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Glossary

The vocabulary of global trade compliance.

Plain-English explainers for the HS, HTS, customs, and export-control regulations TariffWolf handles every day — covering tariff classification, ECCN, EAR, EAR99, ITAR, EU dual-use, deemed exports, customs procedures (clearance, warehousing, transit, inward and outward processing, temporary admission, ATA carnet), rules of origin, USMCA, CTPAT, AEO, and restricted-party / OFAC screening.

46 terms across 8 categories
HS & HTS classification

The Harmonized System, in plain English.

Reference notes on harmonized system codes, HTS classification, tariff nomenclature, and how tariff classification actually works in production.

Harmonized System (HS) HS

The Harmonized System — formally the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System — is the international product nomenclature maintained by the World Customs Organization (WCO). The harmonized system code meaning is straightforward: every traded product has a 6-digit HS code recognized in 200+ countries. Beyond the first six digits each country extends the code (8 or 10 digits) to its own tariff schedule.

Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) HTS

The Harmonized Tariff Schedule is the United States’ national extension of the HS — a 10-digit classification system used by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to determine duty rates. An HTS code (sometimes referenced as a 10-digit harmonized tariff schedule HTS code) is what actually drives the duty bill on every U.S. import. HTS code lookup, harmonized tariff schedule search, and HTS classification are the day-to-day verbs of import compliance.

Tariff classification in practice Tariff Classification

A correct tariff classification number drives duty rates, free-trade-agreement eligibility (USMCA, EU FTAs, RCEP), and customs valuation. Every HS tariff classification number lookup needs to consider product description, function, material, intended use, and the General Rules of Interpretation (GRIs). TariffWolf automates the lookup, but expert reviewers validate every borderline case before the answer leaves the platform.

Tariff nomenclature, headings & subheadings Nomenclature

A tariff nomenclature is the classification and coding system a customs administration uses to designate commodities for tariff purposes. Most jurisdictions base their nomenclature on the WCO’s HS Nomenclature, organized into Sections and Chapters with General Rules of Interpretation. A tariff heading (or subheading) is the textual designation of a single commodity or group of related commodities, identified by a numeric code — the basic unit of every customs declaration.

Country-specific HTS extensions (8 / 10-digit) HTS Extensions

Beyond the WCO’s 6-digit HS code, every customs authority extends the number further. The U.S. uses a 10-digit Harmonized Tariff Schedule administered by CBP; the EU uses an 8-digit Combined Nomenclature plus a 10-digit TARIC; India uses an 8-digit ITC(HS); China uses a 10-digit code. The first six digits stay the same worldwide; the country extension drives the actual duty rate, FTA eligibility, and statistical reporting.

HS Convention & the World Customs Organization HS Convention

The HS Convention — formally the International Convention on the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System — was adopted by the Customs Co-operation Council in 1988. It is administered by the World Customs Organization (WCO) in Brussels. Member countries commit to using the HS as the basis of their tariff and trade-statistics nomenclatures, which is why one HS heading means the same product anywhere in the world.

Sector examples we classify daily Sector

Harmonized system code for clothing: garments fall in HS Chapters 61 (knitted/crocheted) and 62 (not knitted), with material composition driving sub-heading. Dietary supplements HS code: typically Heading 2106 (food preparations) but can shift to Chapter 30 if a therapeutic claim is made. HS code for shipment on industrial machinery commonly lands in Chapters 84/85, with ECCN review required for dual-use components.

Customs tariff number & duty assessment Customs Tariff

The customs tariff number on an entry is what triggers the assessment of duties and taxes — the determination of how much is payable. Wrong number, wrong duty bill: under-pay and you owe back-duty plus interest plus penalty; over-pay and you have quietly handed margin to the customs authority. Every entry sits on a defensible classification — whether the duty is ad-valorem (calculated on value) or specific (calculated on weight, volume, or count).

Export control — ECCN, EAR, EAR99

The U.S. dual-use export-control regime.

Plain-English explainers for the EAR, the Commerce Control List, ECCN classification, EAR99, BIS licensing, and license exceptions.

EAR — Export Administration Regulations EAR

The Export Administration Regulations (EAR) are the U.S. commercial export control rules administered by the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS). The EAR govern the export, re-export, and in-country transfer of dual-use items — goods, software, and technology that have both commercial and military or proliferation potential. Every item subject to the EAR is classified against the Commerce Control List (CCL).

ECCN — Export Control Classification Number ECCN

An Export Control Classification Number (ECCN) — also called an ECCN code, ECCN number, export commodity control number, or simply ECCN — is a five-character alphanumeric designation (for example 3A001 or 5A992.c) used on the CCL. It identifies a specific category of dual-use item and drives whether a license is required for a given destination, end-user, and end-use.

EAR99 — the catch-all classification EAR99

EAR99 is the designation given to items subject to the EAR but not listed on the Commerce Control List. Most low-tech consumer goods are EAR99. EAR99 items can typically be exported without a license — except when the destination is embargoed, the end-user is on a restricted list, or the end-use raises a red flag.

Commerce Control List (CCL) CCL

The Commerce Control List is the master inventory of dual-use items subject to the EAR. The CCL is divided into ten categories (0 through 9) — from nuclear materials to telecommunications — and five product groups (A through E). Every line on the CCL is paired with one or more Reasons for Control (national security, anti-terrorism, missile technology, etc.) that drive licensing requirements country-by-country.

BIS — Bureau of Industry and Security BIS

The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) is the U.S. Department of Commerce agency that administers and enforces the EAR. BIS issues BIS export licenses, maintains the Entity List, the Denied Persons List, the Unverified List, and Military End-User List, and runs end-use checks. Most U.S. dual-use export questions ultimately end up on a BIS desk.

Export licenses & license exceptions License

An export license is the written authorization a regulator issues for a controlled shipment. Under the EAR, BIS reviews license applications against destination, end-user, and end-use; under ITAR, DDTC issues defense-article licenses; under the EU Dual-Use Regulation, member-state competent authorities issue dual-use licenses. License exceptions (TMP, STA, GOV, RPL, ENC, etc.) allow specific shipments to move without an individual license when defined conditions are met.

ITAR & defense exports

Defense articles, USML, and DDTC.

How the International Traffic in Arms Regulations work, where the U.S. Munitions List ends, and how to tell ITAR from EAR.

ITAR — International Traffic in Arms Regulations ITAR

The International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR, sometimes written ITARs or international traffic and arms regulations) govern defense articles and defense services on the U.S. Munitions List (USML). ITAR is administered by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC) at the U.S. Department of State. ITAR controls are stricter than EAR controls and apply to a narrower, defense-focused product set.

USML — U.S. Munitions List USML

The U.S. Munitions List is the catalog of defense articles, defense services, and related technical data subject to ITAR. Categories I through XXI cover everything from firearms to spacecraft systems. If a product is on the USML, ITAR jurisdiction applies and DDTC controls the export — full stop. Items previously on the USML that have transferred to the EAR (the so-called “600 series” and “500 series”) are an important nuance worth a separate jurisdictional review.

DDTC — Directorate of Defense Trade Controls DDTC

The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (DDTC), part of the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, administers ITAR. DDTC registers manufacturers, brokers, and exporters of defense articles, issues licenses, processes commodity-jurisdiction (CJ) requests, and enforces compliance. If your item is potentially USML, DDTC is the regulator that signs off.

ITAR vs EAR — which regime applies? ITAR · EAR

A core question in any U.S. export-control compliance program: is your item subject to ITAR (defense, USML, DDTC) or to the EAR (dual-use, CCL, BIS)? The two regulators, license logic, and reporting obligations differ. TariffWolf runs a side-by-side jurisdictional analysis on every classified item so you can document the determination defensibly.

Dual-use & multi-jurisdiction

Beyond the U.S. — EU, India, China, UK.

How dual-use frameworks line up across jurisdictions, plus the specific concept of deemed exports.

Dual-use items & EU Dual-Use Regulation Dual-Use

Dual-use items are goods, software, and technology with both civilian and potential military or proliferation applications. The U.S. controls dual-use items under the EAR/CCL; the EU controls them under the EU Dual-Use Regulation (Annex I, Regulation (EU) 2021/821). TariffWolf maps every classification across both frameworks so a single SKU can be cleared globally.

Deemed exports & technology control plans Deemed Export

A deemed export happens when controlled technology or source code is released to a foreign national inside the United States — that release is “deemed” an export to the person’s country of nationality. Compliance teams typically address this with a written technology control plan covering access, training, and segregation. The Workbench surfaces deemed-export risk before it occurs.

Multi-jurisdiction export control Multi-jurisdiction

Outside the U.S. several frameworks need attention: India’s SCOMET (Special Chemicals, Organisms, Materials, Equipment & Technology) administered by DGFT; China’s Export Control Law with its dual-use catalog; the UK’s regime under the Export Control Joint Unit (ECJU); the Canadian Export Control List; and member-state implementations of the EU Dual-Use Regulation. A modern compliance program clears the same product against all of them.

Sanctions & restricted parties

OFAC, watchlists, and customs offences.

The screening obligations that overlay every export — even when an ECCN says “no license required”.

Restricted-party screening & OFAC sanctions RPS · OFAC

Even with a correct ECCN and a valid license, an export can still be illegal if the counterparty is sanctioned. Restricted-party screening checks every party in a transaction against OFAC SDN, BIS Entity / Denied / Unverified / Military End-User lists, the EU consolidated list, UK OFSI, UN, the Canadian Export Control List, and proprietary watchlists.

Smuggling & customs offences Offence

Per the WCO, smuggling is the customs offence of moving goods across a customs frontier in any clandestine manner, evading customs control. Customs fraud is the broader concept: any deception of customs to evade duty, taxes, prohibitions, or restrictions, or to obtain an unentitled benefit. Both are addressed under the WCO’s Nairobi Convention on mutual administrative assistance for the prevention, investigation, and repression of customs offences.

Embargo, sanctions & export restrictions Sanctions

Export restrictions include comprehensive embargoes (Iran, Cuba, North Korea, Syria, the Crimea/DNR/LNR regions of Ukraine), sectoral sanctions (Russia, Belarus), and item-specific controls. They overlay the EAR/ITAR/EU regimes — a license that would otherwise be valid can be refused on sanctions grounds. Active sanctions monitoring is a non-negotiable part of any export-compliance program.

Customs procedures

The treatments customs applies to your goods.

WCO Kyoto Convention terms: clearance, warehousing, transit, inward and outward processing, temporary admission, and re-importation.

Customs procedure (overview) Procedure

A customs procedure is the treatment customs applies to goods under its control. Major procedures defined under the WCO’s revised Kyoto Convention include clearance for home use, customs warehousing, inward processing, outward processing, temporary admission, customs transit, and transhipment. The right procedure controls the duty bill.

Goods declaration & customs declaration Declaration

A goods declaration (also referred to as a customs declaration) is the statement by which the declarant indicates the customs procedure to be applied to goods and furnishes the particulars customs requires. Modern customs administrations accept goods declarations electronically through Single Window facilities; the WCO Data Model standardizes the data elements involved.

Customs clearance & release of goods Clearance

Customs clearance is the accomplishment of customs formalities necessary to allow goods to enter home use, to be exported, or to be placed under another customs procedure. Release of goods is the action by which customs permits the goods undergoing clearance to be placed at the disposal of the persons concerned — the moment when paperwork becomes a shipment.

Clearance for home use Home Use

Clearance for home use is the customs procedure by which imported goods enter into free circulation in the customs territory upon payment of any import duties and taxes chargeable, and the accomplishment of all other customs formalities. After clearance for home use, goods are in free circulation and may be disposed of without further customs restriction.

Customs warehousing procedure Warehousing

The customs warehousing procedure allows imported goods to be stored under customs control in a designated place — a customs warehouse — without payment of import duties and taxes. Public customs warehouses serve general use; private customs warehouses are restricted to specified persons. Duty becomes payable when the goods are released for home use.

Customs transit Transit

Customs transit is the procedure under which goods are transported under customs control from one customs office to another — through transit, inward transit, outward transit, or interior transit. Transit is dealt with under the revised Kyoto Convention and the TIR Convention (Customs Convention on the international transport of goods under cover of TIR carnets, 1975).

Inward processing Inward Processing

Inward processing is the customs procedure under which certain goods can be brought into a customs territory conditionally relieved from import duties and taxes, on the basis that the goods are intended for manufacturing, processing, or repair and subsequent re-exportation. The resulting compensating products are typically re-exported.

Outward processing Outward Processing

Outward processing is the mirror procedure: goods in free circulation are temporarily exported for manufacturing, processing, or repair abroad, then re-imported with total or partial exemption from import duties and taxes on the value added abroad. Common in repair-and-return and global manufacturing supply chains.

Temporary admission & ATA Carnet Temporary Admission

Temporary admission is the customs procedure that allows goods to be brought into a customs territory conditionally relieved from import duties and taxes, on the basis that they are imported for a specific purpose and are intended for re-exportation within a specified period. The ATA Carnet, issued under the Istanbul Convention and the ATA Convention, is the international customs document used as security for temporary admission and, where appropriate, transit.

Re-importation & re-exportation Re-import · Re-export

Re-importation is the importation into a customs territory of goods previously exported from that territory. Re-importation in the same state is duty-free if the goods have not undergone manufacturing, processing, or repair abroad. Re-exportation is the corresponding outbound concept: exportation of goods previously imported.

Origin & FTAs

Where goods come from, and what that’s worth.

Country of origin, rules of origin, certificates, USMCA, CTPAT, and the substantial-transformation test.

Country of origin of goods Origin

Country of origin is the country in which goods have been produced or manufactured, according to the criteria laid down for the application of the customs tariff, quantitative restrictions, or any other trade-related measure. “Country” here may include a group of countries, a region, or part of a country — the WCO definition is deliberately flexible.

Rules of origin Rules of Origin

Rules of origin are the specific provisions, developed from principles in national legislation or international agreements, that a country uses to determine the origin of goods. They distinguish between non-preferential rules (used for general MFN treatment, anti-dumping, statistics) and preferential rules (used to qualify for FTA benefits like USMCA).

Certificate of origin COO

A certificate of origin is a specific form, issued by an authority or body empowered to do so, certifying that the goods to which it relates originate in a specific country. It may include a declaration by the manufacturer, producer, supplier, or exporter. Free-trade agreements typically have their own COO format and self-certification regime.

Substantial transformation criterion Substantial Transformation

The substantial transformation criterion is the rule by which origin is determined by regarding as the country of origin the country in which the last substantial manufacturing or processing — sufficient to give the commodity its essential character — has been carried out. It is the standard non-preferential origin test in U.S. customs law.

USMCA & free-trade agreements USMCA · FTA

A correct HS classification is the entry point to USMCA compliance and every other free-trade-agreement preferential rate. Get the HS heading wrong and you can lose duty preference, trigger reclassification by customs, and face penalties on retroactive shipments. Expert reviewers cross-check origin rules of every classification we issue.

CTPAT & supply-chain security CTPAT

CTPAT compliance (Customs–Trade Partnership Against Terrorism) is a voluntary U.S. supply-chain security program. CTPAT-certified importers and brokers benefit from reduced inspections and faster border processing. We integrate CTPAT-aligned data discipline into every classification project.

Trade facilitation & compliance

The infrastructure of global trade compliance.

Trade compliance, AEO, post-clearance audit, customs valuation, the Single Window, and risk management.

Trade compliance (overview) Trade Compliance

Trade compliance is the discipline of meeting customs, export, and sanctions obligations across every cross-border transaction. It includes HS classification, HTS classification, ECCN determination, ITAR jurisdiction, EAR licensing, and restricted-party screening — applied across multiple jurisdictions for the same product flow. Global trade compliance is the same discipline at multinational scale.

Authorized Economic Operator (AEO) AEO

An Authorized Economic Operator is a party in the international supply chain — manufacturer, importer, exporter, broker, carrier, consolidator, port, terminal operator, warehouse, distributor, or freight forwarder — that has been approved by a national customs administration as complying with the WCO SAFE Framework or equivalent supply-chain security standards. AEO status typically buys faster clearance and reduced examinations.

Audit-grade compliance & post-clearance audit Audit

Every classification, license, and screening decision is traceable to a primary source, attributed to a reviewer, and timestamped — defensible to an auditor or a regulator after the fact. Audit-grade compliance is the difference between “probably correct” and survivable under examination. The WCO addresses this through audit-based control and post-clearance audit (PCA) standards.

Customs valuation & transaction value Valuation

Customs valuation is the determination of the value used to compute ad-valorem duties. The WTO Valuation Agreement (Article VII of GATT 1994) sets the methodology, with transaction value — the price actually paid or payable for the goods when sold for export, adjusted under Article 8 — as the prime method. Transfer pricing is a related concept for related-party transactions.

Single Window Single Window

A Single Window is a facility that allows parties involved in trade and transport to lodge standardized information and documents with a single entry point to fulfill all import, export, and transit-related regulatory requirements. If the information is electronic, individual data elements should only be submitted once. UN/CEFACT Recommendation No. 33 sets the standard.

Risk management & customs control Risk

Risk management in customs is the coordinated activity by administrations to direct and control risk — to apply controls where they matter and let low-risk shipments move freely. Risk analysis uses available information to determine how often defined risks may occur and the magnitude of their consequences. Customs control is the broader set of measures applied to ensure compliance with customs law.

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