The tariff classification of "Vitalmix" from Ghana
Issued April 7, 1994 by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Tariff classification
HTS codes: 1901.90.9060
Headings: 1901
Product description
"Vitalmix" is a light brown powder, said to be a mixture of 50 percent maize, 30 percent sorghum, 10 percent cowpeas, and 10 percent groundnuts, put up for retail sale in a plastic bag containing 500 grams, net weight. The product will be used as an ingredient in the preparation of porridge, soups, stews, bread, biscuits, cakes, and other foods.
CBP rationale
The applicable subheading for the Vitalmix will be 1901.90.9060, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for food preparations of flour, meal, starch or malt extract.
Full text
NY 896373 April 7, 1994 CLA-2-19:S:N:N7:228 896373 CATEGORY: Classification TARIFF NO.: 1901.90.9060 Mr. Michael K. Oduro 703 N. Fifth Avenue #1 Ann Arbor, MI 48104 RE: The tariff classification of "Vitalmix" from Ghana Dear Mr. Oduro: In your letter dated March 24, 1994 you requested a tariff classification ruling. A sample, submitted with your letter, was opened, examined and disposed of. "Vitalmix" is a light brown powder, said to be a mixture of 50 percent maize, 30 percent sorghum, 10 percent cowpeas, and 10 percent groundnuts, put up for retail sale in a plastic bag containing 500 grams, net weight. The product will be used as an ingredient in the preparation of porridge, soups, stews, bread, biscuits, cakes, and other foods. The applicable subheading for the Vitalmix will be 1901.90.9060, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for food preparations of flour, meal, starch or malt extract...other... other...put up for retail sale. The duty rate will be 10 percent ad valorem. Articles classifiable under subheading 1901.90.9060, HTS, which are products of Ghana are entitled to duty free treatment under the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) upon compliance with all applicable regulations. 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
More rulings on the same tariff codes
Classification of Chocolate Pudding Mix - Reconsideration of NYRL 845783, dated October 1989
The tariff classification of bean thread from China
The tariff classification of food products from Canada
Modification of Headquarters Ruling Letter 084095; Frozen spring rolls
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 →