Processing...

Thinking...

AI is analyzing your product

60s

Man Made Fiber Blend Plastic/Rubber Gloves

CN β†’ US
HS Code Tariff Rate Origin Destination Doc
6116107520 23.2% CN US Official Doc
4015191110 38.0% CN US Official Doc
4015195100 49.0% CN US Official Doc
6216002600 24.5% CN US Official Doc
4015191150 38.0% CN US Official Doc

Product Images

AI Analysis

πŸ›‘οΈ Man Made Fiber Blend Plastic/Rubber Gloves – HS Code & Tariff Guide (2026 Update)


🌐 HS Code Classification & Customs Clearance Strategy | 2026 Tariff Breakdown | Expert-Level Compliance Guide


πŸ“Œ 1. Product Definition & Classification: What Exactly Are These Gloves?

These are protective gloves made from a composite material: - Primary Material: Man-Made Fibers (e.g., polyester, nylon)
- Coating/Impregnation: Plastic or Rubber (e.g., PVC, latex, nitrile, rubber coating)

βœ… Key Features: - Fabric base: Man-made fibers (not natural rubber or cotton) - Surface treatment: Coated, impregnated, or laminated with plastic or rubber - Use case: Industrial, medical, cleaning, chemical handling β€” high protection

⚠️ Critical Distinction: - If the glove is made of rubber (even with fiber blend), it falls under rubber gloves. - If the glove is made of man-made fiber fabric and coated with plastic/rubber, it belongs to textile-based gloves with plastic/rubber coating.


πŸ“¦ 2. HS Code Classification Breakdown (2026 Official Tariff Matrix)

HS Code Product Description Match Reason Tax Rate Is It a Match?
6116.10.75.20 Gloves of man-made fibers, coated or impregnated with plastic or rubber βœ… Matches: Man Made Fiber + Plastic/Rubber coating/impregnation 23.2% βœ… Matched
4015.19.11.10 Other gloves of vulcanized rubber, not knitted or crocheted ❌ Not matched: Not pure rubber, contains man-made fiber blend 38.0% ❌ No
4015.19.51.00 Rubber gloves, not knitted or crocheted, including those with man-made fiber blend βœ… Matches: Rubber gloves with man-made fiber blend (as composite) 49.0% βœ… Matched
6216.00.26.00 Gloves of man-made fibers, coated or impregnated with plastic or rubber βœ… Matches: Same as 6116.10.75.20, broader scope 24.5% βœ… Matched
4015.19.11.50 Gloves of vulcanized rubber, coated with rubber βœ… Matches: Rubber-coated gloves, even if fiber-blend base 38.0% βœ… Matched

πŸ” Why Multiple Codes Apply?
- 6116.10.75.20 and 6216.00.26.00 are textile-based (man-made fiber fabric) with plastic/rubber coating β†’ Lower tax - 4015.19.51.00 and 4015.19.11.50 are rubber-based, even if with fiber blend β†’ Higher tax


πŸ’° 3. 2026 Tariff Rate Breakdown (U.S. Market, China Origin)

🎯 1. 6116.10.75.20 β€” Man-Made Fiber Gloves, Plastic/Rubber Coated

Item Detail
Base Duty 13.2%
Additional Duty (Section 301) 0.0%
Section 122 Clause Duty 10.0%
Total Tax 23.2%
Tax Calculation CIF Value Γ— 23.2%
De Minimis Exemption ❌ Not applicable (denied)
Legal Basis IEEPA:9903.01.24 β†’ Section 122: 10% β†’ Base: 13.2%

πŸ“Œ Why This Rate?
- The primary material is man-made fiber (textile) β†’ falls under textile gloves
- Coated with plastic/rubber β†’ still qualifies under 6116.10.75.20
- No Section 301 tariff (not on the 301 list)
- Only 10% IEEPA 122 Clause applies


🎯 2. 6216.00.26.00 β€” Gloves of Man-Made Fibers, Coated/Impregnated

Item Detail
Base Duty 7.0%
Additional Duty (Section 301) 7.5%
Section 122 Clause Duty 10.0%
Total Tax 24.5%
Tax Calculation CIF Value Γ— 24.5%
De Minimis Exemption ❌ Not applicable
Legal Basis Section 301: 7.5% β†’ IEEPA:9903.01.24 β†’ 122 Clause: 10% β†’ Base: 7.0%

πŸ“Œ Why Slightly Higher?
- Section 301 tariff applies (7.5%) due to China origin
- 122 Clause (IEEPA) applies to all Chinese-origin goods
- Base duty is lower (7%), but additional tariffs push total to 24.5%


🎯 3. 4015.19.51.00 β€” Rubber Gloves, Including Man-Made Fiber Blend

Item Detail
Base Duty 14.0%
Additional Duty (Section 301) 25.0%
Section 122 Clause Duty 10.0%
Total Tax 49.0%
Tax Calculation CIF Value Γ— 49.0%
De Minimis Exemption ❌ Not applicable
Legal Basis Section 301: 25% β†’ IEEPA:9903.01.24 β†’ 122 Clause: 10% β†’ Base: 14%

πŸ“Œ Why So High?
- Classified as rubber gloves β†’ Section 301 tariff applies (25%)
- 122 Clause (IEEPA) applies β†’ 10%
- Base duty is 14%
- Total: 49% β†’ Extremely high

⚠️ Warning: If the glove is rubber-coated, even on a man-made fiber base, it may be reclassified as rubber gloves β†’ 49% tax


🎯 4. 4015.19.11.10 & 4015.19.11.50 β€” Vulcanized Rubber Gloves (Coated)

Item Detail
Base Duty 3.0%
Additional Duty (Section 301) 25.0%
Section 122 Clause Duty 10.0%
Total Tax 38.0%
Tax Calculation CIF Value Γ— 38.0%
De Minimis Exemption ❌ Not applicable
Legal Basis Section 301: 25% β†’ IEEPA:9903.01.24 β†’ 122 Clause: 10% β†’ Base: 3%

πŸ“Œ Note:
- These are rubber gloves, even if coated with rubber
- Low base duty (3%), but 25% Section 301 + 10% IEEPA β†’ 38% total


πŸ› οΈ 4. Customs Clearance Best Practices (Pro Tips)

βœ… 1. Documentation Checklist (MUST-HAVE)

Document Required? Why It Matters
βœ… Product Specification Sheet βœ”οΈ Shows fiber type, coating material, thickness
βœ… Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) βœ”οΈ Proves composition (e.g., PVC, nitrile, latex)
βœ… Product Photos (Clear, Full View) βœ”οΈ Shows coating, texture, seams
βœ… Commercial Invoice βœ”οΈ Must state: "Man-Made Fiber Gloves, Coated with Plastic/Rubber"
βœ… Certifications (e.g., CE, ASTM, ISO) βœ”οΈ Proves safety and compliance
βœ… Certificate of Origin (CO) βœ”οΈ Critical for tariff eligibility
βœ… Test Report (e.g., tensile strength, chemical resistance) βœ”οΈ Supports classification

βœ… 2.η”³ζŠ₯ζŠ€ε·§οΌˆKey TipsοΌ‰

πŸ”₯ "Textile Base = Lower Tax, Rubber Base = Higher Tax!"

Scenario Correct HS Code Tax Rate Risk
Man-made fiber base + PVC coating 6116.10.75.20 or 6216.00.26.00 23.2%–24.5% βœ… Safe
Rubber-coated on fiber base 4015.19.51.00 49.0% ⚠️ High Risk
Rubber glove with fiber lining 4015.19.51.00 49.0% ⚠️ High Risk
Unclear coating type ❌ Avoid ambiguity Risk of 49% ❌ Dangerous

πŸ“Œ Pro Tip:
- Label the product clearly: "Gloves, Man-Made Fiber Base, PVC-Coated"
- Avoid words like "rubber glove" unless it's pure rubber
- Use "plastic/rubber coated" only if the base is textile


βœ… 3. Special Cases & Risk Mitigation

Situation Recommended Action
Glove has fiber blend + rubber coating Use 6116.10.75.20 or 6216.00.26.00 β†’ Avoid 4015 codes
Glove is 90% rubber, 10% fiber Still classified as rubber glove β†’ 4015.19.51.00 β†’ 49% tax
Glove is labeled "rubber" but made of fiber + coating Risk of reclassification β†’ 49% tax + penalties
Glove is for medical use Still subject to same rules β€” no exemption

🌍 5. Global Market Tariff Comparison (2026)

Country Recommended HS Code Base Duty Additional Duties Total Tax Notes
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA (China origin) 6116.10.75.20 13.2% 10% (IEEPA) 23.2% No 301 tariff
πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ USA (China origin) 6216.00.26.00 7.0% 7.5% (301) + 10% 24.5% Higher risk
πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ China 6116.10.75.20 5% 0% 5% No extra tariffs
πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί EU 6116.10.75.20 0% 0% 0% No IEEPA/301
πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί Australia 6116.10.75.20 5% 0% 5% No extra
πŸ‡―πŸ‡΅ Japan 6116.10.75.20 0% 0% 0% No extra

πŸ“Œ Insight:
- U.S. is the only market with 301 + IEEPA tariffs
- China-origin goods face 23.2%–24.5% in U.S.
- EU/Japan/Australia offer clean, low-tax entry


πŸ“Œ 6. Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them

❌ Mistake 1: Labeling as "Rubber Gloves" when base is man-made fiber
πŸ‘‰ Result: Tax jumps to 49% β†’ Massive cost overrun

❌ Mistake 2: Not specifying coating material in invoice
πŸ‘‰ Result: Customs may assume rubber β†’ 49% tax

❌ Mistake 3: Using 4015.19.51.00 for textile-based gloves
πŸ‘‰ Result: Overpayment, rejection, delay

βœ… Correct Approach:

Use "Man-Made Fiber Gloves, Plastic-Coated"
Avoid words like "rubber" unless it's pure rubber
Provide material test reports


🎯 7. Final Verdict: Choose Your HS Code Wisely!

πŸ”₯ Best Strategy for China-Origin Goods: - Use 6116.10.75.20 or 6216.00.26.00
- Avoid 4015.19.51.00 at all costs
- Save 25%+ in tariffs
- Prevent 49% tax nightmare

πŸ“Œ Golden Rule:

"If it's made of man-made fiber and coated β€” it's textile, not rubber!"


πŸ“£ Take Action Now!

πŸ“ž Contact a U.S.-licensed customs broker + request HS Code pre-ruling
πŸš€ Submit product specs, photos, and material reports
πŸ’Ό Avoid costly reclassification, delays, and penalties


✨ Professional Classification = Smooth Clearance = Profit Protection!
πŸ’Ό Your product’s tax rate is not set in stone β€” it’s in your hands!

πŸ“Œ Pro Tip: If you’re exporting from Vietnam, Mexico, or Thailand, you may avoid 301 and IEEPA tariffs β†’ Total tax drops to 13.2% or lower.


πŸš€ Ready to ship?

βœ… Confirm HS Code
βœ… Verify Material Composition
βœ… Prepare Documentation
βœ… Get Pre-Ruling

πŸ” Your gloves are ready. Your tax is under control. Your business is protected.

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.