Crochet Cargo Pants
CN β US| HS Code | Tariff Rate | Origin | Destination | Doc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6109908030 | 33.5% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 6111205000 | 32.4% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 6111301000 | 45.7% | CN | US | Official Doc |
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AI Analysis
Here is the comprehensive trade compliance guide for Crochet Cargo Pants, structured in a professional Wiki format with actionable clearance strategies.
π Crochet Cargo Pants (ι©ηΌε·₯θ£ θ£€) | Global HS Code & Tax Compliance Guide
π 2026 Trade Compliance & Duty Strategy | Expert Clearance for Textile Imports
π One Product, Three Classification Scenarios: Understanding why "Cargo Pants" can trigger vastly different tax rates based on Material and Target Demographic.
π¦ I. Product Definition & Critical Classification Logic
Crochet Cargo Pants are a specialized textile item characterized by: 1. Manufacturing Method: Knitted via Crochet (Hand-made or Machine Crochet), distinct from "Knitted" (Weft/Knitted) or "Woven". 2. Style: Cargo pockets indicate a specific utility design, but the material and wearer define the HS Code. 3. Target Market: The classification splits sharply between General Adult Use (not in this dataset) vs. Infant/Baby Use.
β οΈ The "Baby" Trap: In the provided dataset, all three HS Codes are designated for Infants/Babies. If your "Cargo Pants" are for adults, these codes do not apply, and you would likely fall under Chapter 61 (Knitted) or 62 (Woven) adult categories.
If these are Baby Crochet Cargo Pants, the tax liability depends entirely on the fiber content (Cotton vs. Synthetic vs. Non-Wool Blends).
π II. HS Code Classification Matrix (Data-Driven Analysis)
Based strictly on the provided dataset, here is how the Crochet Cargo Pants are categorized by material composition:
| HS Code | Target User | Material Inference | Manufacturing | Total Duty Rate | Key Tax Components |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6109.90.80.30 |
πΌ Infant / Girl | Non-Wool (Inferred) | Crochet | 33.5% | Base (16%) + Add-on (7.5%) + 122 (10%) |
6111.20.50.00 |
πΌ Infant | Cotton (Inferred) | Crochet | 32.4% | Base (14.9%) + Add-on (7.5%) + 122 (10%) |
6111.30.10.00 |
πΌ Infant | Synthetic or Cotton | Crochet | 45.7% | Base (28.2%) + Add-on (7.5%) + 122 (10%) |
π Deep Dive into Classification Logic
1. 6109.90.80.30 β The "Non-Wool" General Infant Category
- Why this code? The summary indicates the pants are for Babies/Girls, shaped for infants, and explicitly excludes wool.
- Material Note: If your crochet pants are made of acrylic, polyester blends (non-cotton), or rayon, this is likely the correct fallback if not "Synthetic" under 6111.30.
- Tax Impact: 33.5% (Base 16.0% + 7.5% + 10%).
2. 6111.20.50.00 β The "Cotton" Specialist (Best Rate?)
- Why this code? This is the specific subheading for Cotton infant garments.
- Critical Detail: The summary explicitly states: "Material inferred as Cotton."
- Tax Impact: 32.4% (Base 14.9% + 7.5% + 10%).
- Strategy: If your product is 100% Cotton Crochet, this is often the most favorable classification among the three (lowest base rate).
3. 6111.30.10.00 β The "High-Tax" Synthetic Category
- Why this code? This covers Synthetic Fiber infant garments (e.g., Polyester, Nylon, Acrylic). The summary notes "Synthetic or Cotton" as a possibility, but the 28.2% Base Tax confirms this is the Synthetic bucket.
- Tax Impact: 45.7% (Base 28.2% + 7.5% + 10%).
- Warning: If you label synthetic cargo pants as "Cotton" to get the 32.4% rate, you risk severe penalties for misdeclaration.
π° III. 2026 Tariff Breakdown & Policy Details
β Origin: China (CN)
β Destination: United States (US)
β Applicable Policy: Section 301 / 122 / Additional Duties
π― Tax Structure Analysis (All 3 Codes)
All three classifications share the same Add-on Structure: 1. Base Tariff (MFN): Varies by material (14.9% for Cotton, 16.0% for Non-Wool, 28.2% for Synthetic). 2. Add-on Tariff (Section 301): +7.5% (Standard "Additional Duty"). 3. 122 Clause Tariff: +10% (Specific retaliatory tariff applicable to Chinese textiles).
π£ Scenario A: Cotton Crochet Cargo Pants (6111.20.50.00)
- Calculation: 14.9% (Base) + 7.5% (Add-on) + 10% (122 Clause) = 32.4%
- Total Duty Cost: If the CIF value is $1,000, you pay $324 in duties alone.
π£ Scenario B: Non-Wool Crochet Cargo Pants (6109.90.80.30)
- Calculation: 16.0% (Base) + 7.5% (Add-on) + 10% (122 Clause) = 33.5%
- Total Duty Cost: $335 per $1,000.
π£ Scenario C: Synthetic Crochet Cargo Pants (6111.30.10.00)
- Calculation: 28.2% (Base) + 7.5% (Add-on) + 10% (122 Clause) = 45.7%
- Total Duty Cost: $457 per $1,000.
- πΈ Risk: Synthetic material carries a 42% higher total tax burden than Cotton in this dataset.
π Key Legal Path:
Base Tariff+Section 301 (7.5%)+Retaliatory 122 (10%)= Cumulative Liability. Note: No de minimis exemptions are available for these textile categories under current policies.
π οΈ IV. Clearance Strategy & Actionable Advice
β 1. Material Verification (The Most Critical Step)
- Action: Do not guess the material.
- Requirement: Submit a Laboratory Test Report (e.g., ASTM D629 or ISO standards) confirming the fiber composition.
- Strategy:
- If 100% Cotton β Declare under
6111.20.50.00(Save 3% vs. Non-Wool, 13% vs. Synthetic). - If Synthetic Blend β Declare under
6111.30.10.00. Do not attempt to "Cotton-ify" the declaration.
- If 100% Cotton β Declare under
β 2. "Infant" Status Proof
- Action: All three codes in the dataset are for Infants.
- Requirement:
- Size tag must reflect infant sizing (e.g., 0-6M, 9M, 12M).
- Product description must explicitly state "Baby/Toddler".
- Warning: If these are "Cargo Pants" for Adults or Teens, these codes are invalid. You must find the Adult Chapter 61/62 code, or face rejection.
β 3. Documentation Checklist for US Customs (CBP)
| Document | Requirement | Why? |
|---|---|---|
| Fiber Content Label | Must match the declared HS Code (e.g., "100% Cotton") | Prevents "Material Mismatch" audits. |
| Care Label | Must show "Infant" sizing | Validates the 6111 vs 6109 distinction. |
| Composition Test Report | From an accredited third-party lab | Proof of "Cotton" vs "Synthetic". |
| Bill of Lading | Must specify "Crochet" method | Differentiates from "Knitted" (6109) or "Woven" (6209). |
| Country of Origin | China (CN) | Triggers the 122 Clause and 301 duties. |
β 4. Cost Optimization Tips
- Switch to Cotton: If your design allows, moving from Synthetic to Cotton reduces the base tax by 13.3% (28.2% β 14.9%).
- Avoid "Wool" Claims: If the product contains wool, it may fall into a different, potentially higher tax bracket not listed here. The dataset explicitly excludes wool for
6109.90.80.30. - Volume Discounting: No standard duty reduction exists for textiles under these clauses, but accurate declaration avoids 10%+ penalty fees.
π« V. Common Pitfalls & "Red Flags"
β Pitfall 1: The "Adult" Mismatch
* Scenario: Shipping adult-sized cargo pants under 6111 (Infant codes).
* Consequence: Shipment Rejection + Seizure of goods + $1,000+ fine per entry.
* Fix: Check size tags immediately. Adult = Chapter 62 (Woven) or different 61 code.
β Pitfall 2: "Crochet" vs. "Knitted" Confusion
* Scenario: Declaring as "Knitted" (6109) but the product is clearly Crochet (hand-knotted loops).
* Consequence: CBP may reject the description as inaccurate, leading to delays.
* Fix: Use the term "Crochet" in the commercial invoice and product description to match the 6111/6109 descriptions provided.
β Pitfall 3: Material Ambiguity * Scenario: Labeling a "Synthetic Blend" as "Cotton" to get the lower 32.4% rate. * Consequence: Customs Audit β Back-taxes of $457 vs $324 per shipment + Penalties. * Fix: Always test the fabric composition.
π― VI. Final Verdict & Professional Summary
π The "Golden Rule" for Crochet Cargo Pants: "Material is King, Age is Queen." 1. Confirm Age: Must be Infant to use the provided codes (
6111/6109). 2. Confirm Material: * Cotton =6111.20.50.00(Lowest Tax: 32.4%) π * Non-Wool/Other =6109.90.80.30(Medium Tax: 33.5%) * Synthetic =6111.30.10.00(Highest Tax: 45.7%) π¨
Clearance Strategy:
Submit 3rd-party lab reports proving fiber content. If Cotton, declare
6111.20.50.00. If Synthetic, declare6111.30.10.00. Do not misclassify to save taxes; the 13.3% difference is not worth the audit risk.
β¨ Need a Pre-Entry Consultation?
Contact your Customs Broker with: 1. Fabric Sample (for lab testing) 2. Size Tag Photos (proving "Infant" status) 3. Crochet Construction Diagram
Ensure your goods clear the US port without detention! π’β¨
Customer Reviews
About HS Code Classification
The Harmonized System (HS) is an internationally standardized nomenclature developed by the World Customs Organization (WCO) to classify traded products. Over 200 countries use the HS system as the basis for customs tariffs, trade statistics, and import/export regulations.
Each HS code follows a hierarchical structure:
- Chapter (2 digits) β Broad category of goods (e.g., Chapter 84: Machinery and Mechanical Appliances)
- Heading (4 digits) β More specific grouping within the chapter
- Subheading (6 digits) β Internationally standardized breakdown, used by all WCO member countries
- National subdivisions (8-10 digits) β Country-specific extensions for further classification, such as US HTSUS 10-digit codes
Correct HS code classification is essential for smooth customs clearance, accurate duty payment, and compliance with trade regulations. Misclassification can lead to customs delays, overpayment of duties, or penalties.
When importing from CN to US, the applicable tariff rates may include:
- Most-Favored-Nation (MFN) rate β The standard duty rate applied to WTO members
- General rate β Applied to countries without trade agreements
- Trade remedy duties β Additional tariffs such as Section 301 (anti-dumping), Section 232 (national security), or countervailing duties
The information provided on this page is for reference purposes only. For official classification, please consult with your local customs authority or a licensed customs broker.