PlainTariff

Browse HTS Tariff Lines

Explore all 13,855 US Harmonized Tariff Schedule tariff lines

HTS Number Description Rate
9804.00.80 Articles (including not over 50 cigars, or 300 cigarettes, or 2 kilograms of smoking tobacco or a proportionate amount of each, and not over 1 liter of alcoholic beverages), reasonable and appropriate, and intended exclusively, for the bona fide personal use of, and (except for articles consumed in use) to be taken out of the United States by, any person arriving in the United States who is leaving a vessel, vehicle or aircraft, engaged in international traffic, on which he is employed, with the intention of resuming such employment 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
9805.00.50 The personal and household effects (with such limitation on the importation of alcoholic beverages and tobacco products as the Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe) of any person in the service of the United States who returns to the United States upon the termination of assignment to extended duty (as defined in regulations issued in connection with this provision) at a post or station outside the customs territory of the United States, or of returning members of his family who have resided with him at such post or station, or of any person evacuated to the United States under Government orders or instructions Free
9806.00.05 Upon the request of the Department of State, ambassadors, ministers, charge d'affaires, secretaries, counselors, attaches and other representatives, officers and employees of foreign governments, accredited to the United States or en route to or from other countries to which accredited, and their immediate families, suites and servants Free
9806.00.10 Upon the request of the Department of State, diplomatic couriers of foreign governments Free
9806.00.15 Upon the request of the Department of State, representatives of foreign governments in or to, and officers and employees of, organizations designated by the President of the United States as public international organizations pursuant to section 1 of the International Organizations Immunities Act (22 U.S.C. 288), and their immediate families, suites and servants 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
9806.00.25 Upon the request of the Department of State, persons designated by the Department of State as high officials of foreign governments or distinguished foreign visitors and their immediate families Free
9806.00.30 Upon the request of the Department of State, persons designated pursuant to statute or pursuant to treaties ratified by the United States Senate Free
9806.00.35 Upon the request of the Department of State, personal effects and equipment of groups or delegations of foreign residents arriving in the United States on goodwill visits of short duration to participate in patriotic celebrations, festivals and other demonstrations of public interest and which will be exported or destroyed at the conclusion of the visit Free
9806.00.40 Upon the request of the Department of State, ambassadors, ministers, charge d'affaires, secretaries, counselors and attaches of foreign embassies and legations Free
9806.00.45 Members of the armed forces of any foreign country Free
9806.00.50 Upon the request of the Department of State, other representatives, officers and employees of foreign governments Free
9806.00.55 Upon the request of the Department of State, persons designated pursuant to statute or pursuant to treaties ratified by the United States Senate Free
9807.00.40 Articles of metal (including medals, trophies and prizes), for bestowal on persons in the United States, as honorary distinctions, by foreign countries or citizens of foreign countries Free
9807.00.50 Upon the request of the Department of State, articles from citizens of foreign countries for presentation to the President or Vice President of the United States Free
9808.00.10.00 Engravings, etchings, photographic prints, whether bound or unbound, recorded video tapes and exposed photographic films (including motion-picture films) whether or not developed; official government publications in the form of microfilm, microfiches, or similar film media Free
9808.00.20.00 Sound recordings and recorded video tapes for use by it in the program authorized by the United States Information and Educational Exchange Act of 1948 (22 U.S.C. 1431-1479) Free
9808.00.30.00 Materials certified to the Commissioner of Customs by the authorized procuring agencies to be emergency war material purchased abroad Free
9808.00.40.00 Materials certified by it to the Commissioner of Customs to be strategic and critical materials procured under the Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act (50 U.S.C. 98-98h) Free
9808.00.50.00 Materials certified by it to the Commissioner of Customs to be source materials the entry of which is necessary in the interest of the common defense and security Free
9808.00.60.00 Plants, seeds and all other material for planting Free
9808.00.70.00 Materials certified by it to the Commissioner of Customs to be strategic materials acquired by that agency as a result of barter or exchange of agricultural commodities or products Free
9808.00.80.00 Goods certified by it to the Commissioner of Customs to be imported for the use of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration or for the implementation of an international program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, including articles to be launched into space and parts thereof, ground support equipment and uniquely associated equipment for use in connection with an international program of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, including launch services agreements 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
9809.00.20 Upon the request of the Department of State, office supplies and equipment and other articles for the official use of representatives of foreign governments or of personnel of public international organizations, on duty in the United States Free
9809.00.30 Articles for the official use of members of the armed forces of any foreign country on duty in the United States Free
9809.00.40 Articles which, while in the United States, will remain the property of such government or of such organization and will be used only in connection with noncommercial functions of such government or of such organization, including exhibitions which are sponsored by or participated in by such government or such organization and which are not commercial in character or connected with commercial undertakings 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
9809.00.60 Headstones furnished by a foreign government for graves of its war veterans buried in the United States Free
9809.00.70 Articles for presentation as gifts to the United States Government, to any State or local government or to any public institution organized in the United States Free
9809.00.80 Printed matter, not containing advertising matter, for free distribution Free
9810.00.05.00 Drawings, engravings, etchings, lithographs, woodcuts, sound recordings, recorded video tapes and photographic and other prints, all the foregoing whether bound or unbound, and exposed photographic films (including motion-picture films) whether or not developed 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
9810.00.15.00 Regalia Free
9810.00.20.00 Hand-woven fabrics, to be used by the institution in making religious vestments for its own use or for sale Free
9810.00.25.00 Altars, pulpits, communion tables, baptismal fonts, shrines, mosaics, iconostases, or parts, appurtenances or adjuncts of any of the foregoing, whether to be physically joined thereto or not, and statuary (except granite or marble cemetery headstones, granite or marble grave markers and granite or marble feature memorials, and except casts of plaster of Paris, or of compositions of paper or papier-mâché) Free
9810.00.30.00 Drawings and plans, reproductions thereof, engravings, etchings, lithographs, woodcuts, globes, sound recordings, recorded video tapes and photographic and other prints, all the foregoing whether bound or unbound, and exposed photographic films (including motion-picture films) whether or not developed Free
9810.00.35.00 Letters, numbers, and other symbols; number cards and other arithmetical materials; printed matter; blocks and other dimensional shapes; geometrical figures, plane or solid; geographical globes; tuned bells and basic materials for understanding music; model articles and figures of animate objects; puzzles and games; flags; dressing frames; dummy clocks; bottles, boxes, and other containers or holders; all the foregoing, whether or not in sets, fabricated to specification and designed for the classroom instruction of children; and containers or holders fabricated to specification and designed for the storage of such instructional articles when not in use Free
9810.00.40.00 Sculptures and statuary Free
9810.00.45.00 Regalia Free
9810.00.50.00 Any textile machine or machinery or part thereof, solely for the instruction of students Free
9810.00.55.00 Patterns and models exclusively for exhibition or educational use at any such institution Free
9810.00.60.00 Instruments and apparatus, if no instrument or apparatus of equivalent scientific value for the purposes for which the instrument or apparatus is intended to be used is being manufactured in the United States (see U.S. note 6 to this subchapter) Free
9810.00.65.00 Repair components for instruments or apparatus admitted under subheading 9810.00.60 Free
9810.00.67.00 Tools specially designed to be used for the maintenance, checking, gauging or repair of instruments or apparatus admitted under subheading 9810.00.60 Free
9810.00.70.00 Wild animals (including birds and fish) imported for use, or for sale for use, in any scientific public collection for exhibition for scientific or educational purposes Free
9810.00.75.00 Lifeboats and life-saving apparatus Free
9810.00.80.00 Apparatus utilizing any radioactive substance in medical diagnosis or therapeutic treatment, including the radioactive material itself when contained in the apparatus as an integral element thereof, and parts or accessories of any of the foregoing Free
9810.00.85.00 Cellulosic plastics materials imported for use in artificial kidney machines or apparatus by a hospital or by a patient pursuant to prescription of a physician Free

How the Harmonized Tariff Schedule is organized

The Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) is the codified system U.S. Customs and Border Protection uses to assign duty rates to imported goods. It is published by the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) and updated when trade-policy actions take effect — presidential proclamations, antidumping orders, Section 301 actions, and free-trade-agreement implementations. The schedule has 22 sections, 99 chapters, and roughly 18,000 individual tariff lines. Each tariff line has a 10-digit HTS code where the first 6 digits map to the international Harmonized System (HS) maintained by the World Customs Organization, the next two digits identify the U.S. statistical heading, and the final two digits are the U.S. statistical suffix used for trade-data reporting.

Browsing tariff lines alphabetically (the letter-paged index) is one of three primary navigation paths PlainTariff offers — alongside section/chapter hierarchy and product-keyword search. Alphabetic browse is useful when the importer or researcher has a partial product name but does not know which chapter or section the product falls under. A surprising number of tariff lines are organized by common product names (apples, automobiles, batteries) rather than by industry taxonomy, so alphabetic browse often surfaces relevant lines faster than hierarchical drill-down.

Reading a tariff line page

Each tariff-line detail page shows the General (MFN) duty rate, any Special preferential rates available under free trade agreements (USMCA, GSP, CAFTA-DR, KORUS, JAPAN, etc.), and the Column 2 rate that applies to imports from non-MFN countries (currently Cuba and North Korea). Rates can be expressed as ad valorem (a percentage of customs value), specific (a dollar amount per unit of quantity), or compound (a combination of both). The detail page preserves the original rate text exactly as published by USITC and additionally extracts a numeric percentage where applicable to enable comparison and ranking.

Beyond the duty rate itself, the detail page surfaces the unit of quantity that customs uses for the line, the chapter and section it belongs to, and any additional duties that apply — antidumping (AD), countervailing (CVD), Section 201 safeguards, or Section 301 tariffs. The chapter context matters because two products with very similar descriptions can sit in different chapters with very different rates: for example, certain food products straddle the chapter boundary between agricultural commodity and prepared food, where the prepared-food chapter frequently carries 2-3x the duty rate of the raw commodity chapter.

Compliance use cases

Importers use the alphabetic browse to validate classifications a customs broker has proposed for a shipment, to find duty rates while sourcing new products, and to identify free-trade-agreement opportunities that might reduce the effective duty rate on already-imported product categories. Researchers and journalists use the browse to write about tariff incidence by product, to track which categories have been most affected by recent Section 301 actions, and to compare U.S. duty rates with rates in partner countries. Small business owners use it to estimate landed cost when evaluating whether to import directly rather than through a domestic distributor.

For binding classification determinations, always verify against the official USITC HTS site and consult a licensed customs broker. PlainTariff is an unofficial reference tool — it preserves USITC data faithfully but does not provide formal customs advice. Classification errors at the border can result in shipment delays, post-entry duty adjustments, or penalties under 19 USC 1592.

How tariff rates connect to consumer prices

Import duties feed into landed cost, which in turn feeds into wholesale and ultimately retail pricing for imported goods. The pass-through is rarely 1:1 — retailers may absorb part of the duty cost, importers may renegotiate supplier terms, and currency movements can offset or amplify the duty effect. Academic research on the 2018-2019 Section 301 tariffs found roughly 95% pass-through to U.S. wholesale prices within 6 months, with smaller and more delayed effects on retail. The implication for PlainTariff readers: an MFN duty rate increase is a real cost to importers, but the magnitude that reaches end consumers depends on competitive dynamics in the downstream supply chain.

Tariff incidence — who bears the economic cost — is technically a different question from statutory incidence (who legally pays the duty to CBP). The duty is paid by the importer of record at entry, but the economic burden can shift to exporters (via lower wholesale prices), domestic competitors (via increased market share), or consumers (via higher retail prices). Most economic studies of recent tariff actions find that the bulk of the economic incidence on consumer goods has fallen on U.S. importers and consumers rather than on foreign exporters.

Trade-program preferences worth knowing about

Beyond the standard MFN rates, several preference programs can substantially reduce or eliminate duty on qualifying imports. USMCA covers Canada and Mexico and provides duty-free treatment for goods that meet rules of origin (which can be complex — automotive, textile, and agricultural ROOs are particularly stringent). CAFTA-DR covers Central American countries and the Dominican Republic. KORUS covers Korea. JAPAN, AUSTRALIA, ISRAEL, and BAHRAIN each have bilateral FTAs with product-specific carve-outs. GSP (Generalized System of Preferences) provides duty-free entry for qualifying developing-country goods.

Each preference program has its own claim procedure — generally an importer self-certification at entry, supported by supplier documentation that the goods meet the program's rules of origin. Misclaimed preferences are a frequent source of post-entry duty assessments and penalties, so importers should consult a licensed customs broker before claiming a preference for the first time on a new product or supplier combination.