883167 88 Ruling Active

The tariff classification of Sangaria Yogaria Nomigoro fromJapan.

Issued March 9, 1993 by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Tariff classification

HTS codes: 2202.90.9090

Headings: 2202

Product description

Samples were included with your request. The subject merchandise is described as a soft drink and is stated to contain 83.5 percent water, 9.5 percent corn syrup, 3.2 percent powdered non-fat milk, 2.8 percent origomerized maltose, 0.5 percent pectin, 0.4 percent yogurt flavor and 0.1 percent citric acid. The product will be packaged for retail sale in small plastic containers.

CBP rationale

The applicable subheading for the Sangaria Yogaria Nomigoro will be 2202.90.9090, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for waters.

Full text

NY 883167 March 9, 1993 CLA-2-22:S:N:N7:232-883167 CATEGORY: Classification TARIFF NO.: 2202.90.9090 Mr. Steven Hong Koryeo International Corp. 200 Stewart Avenue Brooklyn, New York 11237 RE: The tariff classification of Sangaria Yogaria Nomigoro from Japan. Dear Mr. Hong: In your letter dated May 13, 1992, which was received March 2, 1993, you requested a tariff classification ruling. Samples were included with your request. The subject merchandise is described as a soft drink and is stated to contain 83.5 percent water, 9.5 percent corn syrup, 3.2 percent powdered non-fat milk, 2.8 percent origomerized maltose, 0.5 percent pectin, 0.4 percent yogurt flavor and 0.1 percent citric acid. The product will be packaged for retail sale in small plastic containers. The applicable subheading for the Sangaria Yogaria Nomigoro will be 2202.90.9090, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for waters...containing added sugar or other sweetening matter or flavored, and other nonalcoholic beverages...other...other...other. The rate of duty will be 0.3 cents per liter. Section 304 of the Tariff Act of 1930, as amended (19 U.S.C. 1304), provides, in general, that all articles of foreign origin imported into the United States must be legibly, conspicuously, and permanently marked to indicate the English name of the country of origin to an ultimate purchaser in the United States. The implementing regulations to 19 U.S.C. 1304 are set forth in Part 134, Customs Regulations (19 CFR Part 134). The samples you have submitted do not appear to be properly marked with the country of origin. You may wish to discuss the matter of country of origin marking with the Customs import specialist at the proposed port of entry. This ruling is being issued under the provisions of Section 177 of the Customs Regulations (19 C.F.R. 177). A copy of this ruling letter should be attached to the entry documents filed at the time this merchandise is imported. If the documents have been filed without a copy, this ruling should be brought to the attention of the Customs officer handling the transaction. Sincerely, Jean F. Maguire Area Director New York Seaport 

View original on CBP CROSS →

More rulings on the same tariff codes

Searching CBP rulings the smart way

TariffLens semantically searches all 200,000+ CBP rulings, surfaces the ones that actually match your product, and builds defensible classifications backed by ruling citations.

Book a demo →