Importing Jewelry & Precious Metals to the US
Duty Rates for Jewelry & Precious Metals Imports
5%–13.5% MFN
Duty rates for jewelry & precious metals vary significantly by specific product type, material, and country of origin. The rates above represent the typical range — use the HTS classifier to get the exact rate for your specific product.
HTS Chapters
- Chapter 71 — Precious Metals, Jewelry
Common HTS Code Headings
Classify Your Jewelry & Precious Metals Product
Enter your product description and origin to get the exact HTS code, duty rate, and Section 301 status.
Regulatory Requirements for Jewelry & Precious Metals Imports
Beyond standard CBP duties, jewelry & precious metals imports may require:
- Kimberley Process for diamonds
- CBP reasonable care valuation
- Conflict minerals reporting (3TG for gold)
- AML compliance for high-value shipments
Common Pitfalls
- Undervaluation (CBP audits common)
- Diamond certification gaps
- Gold purity and content classification
- Anti-dumping on diamond jewelry from India
Check All Compliance Requirements
Track FDA, USDA, CPSC, EPA, and CBP requirements for your jewelry & precious metals product catalog.
How Country of Origin Affects Jewelry & Precious Metals Duty Rates
The country where your jewelry & precious metals are manufactured significantly impacts your total duty burden:
| Origin Country | Trade Agreement | Section 301 | Est. Total Duty |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇮🇳 India | GSP (suspended) | None | 0% (GSP (suspended)) |
| 🇨🇳 China | None | +7.5%–25% on most goods | MFN + S301 |
| 🇹🇭 Thailand | GSP (partial) | None | 0% (GSP (partial)) |
| 🇮🇹 Italy | None | None | MFN Rate |
| 🇨🇭 Switzerland | None | None | MFN Rate |
Calculate Landed Cost by Country
Compare total import costs for jewelry & precious metals across different origin countries including duty, freight, and fees.
Common Questions About Importing Jewelry & Precious Metals
US import duty rates for jewelry & precious metals typically range from 5%–13.5% MFN. The exact rate depends on the specific 10-digit HTS code classification — different product forms, materials, and uses within the jewelry & precious metals category carry different duty rates. Use the HTS classification tool at ustradestack.ai/classify to identify the precise rate for your product.
Jewelry & Precious Metals imports may be regulated by: Kimberley Process for diamonds, CBP reasonable care valuation, Conflict minerals reporting (3TG for gold), AML compliance for high-value shipments. Each agency has specific documentation, testing, and labeling requirements that must be met before or at the time of import. Failure to comply can result in CBP detention, refusal of entry, or penalty assessment.
Jewelry & Precious Metals products are primarily classified under HTS Chapter 71 — Precious Metals, Jewelry. Common HTS codes include: 7113.11, 7113.19, 7113.20, 7114.11. Correct classification is critical — misclassification can lead to duty overpayment, underpayment penalties, or customs delays. The specific 10-digit HTS code determines the applicable duty rate, trade agreement eligibility, and whether Section 301/232 additional tariffs apply.
Jewelry & Precious Metals Import Analysis — 2026 Tariff Environment
The 2026 Tariff Environment for Jewelry & Precious Metals
The US tariff landscape for jewelry & precious metals imports has shifted dramatically since 2024. China-origin jewelry & precious metals face Section 301 surcharges that push effective duty rates well above MFN baseline — in many cases doubling the total landed cost compared to alternative sourcing countries. The April 2026 IEEPA executive order added a 10% baseline tariff on goods from countries without active free trade agreements, creating a new cost layer that affects all major jewelry & precious metals sourcing origins since none have preferential FTA access. For importers, this means duty modeling must now account for MFN base rate + Section 301 (if China) + Section 232 (if steel/aluminum content) + IEEPA baseline (if non-FTA origin) + MPF + HMF — a five-layer tariff stack that requires careful calculation.
Supply Chain Dynamics: Where Jewelry & Precious Metals Are Actually Made
The top US import sources for jewelry & precious metals — India, China, Thailand — each present a different cost-compliance trade-off. China remains the dominant producer by volume, but the cumulative tariff burden (MFN + Section 301 + IEEPA) has accelerated sourcing diversification since 2018. Importers should model total landed cost across at least three origin countries before committing to procurement contracts, using the Landed Cost Calculator for accurate comparisons.
Compliance Requirements That Jewelry & Precious Metals Importers Miss
Jewelry & Precious Metals imports face 4 distinct regulatory requirements, administered by multiple federal agencies operating independently. Run a compliance check to identify every agency with jurisdiction over your specific product.
Reducing Your Jewelry & Precious Metals Import Costs in 2026
With multiple tariff layers stacking, jewelry & precious metals importers have several cost optimization strategies:
- HTS classification optimization: Many jewelry & precious metals products can be classified under multiple headings with different duty rates. A classification review by a licensed customs broker or trade attorney can identify lower-duty alternatives. Use the HTS Classifier for initial assessment.
- Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) strategy: Importing jewelry & precious metals into an FTZ before entering US commerce can reduce duty exposure through inverted tariff manufacturing, duty deferral, and re-export without duty payment.
- Duty drawback: If you re-export jewelry & precious metals (or use imported materials in goods that are exported), you may recover up to 99% of duties paid through the CBP drawback program.
- First Sale valuation: For multi-tier supply chains (manufacturer → middleman → importer), the "first sale" rule allows duties to be assessed on the lower manufacturer-to-middleman price rather than the middleman-to-importer price — reducing the dutiable value by 15%–30% in many cases.
For a complete tariff exposure analysis of your specific jewelry & precious metals products, order a $29 HTS Classification Report — includes duty breakdown, alternative classifications, and sourcing comparison.
Need to budget for a specific shipment? Get a $49 Landed Cost Analysis — itemized freight, duties, fees, and cost-per-unit across 3 shipment sizes.
Tools for Jewelry & Precious Metals Importers
Other Product Import Guides
Tariff rates are sourced from USITC HTS Schedule as of 2026-07-04. Compliance requirements based on current CBP, FDA, USDA, and CPSC regulations. Always verify with official sources before importing. AI-assisted analysis — not legal or customs advice.