China Import Tariffs 2026: What FBA Sellers Actually Pay

Reviewed and updated July 5, 2026. Tariff policy is moving fast this summer; the dates that matter are July 24 and November 10, 2026, and this guide is built around them.

If you import from China, the question is no longer “are there tariffs?” but “which layers apply to my product, and what do they add up to?” We clear China-to-USA freight every week for Amazon FBA sellers, and the same confusion comes up in almost every quote request: sellers know a number like “25%” exists, but not how the layers stack, which ones are about to change, or how to price a landed cost they can trust. This guide walks through the full 2026 tariff stack, with worked examples and the two deadlines that will reshape it.

The 2026 tariff stack at a glance

A single product imported from China can carry several tariff layers at once, stacked on top of the normal HTS duty rate for its classification. As of July 2026:

Layer Rate Applies to Status
Base HTS duty 0% to ~10% typical Everything, by 10-digit HTS code Permanent
Section 301 25% most manufactured goods; 100% EVs; 50% solar cells and semiconductors China-origin goods on Lists 1 to 4A Active; 178 exclusions run to Nov 10, 2026
Section 122 10% global surcharge (15% on some electronics) Nearly all imports Expires July 24, 2026 unless Congress extends it
Section 232 50% Steel and aluminum content Active

Across all layers, the average effective tariff rate on Chinese goods sits near 24% in mid-2026, per the Penn Wharton Budget Model. Your product’s real number depends entirely on its HTS classification, which is why professional customs brokerage pays for itself: a wrong code either overpays duties or invites a CBP penalty.

Section 301: the China-specific layer

Section 301 tariffs are the backbone of China-specific duties and they are not going anywhere. Most manufactured goods on Lists 1 through 4A carry 25%. Strategic categories run far higher: electric vehicles at 100%, solar cells and semiconductors at 50%.

The one moving part is the exclusion list. Following the November 2025 US-China trade agreement, the 178 active product exclusions were extended to November 10, 2026. They cover items like solar manufacturing equipment, machinery components, plastic films, electric motors, and certain medical devices. If your product rides one of these exclusions, that date is your planning horizon: no new exclusion process is currently open, so treat November 10 as a hard deadline for sourcing decisions.

Section 122: the 10% surcharge on a deadline

The 10% global surcharge imposed under Section 122 is the layer most likely to change between now and August. Two forces are working against it at once:

  • It expires by statute on July 24, 2026. Section 122 authority is capped at 150 days without Congressional extension, and as of early July no extension bill is moving.
  • A federal court already struck it down. On May 7, 2026 the US Court of International Trade invalidated the Section 122 tariffs, though the injunction only covers the three plaintiff importers while the government’s appeal proceeds. Everyone else keeps paying for now.

Do not celebrate the expiry date yet. The administration has signaled that new Section 301 investigations are timed to conclude before July 24, positioning replacement tariffs to slot in as the surcharge lapses. Practically: build your Q3 landed costs with the 10% in place, and treat any post-July savings as upside rather than a plan.

Section 232 and the product-specific layers

Steel and aluminum imports carry a 50% Section 232 tariff, which makes steel-and-aluminum products the most heavily tariffed category of all: the effective rate on that category is about 41% once all layers and exemptions wash out. If your product contains significant steel or aluminum content, the metal content itself can be assessed separately from the finished-good classification. This is exactly the kind of entry we review line-by-line before filing.

Worked examples: what a $10,000 shipment actually pays

Example 1: consumer electronics accessories, $10,000 commercial value. Many electronics ride List 4A at 7.5% Section 301 rather than 25%, but currently pay a higher 15% Section 122 surcharge. Stack: base HTS duty (often 0% for electronics) + 7.5% + 15% = roughly 22.5%, or $2,250 in tariffs before fees.

Example 2: kitchen housewares, $10,000 commercial value. Typical stack: base HTS duty ~3% + Section 301 at 25% + Section 122 at 10% = roughly 38%, or $3,800. This is the math that surprises sellers who budgeted “25%”.

Both examples exclude the fixed costs of entry: merchandise processing fee, harbor maintenance fee, bond, and broker fees. On smaller shipments those fixed costs matter proportionally more, which is one reason consolidated ocean freight beats many small parcels since the de minimis exemption ended.

How FBA sellers keep landed costs predictable

Tariff math is exactly why DDP shipping from China to the USA has become the default for FBA sellers we work with. Under DDP (Delivered Duty Paid), your quote already includes duties, tariffs, clearance, and delivery to Amazon’s warehouse. The tariff risk sits with us, priced once, instead of arriving as a surprise CBP bill while your inventory waits at the port.

Three things make DDP work honestly (and separate real providers from the gray-market ones): correct HTS classification up front, a forwarder who files formal entries under your importer ID, and transparent quoting that shows the duty component. We have run our own FBA prep warehouse since 2016, so the same shipment that clears customs also arrives labeled and Amazon-compliant.

If you are comparing providers, our guide to choosing an Amazon FBA freight forwarder in the USA covers the questions that expose weak operators, tariffs included.

What to watch next

  • July 24, 2026: Section 122 expires absent Congressional action. Watch for replacement Section 301 actions announced around the same window.
  • November 10, 2026: the 178 Section 301 exclusions lapse. If you depend on one, lock sourcing alternatives before Q4.
  • The Federal Circuit appeal on the May 7 CIT ruling: a government loss could reopen refund questions for Section 122 duties already paid. Keep your entry records.

We update this guide as the rules change. If you want your specific product’s landed cost calculated with current rates, request a quote and include your product description or HTS code; we will price it DDP so the tariff line is our problem, not your surprise.