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Fresh Leather (Car Interior)

CN β†’ US
HS Code Tariff Rate Origin Destination Doc
4114207000 36.6% CN US Official Doc
4114100000 38.2% CN US Official Doc
4104115080 13.3% CN US Official Doc
4104195080 13.3% CN US Official Doc
4107125000 12.8% CN US Official Doc

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AI Analysis

πŸ§₯ Fresh Leather (Car Interior) – The "Raw Material" vs. "Finished Part" Dilemma


🌐 HS Code Reference & Customs Clearance Guide | 2026 Latest Tariff Analysis | Strategic Clearance for Leather Goods
πŸ“Œ I. Product Definition & Classification: Do You Really Understand "Fresh Leather"?

"Fresh Leather" (often referred to as wet-blue, green hide, or unprocessed leather) in the context of "Car Interior" creates a significant classification conflict. The core question is: Is this a raw material (semi-finished) or a finished part?

  • Raw/semi-finished Leather: If the leather is wet, salted, or merely tanned but not yet dyed, finished, or cut into specific shapes, it falls under Chapter 41 (Raw Hides and Skins; Leather).
  • Finished Automotive Parts: If the leather is already cut, stitched, padded, and shaped specifically for car seats or door panels, it falls under Chapter 41 (Finished Leather) or potentially Chapter 87 (Vehicles) as parts. However, HS Code 4114 specifically covers "Leather and compositions thereof, further manufactured than chapter 41, but not made up into articles."

⚠️ Key Distinction Point:
- If "Fresh" implies wet/unprocessed β†’ It is a Raw Material (HS 410x series).
- If "Fresh" is a marketing term for high-quality, untreated, but fully tanned/finished leather β†’ It is Finished Leather (HS 4114 series).
- If it is cut to shape for a car seat β†’ It may be considered an Article (potentially higher tariff or different chapter), but our dataset focuses on the Leather-specific codes provided.


πŸ“¦ II. HS Code Classification Details (Based on Provided Data)

HS Code Product Description Application Logic Tax Burden
4114.20.70.00 Finished Leather, Other Matches 'Leather'. 'Car Interior' is a reasonable inference for use, but no lacquer/metalization mentioned. Falls under "Other" category. 36.6%
4114.10.00.00 Suede (Chamois-dried Leather) Matches 'Leather' β†’ interpreted as 'Suede' attribute. 'Car Interior' is a common use for suede. 38.2%
4104.11.50.80 Wet Blue Leather, Cowhide, Other Matches 'Fresh Leather' β†’ Interpreted as Wet-state Leather. 'Car Interior' is the use case. Falls under 'Other' bucket. 13.3%
4104.19.50.80 Other Wet Blue Leather, Cowhide, Other Matches 'Leather' + 'Fresh' (Unprocessed/Wet). 'Car Interior' is the application area. No conflict with material/primary form. 13.3%
4107.12.50.00 Decorative Leather, Cow/Horse Matches 'Leather'. 'Car Interior' = Decorative Use. Assumes Cow/Horse hide based on common sense. 12.8%

πŸ” Critical Analysis:
- The term "Fresh" is ambiguous. In customs terms, it often leans towards wet/unprocessed (HS 410x), which has much lower base tariffs (3.3%) compared to finished leather (HS 411x, base 1.6%-3.2%).
- However, US Trade Laws (Section 301 & IEEPA) drastically change the total cost.
- HS 410x codes generally have 0% Section 301 tariffs but still face IEEPA tariffs.
- HS 411x codes often attract Section 301 (25%) + IEEPA (10%) + Base Tariff.


πŸ’° III. 2026 Latest Tariff Rate Breakdown (Including Surcharges & Policy Add-ons)

βœ… Applicable Country: United States (US)
βœ… Origin: China (CN)
βœ… Effective Date: November 10, 2025 onwards

🎯 1. 4114.20.70.00 & 4114.10.00.00 – Finished/Suede Leather

Item Content
Base Tariff 1.6% (4114.20) / 3.2% (4114.10)
Section 301 Tariff (Add-on) +25.0% (USITC Footnote related to Chinese goods)
IEEPA Tariff +10.0% (Targeting Chinese imports)
Total Effective Rate 36.6% / 38.2%
De Minimis Exemption? ❌ NO (High tariff rate triggers stricter scrutiny; likely deny_de_minimis)
Legal Path USITC:4114.xxxx.xxxx β†’ Section 301: +25% β†’ IEEPA: +10%

πŸ“Œ Explanation:
These codes treat the item as finished or semi-finished leather goods. The 25% Section 301 tariff is heavily applied to finished leather products from China. Combined with the 10% IEEPA tariff, the burden is very high.

🎯 2. 4104.11.50.80 & 4104.19.50.80 – Wet/Unprocessed Leather ("Fresh")

Item Content
Base Tariff 3.3%
Section 301 Tariff (Add-on) 0.0% (Raw/Wet hides often exempt from 301 list)
IEEPA Tariff +10.0%
Total Effective Rate 13.3%
De Minimis Exemption? ❌ NO (Still subject to IEEPA restrictions)
Legal Path USITC:4104.1x.xxxxxx β†’ IEEPA: +10%

πŸ“Œ Explanation:
If you can prove the leather is "Fresh" (Wet/Wet-blue/Unprocessed), you can classify it under 4104. This avoids the 25% Section 301 tariff, reducing the total tax from ~37% to 13.3%. This is a massive cost saving.

🎯 3. 4107.12.50.00 – Decorative Finished Leather

Item Content
Base Tariff 2.8%
Section 301 Tariff (Add-on) 0.0% (Based on provided data: 0.0%)
IEEPA Tariff +10.0%
Total Effective Rate 12.8%
De Minimis Exemption? ❌ NO
Legal Path USITC:4107.12.xxxxxx β†’ IEEPA: +10%

πŸ“Œ Explanation:
If the leather is processed specifically for decorative purposes (like car interiors) and classified under 4107, it may benefit from 0% Section 301 in this specific dataset scenario, resulting in the lowest total tax (12.8%). Note: This depends heavily on the exact manufacturing stage and whether it's considered "further manufactured" under 4114 or "decorative" under 4107.


πŸ› οΈ IV. Customs Clearance Practical Advice (Real-World Pitfall Guide)

βœ… 1. Documentation Checklist (Non-negotiable)

Document Required? Notes
βœ… Commercial Invoice βœ”οΈ Must specify "Leather Type" (e.g., Wet Blue, Suede, Finished) and Processing Stage.
βœ… Product Photos βœ”οΈ Show cross-section or surface texture to distinguish between "Wet" (4104) and "Finished" (4114/4107).
βœ… Tanning Certificate βœ”οΈ Proves if leather is "Fresh" (wet) or "Finished". Critical for 4104 vs 4114 distinction.
βœ… Material Composition βœ”οΈ Specify animal origin (Cow, Horse, etc.) for 4107 classification.
βœ… Intended Use Statement βœ”οΈ "For Car Interior Decoration" supports HS 4107 or 4114.

βœ… 2. Classification Strategy (The "Fresh" Keyword Trap)

πŸ”₯ "Fresh" is a Dangerous Word!
- If you declare "Fresh Leather" as 4114.20.70.00, you pay 36.6%.
- If you declare "Fresh Leather" as 4104.11.50.80 (Wet Blue), you pay 13.3%.
- Risk: Customs may audit you if "Fresh" is interpreted as "Finished" due to lack of processing.
- Solution: Provide a Tanning Process Report. If it’s salted/wet-blue, use 4104. If it’s fully dyed/finished for decoration, use 4107.

βœ… 3. Special Circumstances

Scenario Recommendation
OEM Car Interior Kits If the leather is cut and stitched into seat covers, it may be classified as "Articles" (Chapter 42 or 87), not just leather. Check if HS 4114 is still appropriate or if it should be 4202.12 (Leather articles). Note: Our data only provides 41xx codes, so we assume "Leather Sheets/Skins".
De Minimis (Section 321) ⚠️ High Risk. With total tariffs >10%, many carriers declare deny_de_minimis. Expect duty payment at entry for shipments under $800.
Section 301 Exemption Check if your specific product code is on the Exclusion List. Currently, most finished leather is not exempt.

🌍 V. Global Market Comparison (2026)

Country/Region Recommended HS Code Tariff (China Origin) Notes
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA 4104.11.50.80 13.3% Best option if "Wet/Fresh". Avoid 4114 (36.6%).
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ China 4104.11.50.80 ~3.3% No Section 301/IEEPA applies to imports into China.
πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί EU 4104.11 ~4.7% No IEEPA tariffs. Look for CE/REACH compliance for finished leather.
πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ UK 4104.11 ~4.7% Post-Brexit rules apply. Verify UK TRVs.

πŸ“Œ Conclusion:
- USA is the most challenging market due to IEEPA (10%) and Section 301 (25%).
- Strategy: Classify as Wet Blue/Unprocessed (4104) if possible to avoid Section 301.
- Alternative: Classify as Decorative Leather (4107) if it fits the definition, to achieve the lowest rate (12.8%).


πŸ“Œ VI. Common Errors & Pitfalls (Blood Lessons)

❌ Error 1: Using "Leather" generically in the description.
πŸ‘‰ Consequence: Customs assigns a default code with 25% Section 301.
βœ… Fix: Specify "Wet Blue Cowhide" or "Finished Decorative Suede".

❌ Error 2: Assuming "Car Interior" means it's a "Part of a Car" (Chapter 87).
πŸ‘‰ Consequence: If it's just leather sheets, it stays in Chapter 41. If it's cut seats, it might be Chapter 42/87. Misclassification leads to audit penalties.
βœ… Fix: Clarify if it's "Sheets/Raw Material" or "Cut/Sewn Articles".

❌ Error 3: Ignoring the "Fresh" vs. "Finished" distinction.
πŸ‘‰ Consequence: Paying 36.6% instead of 13.3%.
βœ… Fix: Provide tanning certificates to prove the processing stage.


🎯 VII. Conclusion: Strategic Clearance for Maximum Savings

🎯 Key Takeaway:

πŸ”Ή "Fresh" β‰  "Finished".
πŸ”Ή Wet/Unprocessed (4104): 13.3% Total Tax (Lowest Risk).
πŸ”Ή Decorative (4107): 12.8% Total Tax (Best Rate, if applicable).
πŸ”Ή Finished/Suede (4114): 36.6-38.2% Total Tax (Avoid if possible).

πŸ“Œ Action Plan:
1. Audit your inventory: Are the leathers wet/unprocessed or fully finished?
2. Documentation: Prepare Tanning Certificates and Product Photos.
3. Declaration: Use precise terms like "Wet Blue Leather" or "Decorative Tanned Leather" instead of vague "Fresh Leather".
4. Consult: If the leather is cut/sewn, verify if HS 4114 is still correct or if it should be 4202 (Leather Articles).


πŸ“£ Immediate Action:

πŸ“ž Contact your customs broker with the Tanning Process Report.
πŸš€ Request Pre-classification Ruling if the volume is high.
πŸ’‘ Save up to 24% in tariffs by correctly classifying as Wet/Unprocessed or Decorative leather!


✨ Precision in Classification, Profit in Clearance!
πŸ’Ό Don't let "Fresh" cost you a fortune. Classify Right.

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.