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.
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.
Furniture, bedding, lamps, and prefabricated buildings.
Bulky freight plus tariffs can change landed cost quickly.
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.
规划用途提示:TariffsChart 不是报关行、律师事务所、税务顾问或政府机构。归类、税率、生效日期、排除项和申报指引都应通过官方来源和合格专业人士复核。
常见问题
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.