E81497 E8 Ruling Active

The tariff classification of footwear from Brazil

Issued May 10, 1999 by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

Tariff classification

HTS codes: 6404.20.40

Headings: 6404

Product description

The submitted sample, Style BR06S, is a woman’s ballroom dance shoe, with a 3 inch high heel and a T-strap side buckle closure. The shoe has a satiny textile upper and a suede leather outer sole. You provide a lab report which states that as a percentage by weight, the rubber, plastic and textile component materials that are present in this shoe equal 45.60%, metal is 18.7%, leather is 10.86%, fiberboard is 24.67% and misc.(cement) is .17%. Past Customs rulings have held that the weight of the adhesive cement is to be included with the rubber/plastic component weights. Based on the submitted lab report, the weight breakdown percentage total for the textile, rubber and plastics components in this shoe is therefore presumed to be 45.77%. The accuracy of these component weight breakdown figures will be subject to verification at the time of actual importation by Customs at the ports of entry.

CBP rationale

The applicable subheading for this shoe, Style BR06S, will be 6404.20.40, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for footwear, in which the upper's external surface is predominately textile materials; in which the outer sole's external surface is predominately leather or composition leather; which is, by weight, not over 50% as a total of textile materials, rubber and plastics; and which is, we presume, valued over $2.

Full text

NY E81497 May 10, 1999 CLA-2-64:RR:NC:TA:347 E81497 CATEGORY: Classification TARIFF NO.: 6404.20.40 Mr. Charles G.Hartill Charles G. Hartill, LCHB 147-217, 175 St. Jamaica, NY 11434 RE: The tariff classification of footwear from Brazil Dear Mr. Hartill: In your letter dated April 26, 1999, on behalf of Ballet Makers, Inc., you requested a tariff classification ruling. The submitted sample, Style BR06S, is a woman’s ballroom dance shoe, with a 3 inch high heel and a T-strap side buckle closure. The shoe has a satiny textile upper and a suede leather outer sole. You provide a lab report which states that as a percentage by weight, the rubber, plastic and textile component materials that are present in this shoe equal 45.60%, metal is 18.7%, leather is 10.86%, fiberboard is 24.67% and misc.(cement) is .17%. Past Customs rulings have held that the weight of the adhesive cement is to be included with the rubber/plastic component weights. Based on the submitted lab report, the weight breakdown percentage total for the textile, rubber and plastics components in this shoe is therefore presumed to be 45.77%. The accuracy of these component weight breakdown figures will be subject to verification at the time of actual importation by Customs at the ports of entry. The applicable subheading for this shoe, Style BR06S, will be 6404.20.40, Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), which provides for footwear, in which the upper's external surface is predominately textile materials; in which the outer sole's external surface is predominately leather or composition leather; which is, by weight, not over 50% as a total of textile materials, rubber and plastics; and which is, we presume, valued over $2.50 per pair. The rate of duty will be 10% ad valorem. This ruling is being issued under the provisions of Part 177 of the Customs Regulations (19 C.F.R. 177). A copy of the ruling or the control number indicated above should be provided with the entry documents filed at the time this merchandise is imported. If you have any questions regarding the ruling, contact National Import Specialist Richard Foley at 212-637-7089. Sincerely, Robert B. Swierupski Director, National Commodity Specialist Division

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 →