policy trade

HS Code 9507: Tariffs, Compliance, and the Hidden Costs

Most Chinese fishing tackle exports land under a single 4-digit code: HS 9507 — Fishing rods, hooks, reels, and other tackle. Within it sit roughly a dozen 6-digit subheadings that determine your actual duty rate. Get the classification wrong and you either overpay duties, underpay and risk seizure, or trigger a reclassification audit.

This article walks through the structure, the rates that matter in 2026, and the costs most first-time importers don’t anticipate.

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HS 9507 at a glance

SubheadingDescriptionCommon Chinese exports
9507.10Fishing rodsRods, rod kits
9507.20Fish hooksTreble hooks, jig hooks
9507.30Fishing reelsBaitcasting, spinning, fly
9507.90Other tackleLines, lures, swivels, tackle boxes

For more granular classification (10-digit), see your national customs tariff book. HTSUS (US) uses 9507.xx.xxxx; CN uses 9507.xxxx.xx.

Section 301 tariffs — the big one for US importers

If you are importing into the United States from China, the headline rate is 25% under Section 301 (pol-us-301-fishing). This is in addition to the base MFN duty, which for most 9507 subheadings is zero or close to zero.

Effective total duty for HS 9507 into the US from China: 25%.

A few exceptions to track:

EU duties

The EU applies an MFN duty of 1.7%–3.7% depending on subheading. No Section 301 equivalent applies. CE marking is the primary compliance requirement for tackle entering the EU.

Other major markets

MarketTypical dutyKey compliance
US25% (Section 301)FDA (some lures), FCC (electronic), state-level (CA Prop 65 for lead)
EU1.7–3.7% MFNCE marking, REACH (chemicals), WEEE (where applicable)
Canada0–5% MFNNo major Section-301 equivalent
Australia0–5% MFNBiosecurity for natural baits
Japan0–3% MFNPSE for some electrical tackle

Hidden costs first-time importers miss

The duty rate is the obvious line item. Less obvious:

For a first 40HQ container of $80,000 CIF value, total landed cost addition (US import) might look like:

That is a 26.5% markup before warehousing and last-mile.

Practical checklist

Before placing a PO:

  1. Get the 10-digit HS classification from your customs broker for each SKU. Don’t rely on the factory’s classification.
  2. Confirm Section 301 exclusion status at the time of import. USTR exclusions expire.
  3. Check origin rules. Country of origin is not the country of shipment. A rod assembled in Vietnam from Chinese blanks may still be “Made in China.”
  4. CE / FDA / Prop 65 compliance for the specific product. Lures with certain plastics need FDA food-contact clearance in the US. Tackle with lead needs Prop 65 warnings in California.
  5. Insurance. Marine cargo insurance typically costs 0.3–0.5% of cargo value. Worth it.

Sources

Disclaimer

This article is informational, not legal or tax advice. Consult a licensed customs broker and a trade attorney for your specific transactions. Duty rates and exclusion lists change — verify against current sources before each import.


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