Lubricating preparations (including cutting-oil preparations, bolt or nut release preparations, antirust or anticorrosion preparations and mold release preparations, based on lubricants) and preparations of a kind used for the oil or grease treatment of textile materials, leather, furskins or other materials, but excluding preparations containing, as basic constituents, 70 percent or more by weight of petroleum oils or oils obtained from bituminous minerals:
HTS 3403 (Lubricating preparations) classifies this product in the US Harmonized Tariff Schedule. Country of origin can add Section 301, Section 232, or IEEPA measures; use the calculator for total duty.
Lubricating preparations (including cutting-oil preparations, bolt or nut release preparations, antirust or anticorrosion preparations and mold release preparations, based on lubricants) and preparations of a kind used for the oil or grease treatment of textile materials, leather, furskins or other materials, but excluding preparations containing, as basic constituents, 70 percent or more by weight of petroleum oils or oils obtained from bituminous minerals:
How the 10.0% is built.
-
1Apply base HTS rateColumn 1 General (MFN) or Special (FTA)
-
2Add Section 301 (if origin qualifies)Chapter 99 subheading layered on
-
3Add IEEPA / 232 surchargesCountry-scoped emergency measures
-
4Add MPF & HMF feesApplied to entered value
Rate by country of origin
Same HTS, very different landed cost. Here's how 3403 looks from the top trading partners — on a $10,000 shipment.
Citations for 3403
FAQ for this HTS code.
What is this HTS code?
This is a US Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) code that classifies "Lubricating preparations (including cutting-oil preparations, bolt or nut release preparations, antirust or anticorrosion preparations and mold release preparations, based on lubricants) and preparations of a kind used for the oil or grease treatment of textile materials, leather, furskins or other materials, but excluding preparations containing, as basic constituents, 70 percent or more by weight of petroleum oils or oils obtained from bituminous minerals:". It determines base duty rates for imports; additional duties may apply by country of origin.
Does origin affect duty?
Yes. General and Special rates apply by trade agreement and origin. Additional duties (Section 301, 232, IEEPA) are origin-specific. Use the tariff calculator or resolve API with an origin to see full duty.
How do I compute total duty?
Use our tariff calculator (with HTS and optional origin) or the API endpoint GET /api/v1/tariffs/resolve with hts and origin. The API returns base tariffs and additional measures separately; sum as needed for your use case.
Tariff programs explained
Temporary and additional duty provisions that stack on top of a base HTS code.
China-origin tariffs (commonly +7.5% to +25%) added on top of the base rate.
National-security tariffs on steel, aluminum, autos, and other covered goods.
Emergency tariffs by country of origin, including reciprocal and fentanyl measures.