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Outils

Recherche de code HS

Recherchez le code tarifaire harmonisé (HS) des produits courants — vêtements, électronique, chaussures, alimentation et plus encore. Les codes à 6-digit sont valides dans le monde entier et vous permettent d'estimer précisément les droits d'importation.

47 correspondances — affichage des 12 premières

  • T-shirt (cotton)Vêtements

    T-shirts, singlets and vests, knitted, of cotton

  • Jeans / trousers (cotton)Vêtements

    Men's or boys' trousers and shorts, of cotton

  • Sweater / pullover (cotton)Vêtements

    Jerseys, pullovers, cardigans, knitted, of cotton

  • Women's trousers (cotton)Vêtements

    Women's or girls' trousers and shorts, of cotton

  • Jacket / anorak (man-made)Vêtements

    Men's anoraks, windcheaters of man-made fibres

  • Hat / capVêtements

    Hats and other headgear, knitted or made up from fabric

  • Sneakers / sports shoesChaussures et sacs

    Sports footwear with textile uppers and rubber/plastic soles

  • Leather shoesChaussures et sacs

    Footwear with leather uppers, other

  • Handbag (leather)Chaussures et sacs

    Handbags with outer surface of leather

  • Backpack (textile)Chaussures et sacs

    Travel bags, backpacks with outer surface of textile materials

  • Suitcase / luggageChaussures et sacs

    Trunks, suitcases with outer surface of plastic or textile

  • SmartphoneÉlectronique

    Smartphones (telephones for cellular networks)

Vous avez votre code ? Estimez les droits et taxes que vous paierez dessus.

Calculateur de droits de douane →

Les 6 premiers chiffres affichés sont harmonisés dans le monde entier. Les pays de destination ajoutent 2 à 4 chiffres supplémentaires pour le taux de droit exact — confirmez le code complet auprès du tarif douanier du pays importateur avant d’expédier.

Every parcel that crosses a border needs an HS code — the commodity code customs uses to work out duty, tax and whether the goods are restricted. Get it wrong and the package can be delayed, inspected or over-charged. Search the product below to find its internationally-valid 6-digit code, then use it to estimate your import charges.

How to find the right code

  1. 1
    Search the product

    Type what the item actually is — “running shoes”, “smartphone”, “roasted coffee”. You can also type the first digits of a code you already have.

  2. 2
    Match the description

    Read the tariff description next to each result. HS codes classify by material and use, so “cotton t-shirt” and “wool sweater” sit under different headings.

  3. 3
    Take the 6-digit code

    Copy the 6-digit HS code. It is valid worldwide and is the root of every country’s longer tariff number.

  4. 4
    Add the country digits

    Look the 6-digit code up in the destination country’s tariff (US HTS, EU TARIC, UK Global Tariff) to get the full code and the exact duty rate.

How an HS code is built

61chapter·09heading·10subheading

Reading 6109.10 left to right: chapter 61 (knitted apparel), heading 6109 (T-shirts & vests), subheading 6109.10 (of cotton). Each pair of digits narrows the product down.

Why the code matters

The HS code is the single biggest factor in how much duty you pay — two similar-looking products can carry very different rates. It also drives customs clearance speed: a clear, correct code lets a parcel be assessed automatically, while a missing or vague one flags it for manual review. For sellers it decides landed cost and margin; for shoppers it’s the difference between a smooth delivery and a surprise bill at the door.

Frequently asked

What is an HS code?
HS stands for Harmonized System — a global product classification maintained by the World Customs Organization. Every traded product has a 6-digit HS code that customs authorities use to decide the duty rate and any restrictions. The first 6 digits are the same in every country, which is why this lookup works internationally.
What is the difference between an HS code, an HTS code and a commodity code?
They share the same first 6 digits. “HS code” is the 6-digit international root. Countries then add more digits for their own tariff: the US calls its 10-digit version an HTS code, the EU uses a 10-digit TARIC code, and the UK uses a 10-digit commodity code. Start with the HS code here, then look up the extra digits in the destination country’s tariff.
How many digits do I actually need?
For a customs declaration you usually need the full country code — 8 digits for exports, 10 for imports in most countries. The 6-digit HS code shown here is enough to find the right heading and get a duty estimate; add the country-specific digits before you file the actual paperwork.
What happens if I use the wrong HS code?
An incorrect code can mean paying too much duty, having a parcel held or inspected at customs, or — if customs sees it as under-declaration — fines. When in doubt, use the official Binding Tariff Information service in the destination country or ask a customs broker to confirm.
Is this lookup official?
No — it’s a quick reference covering the products people import most often, accurate to the 6-digit subheading. It is not legal classification advice. Always verify the full code against the importing country’s official tariff schedule before declaring goods.
FAQ

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