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Section 301 tariffs on China imports — explained without the law school degree.
Section 301 refers to a provision of the Trade Act of 1974 that gives the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) authority to impose tariffs on imports from countries found to engage in "unfair trade practices." Starting in 2018, the Trump administration used Section 301 to impose sweeping additional tariffs on imports from China, citing intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer.
These tariffs were added on top of existing base duty rates — they don't replace them. If your product had a 5% base duty rate and Section 301 adds 25%, your effective rate is now 30%.
Section 301 tariffs apply based on country of origin, not country of shipment. Goods made in China but shipped through Vietnam or another country are still subject to Section 301 if they originate in China. CBP actively investigates transshipment.
Section 301 tariffs were imposed in four tranches — commonly called Lists 1 through 4. Each list covers different HTS chapters and carries a different rate:
| List | Effective Date | Rate | Coverage |
|---|---|---|---|
| List 1 | July 6, 2018 | 25% | Industrial goods, aerospace, machinery — ~$34B in trade |
| List 2 | Aug 23, 2018 | 25% | Chemicals, plastics, electronic components — ~$16B |
| List 3 | Sept 24, 2018 | 25% | Consumer goods, apparel, food products — ~$200B |
| List 4A | Sept 1, 2019 | 7.5% | Consumer electronics, footwear, apparel — ~$120B |
Lists 1, 2, and 3 carry a 25% additional duty. List 4A carries 7.5%. The Biden administration kept all of these in place and the Trump administration's second term has layered additional IEEPA tariffs on top — meaning many China-origin goods now face effective rates of 50% or higher when all overlays are combined.
The tariff is assessed at the time of U.S. customs entry and paid by the importer of record — the U.S. company or individual whose name appears on the customs entry. Not the Chinese factory. Not your freight forwarder. You.
Many importers are surprised to learn this. If your supplier quotes you a CIF or DAP price that "includes all tariffs," that money is still ultimately coming from your gross margin. The tariff is collected by CBP at the border as a percentage of the declared value of your goods.
If you import $500,000 of aluminum extrusions (HTS 7604) from China at a 25% Section 301 rate plus a 6.5% base rate, your total duty is $157,500 — $31,500 in base duty + $125,000 in Section 301. That's before any IEEPA overlay. This is why tariff optimization matters at scale.
Yes — the USTR ran exclusion processes that allowed companies to apply for product-specific exclusions from Section 301 tariffs. If granted, the exclusion allowed an importer to enter goods at the base duty rate without the 301 overlay.
Most exclusions have expired. Some were renewed; many were not. If you previously operated under a product exclusion, you need to verify its current status. CBP will not remind you — they'll just assess the duty.
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