Search all 99 chapters of the US Harmonized Tariff Schedule. Look up duty rates, tariff classifications, and CBP rulings updated daily from the US International Trade Commission.
| HTS Code | Description | General Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 9903.85.67 | Aluminum articles that are the product of Russia, or where any amount of primary aluminum used in the manufacture of the aluminum articles is smelted in Russia, or where the aluminum articles are cast in Russia, the foregoing under the terms of note 19(a)(vii)(A) to this subchapter, or note 19(m)(A) to this subchapter, as applicable per the date of entry for consumption or withdrawal from warehouse for consumption, except any exclusions that may be determined and announced by the Department of Commerce | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 200% |
| 9903.85.68 | Derivative aluminum articles that are products of Russia, or where any amount of primary aluminum used in the manufacture of the derivative articles is smelted in Russia, or where the derivative aluminum articles are cast in Russia, when such derivative articles are provided for in the headings or subheadings enumerated in note 19(a)(iii) to this subchapter, or notes 19(i), 19(j) or 19(k) to this subchapter, as applicable per the date of entry for consumption or withdrawal from warehouse for consumption, except any exclusions that may be determined and announced by the Department of Commerce | The duty provided in the applicable subheading + 200% |
The Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) is the United States' classification system for all imported goods. Maintained by the US International Trade Commission (USITC), it assigns a 10-digit code to every product entering US commerce. The first six digits follow the international Harmonized System (HS) used by 200+ countries, while digits 7-8 are US-specific subheadings and digits 9-10 are statistical suffixes.
Each HTS code determines the duty rate an importer must pay, any applicable trade program eligibility (such as USMCA or GSP), and whether special tariffs like Section 301 or Section 232 duties apply. Customs brokers, importers, and compliance professionals use HTS codes on every entry summary filed with US Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
HTS classification rulings issued by CBP provide binding guidance on how specific products should be classified. The General Rules of Interpretation (GRI) establish the legal framework for determining the correct heading when a product could fall under multiple codes.
Get alerted when duty rates change, new CBP rulings are issued, or Federal Register rules affect your HTS codes.
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