Transparent Tape High Strength Bonding
CN β US| HS Code | Tariff Rate | Origin | Destination | Doc |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3919905040 | 40.8% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 3919102040 | 40.8% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 3919102010 | 40.8% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 3919905020 | 40.8% | CN | US | Official Doc |
| 3926909989 | 22.8% | CN | US | Official Doc |
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AI Analysis
ποΈ Transparent Tape with High Strength Bonding
π HS Code Reference & Customs Clearance Guide | 2026 Latest Tariff Analysis | Professional-Level Strategy
π I. Product Definition & Classification: What Exactly is "High Strength Transparent Tape"?
"Transparent Tape" in the context of international trade refers primarily to adhesive tapes made of plastic materials. The key differentiator here is "High Strength Bonding" (or High Tack/High Holding Power).
In global trade classification (HS Code), the distinction often lies in: 1. Material Composition: Usually PVC, PP (Polypropylene), or PET. 2. Physical Form: Rolls of tape, self-adhesive. 3. Specific Properties: "Low Viscosity" (Low Tack) vs. "High Strength" (High Tack/Fiber-Reinforced).
β οΈ Key Distinction Point: - "Low Viscosity/Clear Tape": Often used for packaging, labeling, or light-duty holding. Perceived as generic adhesive tapes. - "High Strength/Polypropylene Tape": Often implies industrial-grade, reinforced, or heavy-duty bonding. If it has fiber reinforcement, it may be classified differently than standard plastic film tape.
π¦ II. HS Code Classification Details (Based on Provided Data)
Below is the precise classification for Transparent Tape / High Strength Bonding Tape based on the specific technical attributes provided in your data.
| HS Code | Product Description & Rationale | Key Attributes | Total Tax Rate (China-US) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3919.90.50.40 | Low Viscosity Transparent Tape | β’ Material: Plastic β’ Form: Tape β’ Feature: Low Viscosity (Low Tack) β’ Usage: General transparent tape |
40.8% |
| 3919.10.20.40 | Transparent Tape (Standard) | β’ Material: Plastic β’ Form: Tape β’ Feature: Self-adhesive, standard plastic tape |
40.8% |
| 3919.10.20.10 | High Strength Polypropylene Tape | β’ Material: Plastic (Polypropylene/PP) β’ Form: Tape β’ Feature: Fiber-Reinforced (High Strength) β’ Usage: Industrial/Heavy-duty |
40.8% |
| 3919.90.50.20 | High Strength Polypropylene Tape (Variant) | β’ Material: Plastic (Polypropylene/PP) β’ Form: Tape β’ Feature: Fiber-Reinforced (High Strength) β’ Usage: Alternative classification for reinforced PP tape |
40.8% |
| 3926.90.99.89 | Other Plastic Articles (High Strength PP Tape) | β’ Material: Plastic β’ Form: Not strictly "tape" under 3919? β’ Feature: Classified as "Other" plasticεΆε β’ Usage: If it doesn't fit standard tape definitions |
22.8% |
π Critical Note: - The vast majority of standard and high-strength plastic tapes fall under Chapter 3919 (Plastic tapes, films, sheets, etc.). - 3919.10 typically covers "Plastic tapes... of a kind used for packaging" or similar specific uses. - 3919.90 covers "Other" plastic tapes. - 3926.90 is a "basket" category for other plastic articles. If customs disagrees that your item is a "tape" (e.g., if it's a coated sheet or a specialized industrial component), they may force it into 3926, which has a lower tax rate (22.8%) but higher risk of scrutiny.
π° III. 2026 Latest Tariff Rate Breakdown (China Origin to US)
β Applicable Country: United States (US)
β Origin: China (CN)
β Effective Time: Current rates apply (2025-2026)
π― 1. For HS Codes 3919.90.50.40, 3919.10.20.40, 3919.10.20.10, 3919.90.50.20
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Base Duty Rate | 5.8% (Most Favored Nation / General Rate) |
| Section 301 Additional Duty | +25.0% (List 4A - Many plastic goods and consumer goods) |
| Section 122 Duty | +10.0% (Retaliatory tariffs on US goods, applicable to imports from US origin goods, but often cited in comprehensive tax calculations for China-origin goods depending on specific trade flows or if misclassified. Note: Standard China-US tariff is Base + 301. The 122 clause usually applies to US goods entering China. However, the data provided explicitly lists "122 Clause Tariff 10%" in the tax detail. We must follow the provided data.) |
| Total Tax Rate | 40.8% |
| Tax Calculation | CIF Value Γ 40.8% |
| De Minimis Eligibility | β No (Plastic tapes are generally subject to Section 301 duties and do not qualify for $800 de minimis exemption for duty purposes in the same way some other goods might, though enforcement varies. High tax rates make this irrelevant for commercial shipments.) |
| Legal Basis Path | Base Tariff β Section 301 (25%) β 122 Clause (10%) |
π Explanation: - The 5.8% is the standard WTO/USMFN rate for plastic tapes. - The +25% is the punitive tariff added under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, targeting Chinese imports. - The +10% is listed as "122 Clause Tariff" in your data. Please verify with your broker if this applies to your specific import scenario, as Section 122 typically targets US exports. However, based on the strict constraint "Do not exceed DATA," we accept the 40.8% total.
π― 2. For HS Code 3926.90.99.89
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Base Duty Rate | 5.3% |
| Section 301 Additional Duty | +7.5% (Lower rate category, possibly different list) |
| Section 122 Duty | +10.0% |
| Total Tax Rate | 22.8% |
| Tax Calculation | CIF Value Γ 22.8% |
| De Minimis Eligibility | β No |
| Legal Basis Path | Base Tariff β Section 301 (7.5%) β 122 Clause (10%) |
π Explanation: - This rate is significantly lower (22.8% vs 40.8%). - Risk: Classifying a "tape" under
3926.90(Other plastic articles) instead of3919(Plastic tapes) is aggressive. Customs may challenge this if the product is clearly a roll of adhesive tape.
π οΈ IV. Customs Clearance Practical Advice (Avoid Pitfalls)
β 1. Documentation Checklist (Must-Haves)
| Document | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|
| β Product Spec Sheet | βοΈ | Must clearly state: Material (PP/PVC), Width, Length, Adhesive Type, Viscosity/Tack Level (Low vs. High). |
| β Product Photos | βοΈ | Show the roll, the core, and a close-up of the adhesive side. If reinforced, show the fiber texture. |
| β Commercial Invoice | βοΈ | Description must match HS Code rationale. - For 3919: "Transparent Plastic Adhesive Tape, PP Material" - For 3919.10.20.10: "High Strength Polypropylene Tape, Fiber Reinforced" |
| β Packing List | βοΈ | Net/Gross weight, number of rolls. |
| β Certificate of Origin | βοΈ | Proof of China origin to confirm tariff applicability. |
β 2. Declaration Strategy (Key Mnemonics)
π₯ "Match the Material, Match the Strength, Choose 3919, Avoid 3926"
| Scenario | Correct HS Code | Why? |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Clear Tape (Low Tack) | 3919.90.50.40 |
Matches "Low Viscosity" description in data. |
| Standard Plastic Tape | 3919.10.20.40 |
Matches "Plastic Material + Tape Form". |
| Reinforced/High Strength PP Tape | 3919.10.20.10 |
Matches "Polypropylene + Fiber Reinforced". |
| Uncertain/Non-Standard Shape | 3926.90.99.89 |
High Risk. Only use if product is NOT a standard roll of tape. Lower tax (22.8%) but high audit risk. |
β 3. Special Considerations
- "High Strength" Claim: If you declare as "High Strength," ensure the product description supports it (e.g., mention "Polypropylene," "Fiber Reinforced," or "Industrial Grade"). If it's just a strong glue on thin plastic, it might still be
3919.90.50.40(Low Viscosity in data, which might refer to the adhesive consistency, not tensile strength). Clarify with manufacturer: Does "Low Viscosity" mean the adhesive? If so,3919.90.50.40is the safest bet for standard clear tape. - Material Matters: If the tape is Paper or Cloth, it does NOT belong in Chapter 39. It would be in Chapter 48 (Paper) or 59 (Textile). The data provided is exclusively for Plastic (3919/3926). Ensure your tape is indeed plastic.
- Tariff Engineering: The difference between 40.8% and 22.8% is significant. However, misclassifying a tape as a "plastic article" (
3926) can lead to seizures, penalties, and back taxes. Recommendation: Stick to3919codes if it is genuinely a tape.
π V. Global Market Clearance Comparison (2026)
| Country/Region | Recommended HS Code | Est. Duty (China Origin) | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|
| πΊπΈ USA | 3919.10.20.10 / 3919.90.50.40 |
40.8% | High Section 301 duties. |
| π¨π³ China | 3919.10.20.10 |
Varies | Import duty ~5-10%. No 301 tariffs. |
| πͺπΊ EU | 3919.10.00 |
4.5% - 6.5% | No Section 301. Standard MFN rate. |
| π¬π§ UK | 3919.10.00 |
4.5% - 6.5% | Post-Brexit rates similar to EU. |
π Conclusion: - The USA is the most expensive market for Chinese plastic tapes due to Section 301 tariffs. - Always prioritize 3919 over 3926 unless the product is definitively not a tape.
π VI. Common Errors & Pitfalls (Lessons Learned)
β Error 1: Using "Packaging Tape" as a generic term without specifying material. π Consequence: Customs may assign a higher default duty or delay clearance for clarification.
β Error 2: Declaring "High Strength Tape" under 3926.90 to save 18%.
π Consequence: High risk of customs audit. If they determine it's a tape, they will reassess at 40.8% + penalties.
β Error 3: Confusing "Low Viscosity" (Adhesive property) with "Low Strength" (Tensile property).
π Consequence: If you have high-strength tape but declare it as "Low Viscosity," ensure the adhesive type matches. If the data says 3919.90.50.40 is for "Low Viscosity," and your tape is high-tack, you might be misclassified. Check if your high-strength tape uses a different adhesive.
π― VII. Conclusion: Professional Declaration, Cost Optimization
π― Key Takeaway:
πΉ "Plastic Tape? Go to 3919." πΉ "High Strength? Specify PP or Fiber Reinforced." πΉ "USA Import? Budget 40.8% Duty." πΉ "Save Money? Don't risk misclassification to 3926."
π Pro Tip: If your volume is high, consider applying for an Advance Ruling from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to lock in the correct HS Code and avoid future disputes. This provides legal certainty for your 40.8% tax calculation.
π£ Immediate Action:
π Contact your freight forwarder with the exact product specification (Material: PP/PVC, Form: Roll, Feature: Low/High Viscosity). π Clearance Success: Accurate HS Code = Predictable Costs!
β¨ Professional Customs Clearance Starts with Precise Classification! πΌ Every Percent of Duty Counts!
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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.