power and market share.
Importers and customs brokers must calculate AD/CVD deposits on every entry of subject merchandise, making these calculations a daily operational requirement. The complexity arises from company-specific rates, annual rate changes through administrative reviews, scope determinations that may include or exclude specific product variations, and the retrospective assessment system that creates long-tail financial exposure. Sophisticated importers use trade compliance software to automatically flag AD/CVD products and apply the correct rates.
International trade law firms represent both domestic petitioners seeking AD/CVD protection and foreign respondents defending against investigations. A single AD/CVD case can involve millions of dollars in legal fees across all parties: petitioning the Commerce Department and ITC ($500,000-$2,000,000 for domestic industry), responding to questionnaires and defending pricing practices ($300,000-$1,000,000 per foreign respondent), and pursuing or defending administrative reviews ($100,000-$300,000 per annual review). The economic stakes justify these costs: a successful petition can redirect hundreds of millions in trade flows.
Foreign government trade ministries monitor AD/CVD actions against their exporters as a trade policy priority. China, India, Vietnam, and South Korea are among the most frequently targeted countries for U.S. AD/CVD actions. Governments sometimes provide legal assistance to their exporters through government-funded defense programs, and they challenge U.S. AD/CVD practices through WTO dispute settlement. Several WTO panels have found aspects of U.S. AD/CVD methodology to be inconsistent with WTO agreements, particularly the use of 'zeroing' in dumping margin calculations and the surrogate country methodology for non-market economy cases.
Non-market economy (NME) methodology applies primarily to China and Vietnam.
Under NME rules, Commerce does not use the producers actual costs or home market prices because it presumes government distortion of costs. Instead, Commerce constructs a normal value using surrogate country data: the costs of materials, labor, and energy in a comparable market-economy country (such as Thailand for Chinese cases or Bangladesh for Vietnamese cases) are used to calculate what the product would cost if produced in a market economy. This methodology frequently produces higher dumping margins than the market-economy methodology because the surrogate values may not reflect the actual efficiency of the investigated producer.
The retrospective assessment system creates unique financial risks for importers.
Unlike the EU, which uses a prospective system where the duty rate is fixed at the time of import, the U.S. system estimates duties at import and finalizes them 2-4 years later through administrative review. This means an importer who deposited duties at a 10% rate could owe an additional 50% (or receive a refund) years after the goods were imported and sold. Importers must maintain financial reserves for potential duty increases on all open entries. Some importers have faced unexpected duty demands of millions of dollars when administrative reviews produced substantially higher rates than the deposit rate.
Evasion of AD/CVD orders is a federal enforcement priority.
The Enforce and Protect Act (EAPA) of 2015 gave CBP new authority to investigate and act against AD/CVD evasion. CBP can impose interim measures (suspension of liquidation and cash deposit requirements) within 90 days of initiating an EAPA investigation. Common evasion schemes include: misrepresentation of country of origin, transshipment through third countries, misclassification of products to avoid scope coverage, and undervaluation of entered goods to reduce the duty base. Penalties for evasion include seizure, civil penalties up to 4x the unpaid duties, and criminal prosecution with imprisonment up to 20 years.
| Product | Country | AD Rate Range | CVD Rate Range | Order Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cold-Rolled Steel | China | 265.79% | 256.44% | 2016 |
| Solar Cells/Modules | China | 31-250% | 11-15% | 2012/2018 |
| Wooden Bedroom Furniture | China | 0-216% | N/A | 2004 |
| Shrimp (frozen) | Vietnam | 0-25.76% | N/A | 2004 |
| Steel Wire Rod | China | 106.19-110.25% | 6.09-178.46% | 2014 |
| Carbon Steel Pipe | India | 6.64-24.96% | 5.98% | 2012 |
| Aluminum Extrusions | China | 32.79-374.15% | 6.94-374.15% | 2011 |
What is the difference between anti-dumping duties and countervailing duties?
Anti-dumping duties offset price discrimination: they apply when a foreign producer sells goods in the U.S. at prices below what it charges in its home market or below its cost of production. Countervailing duties offset government subsidies: they apply when a foreign government provides financial benefits to producers or exporters that distort trade. A product can be subject to both AD and CVD orders simultaneously. The rates are calculated independently and stacked additively.
How long do AD/CVD orders last?
AD/CVD orders remain in effect indefinitely until revoked through a sunset review. Sunset reviews occur every five years, where the ITC determines whether revocation would likely lead to a recurrence of material injury. If so, the order is continued for another five years. Many AD/CVD orders have been in effect for decades: the Chinese wooden bedroom furniture order has been active since 2004, and some steel orders date back to the 1990s. The domestic industry has a strong incentive to argue for continuation, and most sunset reviews result in order continuation.
What is the China-wide rate and why is it so high?
Commerce designates China as a non-market economy (NME), meaning it presumes all Chinese producers are controlled by the state unless they demonstrate independence. Companies that do not cooperate with the investigation or fail to demonstrate independence from the Chinese government receive the China-wide rate, which is typically based on 'adverse facts available' (AFA) and set at the highest rate found in the investigation. China-wide rates frequently exceed 200% and serve both as a penalty for non-cooperation and as a deterrent against attempts to evade orders through unexamined Chinese producers.
Can AD/CVD duties be avoided through transshipment?
No. Transshipping goods through a third country to disguise the true country of origin is illegal and aggressively prosecuted. Commerce can extend AD/CVD orders through circumvention findings to cover: slightly modified products, products assembled in third countries from subject components, and products assembled in the U.S. from subject components. CBP uses entry data analytics, foreign government intelligence, and on-site investigations to detect transshipment. Penalties include seizure, civil fines, and criminal prosecution.
How do I know if my product is within the scope of an AD/CVD order?
Each AD/CVD order contains specific scope language defining the covered merchandise by physical characteristics, composition, dimensions, and end use. This language is published in the Federal Register notice that establishes the order. If your product is clearly described in the scope, it is covered. If there is ambiguity, you can request a scope ruling from Commerce, which will determine whether your specific product falls within the order's scope. Importing a product that is within scope without paying AD/CVD duties is a serious violation.
Uzman İpucu
If you import products from countries frequently targeted by AD/CVD investigations (China, India, Vietnam, South Korea), proactively monitor new petition filings at the ITC and Commerce Department. Petitions are public documents that identify the specific products and countries targeted. Early awareness gives you 3-6 months to source alternatives, adjust pricing, or stockpile inventory before preliminary duties take effect. Subscribe to CBP and Commerce AD/CVD alert systems for real-time notification of new investigations and rate changes.
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The largest anti-dumping duty rate ever imposed by the United States was 763.98% on Chinese uncovered innerspring units (mattress springs) in 2009, based on adverse facts available against non-cooperating Chinese producers. This rate means that for every dollar of mattress springs imported, the importer would owe $7.64 in anti-dumping duty alone, before any other tariffs. Not surprisingly, Chinese mattress spring imports effectively ceased following this determination.