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ChinaFurniture2026 Rates

US Tariff on Furniture from China 2026

Furniture from China faces a 25% Section 301 tariff (List 3) added on top of the standard MFN duty (0% for most wood furniture, up to 7% for metal). The combined effective rate for a typical wood dining table (HTS 9403.60) is approximately 25–26%. Additionally, antidumping duty orders on wooden bedroom furniture (HTS 9403.50 / 9403.90) from China can add 10–216% on top.

Key figures at a glance
Product
Furniture
Origin country
China
Typical buyer
Furniture importers, e-commerce sellers, interior designers
HTS hint
HTS 9401 (seating), 9402 (medical furniture), 9403 (other furniture), 9404 (mattress supports)
HTS classification & lookup

Applicable HTS range: HTS 9401 (seating), 9402 (medical furniture), 9403 (other furniture), 9404 (mattress supports)

Enter your product's 10-digit HTS code to check whether an antidumping or countervailing duty order applies in addition to the Section 301 rate. ADD rates are exporter-specific.

Source: USITC Harmonized Tariff Schedule, 2026 Revision 2 — hts.usitc.gov

Compliance risk notes
  • 1Wooden bedroom furniture from China has been under an antidumping duty order since 2005 — rates are exporter-specific and range from 0% (separate rate companies) to 216.01% (all others rate).
  • 2Composite wood products (MDF, particleboard) also face formaldehyde emission standards under TSCA Title VI — a compliance requirement separate from customs duties.
  • 3Section 301 (25%) applies broadly to HTS Chapter 94 from China. Verify whether any current exclusions cover your specific HTS subheading via USTR.
  • 4Country-of-origin marking (country name on product) is required for furniture under 19 CFR 134.
  • 5De minimis elimination for Chinese-origin goods removes the $800 threshold for direct-to-consumer furniture shipments.
FAQ: What is the tariff on furniture imported from China?

Is upholstered furniture from China subject to the same 25% tariff as wood furniture?

Yes. Upholstered seating classified under HTS 9401.61 (stuffed) or 9401.69 from China faces the same 25% Section 301 List 3 rate. If the frame is wood, confirm your HTS subheading carefully — the classification depends on the primary material and function.

If I assemble furniture in Vietnam using Chinese components, can I avoid the Section 301 tariff?

Only if the assembly constitutes a substantial transformation that changes the country of origin to Vietnam. CBP uses a tariff-shift or economic test. Merely cutting to size or drilling holes in Vietnam generally does not qualify. Seek a binding ruling if your assembly process is complex.

What documentation do I need to import furniture from China?

Commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, and CBP Form 3461 (entry/immediate delivery). For wood furniture, you may also need a lacey Act declaration (Plant and Plant Product Declaration) and TSCA Title VI certification if composite wood panels are present.

Calculate your exact landed cost

This page provides a research overview. For a precise tariff breakdown — including Section 301, Section 232, antidumping, and Merchandise Processing Fee — use the full calculator with your exact HTS code and shipment value.

Disclaimer: Informational estimates based on USITC HTS data, USTR Section 301 schedules, and public CBP ADD/CVD records as of 2026. Not legal or customs brokerage advice.

Verify all rates with a licensed customs broker before making import decisions.