How the HS code lookup works

A 30-second AI classifier that reads your product description, matches it against the WCO Harmonized System schedule using the General Rules of Interpretation, and returns the top-3 candidate codes with live EU, US and UK duty rates.

  1. 1

    Describe the product

    Type a clear product description — include material, function, and intended use. Example: 'cotton men's t-shirt, knitted, short sleeve'.

  2. 2

    Review the top-3 candidate HS codes

    The AI returns the three most likely HS codes with a confidence score, the official heading title, and the GRI rule that applies.

  3. 3

    Check duty rates for your destination market

    Each candidate shows live MFN duty rates for the EU (TARIC), US (USITC HTS) and UK (Global Tariff). Pick the code that fits your shipment.

  4. 4

    Verify against the official tariff database

    For high-volume or borderline cases, use the linked TARIC, USITC or HMRC ruling to confirm the chosen code before declaring on a customs entry.

Popular HS code lookups

The most-searched products in our HS code reference. Each page shows the verified 2026 EU TARIC, US HTS and UK Global Tariff duty rates with links to official rulings.

Browse all HS code categories or use the HS code validator to check whether an existing code is current.

HS code, HTS code, CN code, commodity code — what's the difference?

The first 6 digits are identical worldwide; the rest depends on the destination country. This lookup tool returns the right code for whichever market you're shipping to.

🌍HS code (international)

6 digits. Maintained by the WCO. The base of every national tariff.

🇺🇸HTS code (United States)

10 digits. Maintained by USITC. Used by US Customs (CBP) for duty assessment and Section 301 tariffs.

🇪🇺CN code (European Union)

8 digits. Maintained by Eurostat / DG TAXUD. Used in the EU TARIC database for the 27 member states.

🇬🇧Commodity code (UK)

10 digits. Published in the UK Trade Tariff (HMRC) under the UK Global Tariff post-Brexit.

📑TARIC code (EU full)

10–11 digits. The CN code plus EU-wide measures (anti-dumping, suspensions, quotas).

🏷️Tariff code

Generic catch-all term — usually means the country-specific extended code (HTS, CN, commodity).

Frequently asked questions

Everything you need to know about Harmonized System codes, how they're structured, and how to use them for cross-border customs declarations.

What is an HS code?+
An HS code (Harmonized System code) is a standardised 6-digit number used by customs authorities worldwide to classify traded goods. Every product imported or exported across a border must be assigned an HS code to determine the applicable duty rate, import restrictions, and trade statistics. The system is maintained by the World Customs Organization (WCO) and used by over 200 countries.
How do I find the HS code for my product?+
Enter a description of your product in the lookup tool above. The AI analyses the product characteristics and matches them against the Harmonized System schedule using the General Rules of Interpretation (GRI). You'll receive the top-3 most likely HS codes with confidence scores, duty rates for EU, US, and UK, and an explanation of why each code applies.
Are HS codes the same in every country?+
The first 6 digits are internationally standardised — identical in every country. Beyond 6 digits, countries add their own extensions: the EU uses 8-digit CN codes, the US uses 10-digit HTS codes, and the UK uses 10-digit commodity codes under the UK Global Tariff. When classifying for a specific market, you need the full national code, not just the 6-digit HS code.
What is the difference between an HS code and an HTS code?+
An HS code is the international 6-digit base code maintained by the World Customs Organization. An HTS code (Harmonized Tariff Schedule code) is the US-specific 10-digit extension used by the USITC. The first 6 digits of an HTS code always match the corresponding HS code — the extra 4 digits are used to set specific US duty rates and track trade statistics.
How often do HS codes change?+
The WCO revises the Harmonized System every 5 years. The most recent revision was HS 2022 (effective January 1, 2022), which added new headings for electric vehicles, smartphones, and other modern products. Individual countries may also update their national extensions more frequently. Always verify your code against the current edition of the tariff schedule.