TariffBase provides tariff data sourced exclusively from official government and customs authority publications. This page explains where our data comes from, how it is processed, how often it is updated, and what quality measures we apply.
TariffBase follows three core principles for data management:
TariffBase currently covers three major trading markets:
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Data source | US International Trade Commission (USITC), Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS) |
| Schedule structure | 10-digit HTS codes |
| Regimes covered | MFN (Column 1 General), Column 2, Section 201 safeguards, Section 232 national security, Section 301 (China stages), IEEPA additional tariffs, FTA rates (USMCA, etc.) |
| Special measures | Anti-dumping duties, countervailing duties, additional tariffs by country of origin |
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Data source | TARIC (Integrated Tariff of the European Communities), maintained by the European Commission |
| Schedule structure | 10-digit TARIC codes covering all 27 EU member states |
| Regimes covered | MFN (Third country duty), Customs Union rates, GSP, GSP+, EBA (Everything But Arms), bilateral FTA rates, autonomous tariff suspensions, tariff quotas |
| Special measures | Anti-dumping duties, countervailing duties, safeguard measures, additional duties by partner |
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Data source | China Customs Tariff Commission, Ministry of Finance, General Administration of Customs |
| Schedule structure | 10-digit national tariff codes |
| Regimes covered | MFN rates, provisional (temporary) rates, conventional (FTA) rates, retaliatory additional tariffs |
| Special measures | Retaliatory tariffs against specific partners, anti-dumping duties, countervailing duties |
The TariffBase database contains:
Current statistics are displayed on the Dashboard in the Our Tariff Data panel.
Our data goes through a structured pipeline from source to platform:
Tariff data is collected from official government websites, customs databases, and gazette publications. Our collection process monitors these sources for updates, including:
Raw data from different countries comes in various formats (PDFs, spreadsheets, HTML tables, database exports). We parse and transform this data into a unified, harmonized structure that enables:
Every dataset update goes through quality checks:
Once validated, updated data is published to the platform. The Last Update date shown in search results reflects when each specific tariff entry was last refreshed.
| Update Type | Typical Frequency |
|---|---|
| Annual tariff revisions | Processed as each country publishes its new schedule (typically January 1 for most countries) |
| Major tariff actions | Processed within days of official announcement (e.g., new Section 301 lists, retaliatory measures) |
| Routine amendments | Processed on a regular schedule as countries publish corrections and adjustments |
| Trade agreement updates | Processed as new FTAs or rate changes under existing agreements enter into force |
Note: During periods of heightened trade tension (such as active trade disputes), updates may be more frequent to capture rapidly evolving tariff actions.
While TariffBase strives for comprehensive and accurate coverage, users should be aware of the following:
Every tariff rate in TariffBase is associated with an effective date indicating when the rate became or becomes applicable. This allows you to:
If you identify a data discrepancy or have questions about a specific tariff rate:
We take data quality seriously and appreciate user feedback as part of our continuous improvement process.