Wooden furniture from China often starts in Chapter 94, but duty planning should verify the exact article, material, use, parts versus finished goods, base rate, Section 301 exposure, possible AD/CVD scope, freight, packaging, and broker review questions.
Wooden furniture tariff from China to the US: review Chapter 94 before pricing
Review wooden furniture imports from China to the US with Chapter 94 classification, Section 301 assumptions, AD/CVD screening, landed cost, and broker questions.
Wooden furniture parts can classify differently from finished goods.
Review exact HTS and exclusion status.
Scope can be product-specific and should be checked.
What to collect before modeling
Photos, product dimensions, materials, intended use, assembly state, supplier origin evidence, HTS candidate, source URL, freight quote, and target margin all belong in the planning packet.
How to avoid a false margin
Do not stop at supplier price plus base duty. Add modeled Section 301 if applicable, freight, insurance, fees, packaging, and review risk before deciding retail or wholesale price.
Broker questions
Ask whether the product is classified as wooden furniture, a part, or another article; whether Section 301 applies; and whether AD/CVD scope should be screened.
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
Is wooden furniture always Chapter 94?
Often, but not always. Parts, materials, accessories, and special-use products can require different classification review.
Does China-origin wooden furniture need Section 301 review?
It may. Verify exact HTS coverage, Chapter 99 treatment, and exclusion status with official sources.
What should a broker packet include?
Product specs, photos, materials, origin evidence, HTS candidate, source URLs, modeled duty layers, and open questions.