Pearl millet sorghum
CN β US| HS Code | Tariff Rate | Origin | Destination | Doc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1103199000 | 44.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 1103200090 | 35.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 1008290000 | 0.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 1008210000 | 0.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 1209299196 | 35.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 1209299160 | 35.0% | CN | US | Official Doc |
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AI Analysis
πΎ Pearl Millet & Sorghum (Cereals & Forage Seeds) | 2026 HS Code & Taxation Guide | Global Clearance Strategy
π HS Code Reference & Customs Clearance Guide | 2026 Tax Regime Analysis | Professional Entry Strategy
π I. Product Definition & Classification: Do You Know Your Grain?
Pearl Millet (Pennisetum glaucum) and Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) are two of the world's most vital drought-resistant cereals. In international trade, they serve dual purposes: as human food grains and as agricultural seeds for planting or forage for livestock.
The critical distinction lies in the end-use: * Grain for Consumption: Milled into flour, cooked as porridge, or used in animal feed. (Chapter 10 or 11) * Seeds for Sowing: Specifically intended for planting. (Chapter 12) * Specific Varieties: Some Sorghum varieties (like Sudan Grass) are categorized strictly as forage.
β οΈ Key Differentiation Point: * Pearl Millet (General Grain): "Millet: Other" (HS 1008.29.00.00) * Pearl Millet (Seeds): "Millet: Seed" (HS 1008.21.00.00) * Sorghum (Forage/Sudan Grass): "Seeds of forage plants... Sudan grass" (HS 1209.29.91.60) * Processed Millet (Pellets): If milled into pellets, it shifts to Chapter 11 (e.g., HS 1103.20.00.90).
π¦ II. Detailed HS Code Breakdown (2026 Regime)
The following HS Codes cover Pearl Millet and Sorghum based on the provided data. Note the stark difference in tax treatment between Raw Grains, Seeds, and Processed Pellets.
| HS Code | Product Description | Applicable Scenario | Tax Status |
|---|---|---|---|
1008.29.00.00 |
Millet: Other (Pearl Millet Grain) | Unprocessed Pearl Millet for food/feed (excluding seeds). | π’ 0.0% Base + 0% Add-on |
1008.21.00.00 |
Millet: Seed | Pearl Millet specifically certified for planting/sowing. | π’ 0.0% Base + 0% Add-on |
1103.19.90.00 |
Groat & Meal: Of Other Cereals | Millet or Sorghum ground into flour or coarsely crushed (groats/meal). | π’ 0.0% Base + 0% Add-on |
1103.20.00.90 |
Pellets: Of Other Cereals | High Risk! Processed compressed pellets of millet/sorghum. | π΄ 25.0% Add-on (Total 25%) |
1209.29.91.96 |
Forage Seeds: Other Other | Sorghum/Pearl Millet seeds for sowing (non-exhaustive list, "Other"). | π΄ 25.0% Add-on (Total 25%) |
1209.29.91.60 |
Sudan Grass Seeds | Specific Sorghum variety (Sorghum sudanense) used for forage/grazing. | π΄ 25.0% Add-on (Total 25%) |
π Critical Alert: * Grain vs. Seed: While both Pearl Millet grain (
1008.29) and Seed (1008.21) are tax-free (0%), Sorghum forage seeds (1209.29.91.60) are heavily taxed (25%). * Processing Trap: If you take plain millet grain and compress it into pellets (1103.20), you instantly incur a 25% penalty tax, even if the raw grain is free! * Forage Distinction: "Sudan Grass" is a specific sub-type of Sorghum/Forage. Mislabeling general Sorghum seed as "Other" vs. "Sudan Grass" may lead to disputes, though both currently show 25% in this dataset.
π° III. 2026 Tax Rate Deep Dive
β Scope: Based on the provided tariff data. β Applicable Tariff Structure: Base Tariff vs. Added Tariff (e.g., Section 301, Retaliatory, or Specific Add-ons).
π― 1. The "0% Club": Raw Grains & Basic Meal
Codes: 1008.29.00.00, 1008.21.00.00, 1103.19.90.00
| Item | Content |
|---|---|
| Base Tax | 0.0% (Ad Valorem) |
| Added Tax | 0.0% |
| Total Tax | 0.0% |
| Implication | Zero Tariff Entry. This is the ideal classification for bulk trade of grain or seeds for immediate use/processing (provided they are not pellets). |
| Legal Basis | HS 1008 (Millet) & HS 1103 (Meal) β Typically subject to standard MFN rates, which are 0% for these specific agricultural categories in this context. |
π Explanation: * Raw Pearl Millet (Grain or Seed) and basic Millet/Sorghum meal are considered essential agricultural commodities, attracting zero additional duties. * This makes the import of these raw materials cost-competitive.
π― 2. The "25% Penalty Zone": Processed Pellets & Forage Seeds
Codes: 1103.20.00.90, 1209.29.91.96, 1209.29.91.60
| Item | Content |
|---|---|
| Base Tax | 0.0% |
| Added Tax | +25.0% |
| Total Tax | 25.0% |
| Implication | High Duty. This acts as a protective tariff on value-added forms (pellets) or specific agricultural inputs (forage seeds). |
| Legal Basis | HS 1103.20 (Pellets) & HS 1209 (Forage Seeds) β The 25% represents a specific Additional Tariff (likely retaliation or protectionist measure on processed agri-products). |
π Explanation: * Pellets (
1103.20): The 25% tax targets processed forms. Converting grain to pellets triggers this tax. Do not process if you want to avoid this cost. * Forage Seeds (1209): Seeds for planting specific forage crops (like Sudan Grass) attract a 25% levy. This suggests a policy to protect domestic forage seed industries or limit the export of certain seed types. * Risk: If you ship "Millet Feed Pellets" instead of "Millet Grain," your cost increases by 25% instantly.
π οΈ IV. Customs Clearance Action Plan
β 1. Preparation Checklist (Must-Haves)
| Document | Requirement | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| β Technical Spec Sheet | βοΈ Critical | Must state: "Unprocessed Grain" vs. "Pellet" vs. "Forage Seed". Confusion here leads to 25% tax. |
| β Cert of Origin | βοΈ Mandatory | To verify if the 25% add-on applies to your specific country of origin (if the 25% is a retaliatory duty). |
| β Seed Cert (if applicable) | βοΈ For 1008.21/1209 |
If claiming "Seed" status, a Seed Certification from the Ministry of Agriculture is required to prove it's for sowing, not feed. |
| β Commercial Invoice | βοΈ Precise Descrip | Use exact HS descriptions: "Pearl Millet, Unprocessed, For Human Consumption" (Avoid generic "Grain"). |
| β Packing List | βοΈ Weight | Distinguish between grain weight and pellet weight if mixing shipments. |
β 2. Declaration Strategy (Golden Rules)
π₯ The "Pellet Trap" Warning: DO NOT describe millet/sorghum as "Pellets" unless you intend to pay the 25% tax. * Safe Declaration: "Pearl Millet, Raw Grain, 1008.29.00.00" β Tax 0% * Expensive Declaration: "Millet Pellets, 1103.20.00.90" β Tax 25%
| Scenario | Correct HS Code | Tax Outcome | Incorrect Action (Risk) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Buying Pearl Millet for Flour | 1008.29.00.00 |
β 0% | Declaring as "Pellets" β 25% loss |
| Importing Sorghum Seeds | 1209.29.91.60 or 96 |
β οΈ 25% | Declaring as "Feed" (if not for feed) β Audit/Seizure |
| Importing Millet Meal | 1103.19.90.00 |
β 0% | Declaring as "Pellets" β 25% loss |
| Importing Sudan Grass | 1209.29.91.60 |
β οΈ 25% | Declaring as "General Forage" β Potential 25% (still high) |
β 3. Special Handling Scenarios
| Situation | Strategy |
|---|---|
| "Is it a Seed or Feed?" | If for feed, declare as 1008.29.00.00 (0%). If for sowing, declare as 1209.29... (25%). Do not mix. |
| "Can we process pellets?" | Avoid processing before customs clearance if the 25% tax is prohibitive. Import raw grain, process domestically. |
| "Sorghum vs. Sudan Grass" | Be precise. If it is Sorghum sudanense, use 1209.29.91.60. If general Sorghum forage seed, use 1209.29.91.96. Both are 25% in this dataset, but misclassification risks audit. |
π V. Market Comparison & Conclusion
| Status | Classification | Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Raw Pearl Millet (Grain) | 1008.29.00.00 |
0% (Best Case) |
| Pearl Millet Seed | 1008.21.00.00 |
0% (Best Case) |
| Millet/Sorghum Meal | 1103.19.90.00 |
0% (Best Case) |
| Pellets (Value Added) | 1103.20.00.90 |
25% (High Cost) |
| Forage Seeds (Sorghum) | 1209.29.91.60/96 |
25% (High Cost) |
π Final Verdict: * Raw Grains & Seeds (Food/Feed) are tax-free (0%). * Processed Pellets and Specific Forage Seeds are heavily taxed (25%). * Strategy: Import Raw Grain (
1008.29) to enjoy 0% duty. Process domestically if you need pellets. Avoid importing pre-made pellets (1103.20) unless the 25% margin is absorbed in your pricing.
π VI. Common Pitfalls & Solutions
β Pitfall 1: Calling "Pellets" by mistake. * Result: Paying 25% tax on a product that could have been 0% as grain. * Fix: Ensure packaging says "Raw Grain," not "Feed Pellets."
β Pitfall 2: Mislabeling Forage Seeds. * Result: If you declare general Sorghum seed as "Other" but it's "Sudan Grass," you might face regulatory issues, though tax is same (25%). * Fix: Identify the exact species. If it is forage seed, expect the 25% tax; budget accordingly.
β Pitfall 3: Confusing Meal with Pellets.
* Result: 1103.19 (Meal) is 0%, but 1103.20 (Pellets) is 25%.
* Fix: Clearly distinguish "Ground Meal" (0%) from "Compressed Pellets" (25%).
π― VII. Final Advice
π "Keep it Raw, Keep it Free!" To minimize costs: 1. Import as Grain (
1008.29or1008.21) β 0% Tax. 2. Avoid Pellets (1103.20) unless necessary β 25% Tax. 3. Budget for Forage Seeds (1209) β 25% Tax is unavoidable. 4. Documentation is Key: Proving the product is "Grain" and not "Pellets" is the single most important step to saving money.
β¨ Professional Clearance, Smart Classification. πΌ Your bottom line depends on the difference between "Grain" (0%) and "Pellets" (25%).
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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.