United States parcels

US customs duty on home goods

Estimate United States landed cost for overseas home goods purchases with the home goods estimate bucket.

Carrier fee

Rules as of 2026-06, last checked (version 2026.06.25-v1). Note: 2026 de-minimis rules are changing — always confirm the current rule with the official source before relying on this estimate.

Home goods estimate scope

Home goods span many materials and commodity codes, from textiles to ceramics to small furniture, each with its own rate. This broad bucket is a starting point; use a precise code for an accurate estimate.

Next data step

Split home goods into verified commodity-code rows for United States before relying on this for a real shipment.

Official sources: www.cbp.gov www.cbp.gov hts.usitc.gov

FAQ

How is United States duty calculated on home and kitchen items?

It depends on the material and the commodity code, which vary a lot across home goods. This estimate uses one broad bucket, so verify the exact code against the official United States tariff.

Does the United States low-value threshold apply to homeware?

Homeware follows the same low-value parcel rules as other consumer goods: customs duty is generally not charged on consignments at or below USD 800; this model does not add a separate federal import tax for United States. Confirm the current threshold with the official source.

What about larger furniture?

Larger or heavier items can attract different commodity codes, higher shipping, and sometimes additional handling. Treat this estimate as a floor and confirm with the carrier and the official tariff.

Estimate only. This calculator does not provide customs, legal, or tax advice. Final charges are determined by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and the parcel carrier. The de-minimis treatment of low-value imports is changing during 2026; always confirm the current rule with the official source before relying on this estimate.