US Import Duties on Chinese Auto Parts — 2026 Updated Rates
Section 301, MFN tariffs, and what brake importers actually pay landed.
US importers of Chinese auto parts pay several layers of duty. The total varies from 5% to 32% depending on the part category and Section 301 status. Here's the current 2026 picture and how to budget accurately.
The four duty layers
Every shipment from China to the US gets evaluated against:
- MFN (Most Favored Nation) base duty — the standard tariff for the HS code
- Section 301 tariffs — 25% on List 3 goods, 7.5% on List 4A goods (China-specific)
- Section 232 — steel/aluminum tariffs (applies to a few raw inputs, rarely to finished parts)
- Antidumping/countervailing (ADD/CVD) — case-specific, applies to certain product categories
| HS Code | Description | MFN | 301 | Total | |---------|-------------|------|------|-------| | 8708.30.50 | Brake pads, rotors, drums | 2.5% | 25% (List 3) | 27.5% | | 8708.40.75 | Brake calipers, master cylinders | 2.5% | 25% | 27.5% | | 8708.99.81 | Other brake parts (hoses, etc.) | 2.5% | 25% | 27.5% | | 9032.89.60 | ABS sensors / electronic controls | varies | 7.5% (4A) | varies |
Most brake hardware lands in the same 27.5% total bucket. Plan accordingly.
How duty is calculated
Duty is calculated on CIF value (Cost + Insurance + Freight) at the port of entry. Not just the FOB invoice value.
Example for $10,000 FOB shipment of brake pads:
- FOB invoice: $10,000
- Ocean freight: $1,800 (Shanghai → LA)
- Insurance: $50
- CIF value: $11,850
- MFN duty (2.5%): $296
- Section 301 (25%): $2,963
- Total duty: $3,259
What's NOT covered by Section 301
Some categories were excluded or moved off the list. As of early 2026:
- Most electric vehicle components (different list, different rates)
- Some safety-critical sensors (ABS, airbag) on List 4A only — 7.5%, not 25%
- Specific exclusions granted via USTR exclusion process (case-by-case, expire periodically)
MPF and HMF
On top of duty:
- MPF (Merchandise Processing Fee): 0.3464% of cargo value, min $32 / max $634 per shipment
- HMF (Harbor Maintenance Fee): 0.125% of cargo value (for sea freight only)
- MPF: $41
- HMF: $15
- Total small fees: $56
Customs broker fees
Required for any commercial import. Plan $125-300 per shipment for standard brake imports. More for hazmat (brake fluid is hazmat — DOT-3 / DOT-4) or oversized cargo.
ADD/CVD risk by category
Antidumping and countervailing duty cases sometimes target specific Chinese auto parts. Current cases relevant to brake importers:
- Light truck and passenger tires from China — high ADD, but doesn't directly hit brakes
- Wheel rims — ADD active, doesn't hit brakes
- No active ADD/CVD on brake pads, rotors, or calipers as of Q1 2026
The $800 de minimis question
US "de minimis" allows entry of shipments under $800 free of duty. Some sellers try to game this by splitting orders.
Reality:
- The de minimis applies to per-shipment value, not annual
- CBP audits "structuring" — multiple sub-$800 shipments to same buyer get treated as one shipment
- For commercial importers, this is not a viable strategy
- Trump-era reforms reduced de minimis effectiveness for Chinese-origin goods specifically
How to budget total landed cost
Rule of thumb for Chinese brake imports to US west coast:
- FOB invoice: 100%
- Ocean freight: 12-18%
- Insurance: 0.5%
- Duty (MFN + 301): 27.5% of CIF
- Broker + port fees: 1-2%
- Inland trucking (LA → Atlanta): 5-8%
That means a $5.50/set FOB brake pad costs you $8.50-9.00 landed in your warehouse. Price your wholesale and retail accordingly.
What's changing in 2026
Watch for:
- Periodic Section 301 review (next major review window) — could result in tariff changes for some HS codes
- Possible expansion of Section 232 to cover finished automotive components
- ADD/CVD cases — historically filed against Chinese goods every 3-6 months in some category
Free trade alternatives
If Section 301 economics are killing your business model:
- Mexico — USMCA preferential treatment. Many Chinese factories now have Mexico operations specifically for this.
- Vietnam, Thailand — capable brake manufacturing, no Section 301 (but still MFN duty)
- Eastern Europe — for niche premium products, sometimes competitive
Bottom line
Plan for 27.5% total duty on most brake components from China. Build that into your wholesale and retail pricing from day one. Don't try to dodge it through structuring or misclassification — both end badly. If margins are too thin, evaluate Mexico or Vietnam sourcing through your existing Chinese supplier relationships.