Tariff Lines: P
HTS tariff lines and product descriptions beginning with “P”, with their general duty rates.
887 tariff lines starting with "P"
Showing 601–650 of 887
| HTS Number | Description | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 9021.90.40 | Parts and accessories for hearing aids and for pacemakers for stimulating heart muscles | Free |
| 9024.90.00 | Parts and accessories | Free |
| 9025.19.40.00 | Pyrometers | Free |
| 9025.90.06.00 | Parts and accessories | Free |
| 9027.90.45.00 | Printed circuit assemblies for the goods of subheading 9027.81 or 9027.89 | Free |
| 9028.90.00 | Parts and accessories | Free |
| 9030.90.25.00 | Printed circuit assemblies | Free |
| 9031.49.10.00 | Profile projectors | Free |
| 9106.90.20.00 | Parking meters | 36¢ each + 5.6% + 2¢/jewel |
| 9112.90.00.00 | Parts | 5.5% |
| 9202.10.00.00 | Played with a bow | 3.2% |
| 9205.90.15.00 | Piano accordions | Free |
| 9303.90.40.00 | Pistols and revolvers designed to fire only blank cartridges or blank ammunition | 4.2% |
| 9504.40.00.00 | Playing cards | Free |
| 9506.11.60.00 | Parts and accessories | Free |
| 9506.21.80.00 | Parts and accessories | Free |
| 9506.51.60.00 | Parts and accessories | 3.1% |
| 9507.30.80.00 | Parts and accessories | 5.4% |
| 9603.40.20.00 | Paint rollers | 7.5% |
| 9607.20.00 | Parts | 11.5% |
| 9608.91.00.00 | Pen nibs and nib points | Free |
| 9608.99.40.00 | Parts of articles provided for in subheadings 9608.10 and 9608.30 (other than balls for ball point pens) | Free |
| 9609.10.00.00 | Pencils and crayons, with leads encased in a sheath | 14¢/gross + 4.3% |
| 9613.10.00.00 | Pocket lighters, gas fueled, non-refillable | 4% |
| 9613.20.00.00 | Pocket lighters, gas fueled, refillable | 9% |
| 9614.00.26.00 | Pipes and bowls wholly of clay and pipes with bowls wholly of clay | 3% |
| 9616.20.00.00 | Powder puffs and pads for the application of cosmetics or toilet preparations | 4.3% |
| 9617.00.60.00 | Parts | 7.2% |
| 9701.21.00.00 | Paintings, drawings, and pastels | Free |
| 9701.91.00.00 | Paintings, drawings, and pastels | Free |
| 9704.00.00.00 | Postage or revenue stamps, stamp-postmarks, first-day covers, postal stationery (stamped paper) and the like, used or unused, other than those of heading 4907 | Free |
| 9801.00.10 | Products of the United States when returned after having been exported, or any other products when returned within 3 years after having been exported, without having been advanced in value or improved in condition by any process of manufacture or other means while abroad | Free |
| 9801.00.85.00 | Professional books, implements, instruments, and tools of trade, occupation, or employment, when returned to the United States after having been exported for use temporarily abroad, if imported by or for the account of the person who exported such items | Free |
| 9802.00.20.00 | Photographic films and dry plates manufactured in the United States (except motion-picture films to be used for commercial purposes) and exposed abroad, whether developed or not | Free |
| 9804.00.10 | Professional books, implements, instruments and tools of trade, occupation or employment, which have been taken abroad by him or for his account | Free |
| 9804.00.15 | Professional books, implements, instruments and tools of trade, occupation or employment (not including theatrical scenery, properties or apparel, and not including articles for use in any manufacturing establishment, for any other person or for sale), owned and used by him abroad | Free |
| 9804.00.85 | Personal and household effects, not stock in trade, the title to which at the time of importation is in the estate of a citizen of the United States who died abroad | Free |
| 9806.00.20 | Persons on duty in the United States as members of the armed forces of any foreign country and their immediate families | Free |
| 9808.00.60.00 | Plants, seeds and all other material for planting | Free |
| 9809.00.10 | Public documents, whether or not in the form of microfilm, microfiches, or similar film media (including exposed and developed motion picture and other films, recorded video tapes and sound recordings) issued essentially at the instance and expense of a foreign government, of a political subdivision of a foreign country or of an international organization the membership of which includes two or more foreign countries | Free |
| 9809.00.50 | Prosthetic appliances furnished by a foreign government to former members of its armed forces who reside in the United States | Free |
| 9809.00.80 | Printed matter, not containing advertising matter, for free distribution | Free |
| 9810.00.10.00 | Painted, colored or stained glass windows and parts thereof, all the foregoing valued over $161 per square meter and designed by, and produced by or under the direction of, a professional artist | Free |
| 9810.00.55.00 | Patterns and models exclusively for exhibition or educational use at any such institution | Free |
| 9810.00.90.00 | Prayer shawls, bags for the keeping of prayer shawls and headwear of a kind used for public or private religious observances, whether or not any of the foregoing is imported for the use of a religious institution | Free |
| 9813.00.50 | Professional equipment, tools of trade, repair components for equipment or tools admitted under this heading and camping equipment; all the foregoing imported by or for nonresidents sojourning temporarily in the United Statesand for the use of such nonresidents | Free, under bond, as prescribed in U.S. note 1 to this subchapter |
| 9815.00.20.00 | Products of American fisheries (including fish, shellfish and other marine animals, spermaceti and marine animal oils), which have not been landed in a foreign country, or which, if so landed, have been landed solely for transshipment without change in condition | Free |
| 9815.00.60.00 | Products of American fisheries, prepared or preserved by an American fishery on the treaty coasts of Labrador, Magdalen Islands and Newfoundland, as such coasts are defined in the convention of 1818 between the United States and Great Britain | Free |
| 9817.00.48.00 | Patterns and wall charts; globes; mock-ups or visualizations of abstract concepts such as molecular structures or mathematical formulae; materials for programmed instruction; and kits containing printed materials and audio materials or any combination of two or more of the foregoing | Free |
| 9817.00.60.00 | Parts to be used in articles provided for in headings 8432, 8433, 8434 and 8436, whether or not such parts are principally used as parts of such articles and whether or not covered by a specific provision within the meaning of additional U.S. rule of interpretation 1(c) | Free |
About this letter-paged tariff browse
Tariff lines starting with the letter P span multiple HTS chapters and sections, because the Harmonized Tariff Schedule classifies products by common product name rather than by industry sector at the description level. Products beginning with this letter may appear across animal-product chapters, mineral-product chapters, prepared-food chapters, machinery chapters, and so on — wherever the USITC's plain-language description for the tariff line happens to start with P. The pagination above moves through every line whose description starts with this letter, in chapter order by default.
For each tariff line you can click through to the detail page to see the full General (MFN) duty rate, any Special preferential rates available under free trade agreements (USMCA, GSP, CAFTA-DR, KORUS, JAPAN), and the Column 2 rate that applies to imports from non-MFN countries. Rates can be expressed as ad valorem (a percentage of customs value), specific (a dollar amount per unit of quantity), or compound. The detail page preserves the original USITC rate text exactly as published and additionally extracts a numeric percentage for search and ranking where applicable.
How alphabetic browse complements hierarchical browse
The HTS has two primary navigation modes: hierarchical (sections → chapters → headings → subheadings → tariff lines) and alphabetic (by description). Hierarchical browse is the formal structure customs brokers use because classification rules require working through chapter notes and General Rules of Interpretation. But alphabetic browse is often faster for importers who know the common name of a product but not which chapter it belongs to. For example, "almonds" appears in Chapter 8 (edible fruit) while "almond oil" appears in Chapter 15 (animal/vegetable fats) and "almond paste" appears in Chapter 20 (prepared fruit) — three different duty regimes for related products. Alphabetic browse surfaces all three faster than chapter drill-down.
For binding tariff classifications, always verify the line and rate against the official USITC HTS site and consult a licensed customs broker. PlainTariff is an unofficial reference maintained to make USITC data more browsable; it is not a substitute for formal customs advice.
Why duty rates vary so widely
MFN duty rates on the schedule range from 0% (free) on roughly 5,979 tariff lines to north of 100% on a small number of textile and tobacco classifications. The variation reflects decades of accumulated trade policy: GATT/WTO rounds of reciprocal tariff reductions, sector-specific protection retained for textiles, footwear, and certain agricultural commodities, and special programs that eliminated duties for products with strategic-supply or development-policy rationale. Within a single chapter, individual subheadings can carry rates from 0% to 30%+ depending on the specific product description — which is why classification accuracy matters so much for importers.
Free trade agreements layer on top of the MFN schedule and can override the General rate for imports from FTA partners. USMCA (Canada, Mexico) eliminates duties on most tariff lines for qualifying originating goods; CAFTA-DR, KORUS, JAPAN, AUSTRALIA, ISRAEL, and other bilaterals each have their own product-level carve-outs and rules of origin. The Special rate column on each detail page identifies which FTAs apply to that line. Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) and African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) provide unilateral preferences for eligible developing-country imports.
Additional duties beyond the MFN rate
The Column 1 General rate is not always the final duty an importer pays. Section 201 safeguards, Section 232 national-security tariffs (steel, aluminum), and Section 301 actions (China-origin goods) can add 10-100 percentage points to the effective rate. Antidumping and countervailing duties imposed by the Department of Commerce on specific product/country combinations can add hundreds of percentage points. None of these supplemental duties appear in the General rate column — importers need to cross-reference the country of origin and the product-specific orders in effect at time of entry to compute the actual landed duty cost.
PlainTariff currently surfaces the General, Special, and Column 2 rates as published in the USITC HTS 2026 Basic Edition. Section 301, AD/CVD, and other supplemental duty data is not integrated; for those, importers should consult Customs Rulings Online Search System (CROSS) and the active Federal Register notices, or work with a licensed customs broker.