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Furniture tariffs: estimate duty before your next PO

Furniture tariff guide for importers and sellers: Chapter 94 lookup, origin review, Section 301, AD/CVD, and landed-cost estimates.

Source-first answer

Furniture imports usually start with Chapter 94 classification, but landed cost can also depend on origin, materials, Section 301 for China-origin goods, AD/CVD risk, freight, packaging, and broker fees. The safest workflow is HTS lookup first, then additional-duty review.

Common chapter
94

Furniture, bedding, lamps, and prefabricated buildings.

Seller risk
Margin compression

Bulky freight plus tariffs can change landed cost quickly.

Review layer
Origin-specific

China-origin goods often need Section 301 review.

What to classify first

Furniture classification can depend on material, use, whether it is a part, and whether the item is upholstered, wooden, metal, or plastic. A generic “chair” query is not enough for filing.

Why furniture sellers should model landed cost

Furniture has high freight sensitivity. Even a moderate duty increase can force a price change if ocean freight, storage, returns, or marketplace fees are already tight.

Planning-only notice: TariffsChart is not a customs broker, law firm, tax advisor, or government authority. Verify classifications, rates, effective dates, exclusions, and filing instructions with official sources and qualified professionals.

FAQ

What HS chapter is furniture?

Many furniture items are in Chapter 94, but parts, materials, and specialized products can classify differently.

Are furniture tariffs different for China?

China-origin furniture may require Section 301 review in addition to the base HTS rate.

Can I use a generic furniture rate?

Not safely. Use product-specific HTS classification and origin review before relying on a landed-cost estimate.