PHASE 1.5 PREMIUM OUTCOME SERVICE

Know if your product qualifies for FTA duty savings — before you pay full duty

Get a rule of origin analysis for USMCA, KORUS, and 10 other US free trade agreements in under 60 seconds. Preferential rate vs MFN rate comparison, specific documentation requirements, and next steps — for YOUR specific product and supply chain.

$79
one-time · no subscription
Get Trade Agreement Qualification → See all 12 FTAs
Rule of origin cites (Chapter, Annex, Rule) Preferential vs MFN rate comparison Required documentation list Private — only you access your report
12 US trade agreements analyzed

Your product is checked against every US FTA simultaneously. The report shows which agreements apply, whether you qualify, and the specific rule of origin provision that applies.

🇺🇸
USMCA
United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement. Most critical for North American supply chains. Automotive, electronics, machinery. IEEPA does not apply to USMCA originating goods.
0% qualifying
🇰🇷
US-Korea (KORUS)
General RVC of 35%, automotive RVC of 45%. Annex 6-A lists product-specific rules. Widely used for automotive parts and electronics.
0% qualifying
🇵🇪
US-Peru (PTPA)
Trade Promotion Agreement. RVC of 35–55%. Peru exports include textiles, minerals, agricultural products.
0% qualifying
🇨🇴
US-Colombia
RVC of 35–50%. Major for petroleum, coffee, cut flowers, textiles. Requires Certificate of Origin.
0% qualifying
🇦🇺
US-Australia (AUSFTA)
One of broadest US FTAs. RVC of 35%. Most goods enter at 0%. Agriculture, pharmaceuticals, machinery.
0% qualifying
🇨🇱
US-Chile
Long-standing bilateral. RVC of 35–50%. Mining, agriculture, salmon, wine. Chile is a major trade partner.
0% qualifying
🇸🇬
US-Singapore (USSFTA)
RVC of 35%. One of earliest US bilateral agreements. Electronics, pharmaceuticals, machinery.
0% qualifying
🇴🇲
US-Oman
RVC requirements. Manufactured goods, petrochemicals. Growing trade relationship.
0% qualifying
🇵🇦
US-Panama
RVC of 35–50%. Agricultural products, manufactured goods. Important for canal-related logistics.
0% qualifying
🇧🇭
US-Bahrain
RVC requirements. Aluminum, petrochemicals. Middle East hub for US trade.
0% qualifying
🇲🇦
US-Morocco
RVC of 35–50%. Textiles, phosphate, agricultural products. Growing trade relationship.
0% qualifying
🇯🇴
US-Jordan
Substantial transformation test. Textiles, apparel. Qualifying industrial zones (QIZs) provide additional benefits.
0% qualifying
What your report looks like

Not a general USMCA summary — your specific product and supply chain analyzed against all 12 FTAs with specific rule citations and documentation requirements.

Sample Output — Wireless Bluetooth Headphones · HTS 8518.30.2000 · Mexico origin
Product: Wireless Bluetooth Headphones · Shipment value: $50,000
ProductWireless Bluetooth Headphones
Country of OriginMexico (USMCA Party)
HTS Code8518.30.2000
MFN Rate (USITC)0% (Chapter 85)
USMCA Qualifies✓ QUALIFIES
Rule of OriginUSMCA Chapter 4, Annex 4-B — Change in Chapter 85
USMCA Preferential Rate0% (same as MFN in this case)
Duty savings vs. non-FTA route (China): $12,500
For the same product from China: 25% Section 301 + 10% IEEPA = $17,500 duty on $50,000 shipment. USMCA originating = $0. Savings: $17,500.

The above uses illustrative HTS 8518.30.2000 at 0% MFN. Your report will use your actual HTS code and countries of origin.

USTradeStack — $79
60-second qualification analysis
🌍All 12 US FTAs checked simultaneously
📋Specific rule of origin provision cited
⚖️Preferential vs MFN rate comparison
📜Certificate of Origin field list
💰Duty savings calculation on your shipment value
📄Next steps and corrective actions
Time to result: ~60 seconds Enter product + HTS + country of origin → done
Traditional Customs Broker
Binding rule of origin determination
Binding tariff classification
Email + review time: days to weeks
Usually $300–$1,500 per analysis
May not include all 12 FTAs in one report
May not calculate duty savings
Time to result: Days to weeks Best for binding determinations; not for quick screening
What your qualification report contains

Everything specific to YOUR product and supply chain — not generic trade agreement summaries.

🌍
Qualification Status
QUALIFIES / DOES NOT QUALIFY / PARTIAL for each applicable FTA
⚖️
Rule of Origin Provision
Specific chapter, annex, and rule number (e.g., USMCA Chapter 4, Annex 4-B, Section A, Rule 1)
📊
Rate Comparison
Preferential rate vs MFN rate with duty savings on your shipment value
📋
Documentation Requirements
Exact documents required + all Certificate of Origin fields for the applicable FTA
🔧
Next Steps
Specific, prioritized actions to qualify or maintain qualification
🔒
Private Access Link
Permanent link to your report, only accessible to you

Every rate and provision is sourced

USITC HTS Database (hts.usitc.gov) — MFN duty rates
USMCA Chapter 4 + Annex 4-B — Rule of origin provisions
KORUS Chapter 6 + Annex 6-A — Korean FTA rules
19 CFR Part 182 — USMCA Certificate of Origin requirements
USTR Federal Register — FTA operative dates
PTPA / CTPA / AUSFTA / others — Bilateral FTA chapters
Three steps from payment to report

Takes under 90 seconds from when you start.

1
Pay $79 via Stripe
Secure checkout — no account required. Use any card. Payment link is reusable.
2
Enter your product details
Product description, HTS code (optional), country of origin, supply chain details, shipment value.
3
Report delivered + email
Qualification analysis with rule of origin cites, rate comparison, documentation list, and next steps.

Qualify for FTA preferential rates.
Before you pay full duty.

$79 vs. weeks of broker review to find out the same thing

$79 one-time
All 12 US FTAs Your specific HTS + supply chain Rule of origin cites 60-second delivery Duty savings calculation
Get My Trade Agreement Qualification →
Questions
What does "rule of origin" mean?
A rule of origin determines whether your product counts as "originating" in an FTA country — and therefore qualifies for preferential (usually 0%) duty rates. The most common rule is Change in Tariff Classification (CTC): your product must be manufactured in a way that changes its HTS chapter or heading. For example, if you import components from China but assemble them in Mexico, does that assembly count as "originating" in Mexico? That's the rule of origin question this report answers.
What's the difference between this and the Compliance Audit Report?
The $199 Compliance Audit Report is a comprehensive review of your entire trade compliance posture — HTS classification accuracy, valuation, AD/CVD exposure, marking requirements. The Trade Agreement Qualification ($79) is focused specifically on whether your product qualifies for FTA preferential duty rates. If you're importing from Mexico, Canada, South Korea, or any FTA country and want to know if you can claim 0% duty, this is the right report.
Does this work for multi-stage supply chains?
Yes. Enter your countries of manufacture in the form (e.g., "China components assembled in Mexico" or "US steel → Vietnam finishing → USMCA country"). The report analyzes each stage of the supply chain against the applicable rule of origin. Note that for accumulation to work, you typically need origin documentation from each stage.
What does the "rule of origin provision" in the report mean?
The report cites the specific chapter, annex, and rule number from the actual FTA text. For example, "USMCA Chapter 4, Annex 4-B, Section A, Rule 1" refers to the Change in Tariff Classification rule in the USMCA agreement. This is the same provision a broker or CBP officer would reference. If the report says "uncertain," it means the applicability of the rule to your specific HTS code requires broker review — the report flags this rather than guessing.
Can I get a refund?
If the report fails to generate due to a technical error on our end, contact support@ustradestack.ai within 48 hours for a full refund. We cannot issue refunds based on disagreement with the qualification determination — every finding is traceable to specific rule of origin provisions and you can verify independently with a customs broker.
Is this legal advice?
No. This analysis is for informational purposes only. Rule of origin determinations are complex — a false claim of preferential treatment can result in penalty assessments under 19 USC 1592. The report recommends broker review for binding determinations. Use it to screen and prioritize, not to make final duty claims.