Home › Chapter 85 › Portable interactive electronic education dev… Chapter 85 Possible CAPE refund
Portable interactive electronic education devices primarily designed for children 8543.70.9301 · imported from China
Imports from China currently face a combined tariff of approximately 10% — the MFN base rate is Free, so the entire duty comes from the 10% Section 122 emergency tariff added in February 2026, set to expire July 24, 2026. On a $1,000 shipment, that's roughly $100 in duties. The Court of International Trade struck down Section 122 on May 7, 2026, but CBP is collecting it pending appeal.
AI-generated explanation — an estimate, not a compliance determination.
Estimated total duties & fees $134.83
on $1,000.00 entered value · China-origin
Section 122 Expiring ~13 days · contested $100.00 Fees MPF + HMF $34.83 MFN baseline Permanent · Free $0.00 Personalize calculation Duty stack breakdown Component Amount MFN base rate $0.00 Section 122 $100.00 Merchandise Processing Feeminimum fee applies — 0.3464% of this value is below the $33.58 floor $33.58 Harbor Maintenance Fee $1.25 Total duties & fees $134.83
Rates as of 2026-07-11 · base rate & classification from the USITC HTS; the §301/§232/§122 rates from USTR & Presidential proclamations
Estimates only — not legal or customs advice.
What else affects this line Forced-labor (UFLPA) detention risk Electronics of Chinese origin carry significant UFLPA exposure — particularly polysilicon-based solar cells and modules, and finished electronics whose component materials are sourced from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. CBP actively enforces against solar imports under the rebuttable presumption. Verify polysilicon and component provenance.
⚠️ On CPSC's eFiling screening list — Toys
This HTS code is on the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission's eFiling list, which
CBP flags at entry beginning July 8, 2026. Products entered under this code may require a certificate of compliance — a Children's Product
Certificate (CPC) for children's products, or a General Certificate of Conformity (GCC)
for general-use products — filed electronically at entry. If your specific product is
not subject to a CPSC safety rule, a disclaimer may be filed instead. Whether a
certificate is required depends on the product and the applicable safety rule, not the
tariff code.
Screening signal — Portigo does not determine whether your product needs a certificate;
this is not a compliance determination. Confirm with a licensed customs broker. About CPSC eFiling →
You may be owed a CAPE refund
Imports from this origin were subject to IEEPA emergency duties between 2025-02-04 and 2026-02-20.
The Supreme Court ruled IEEPA does not authorize tariffs, and CBP's CAPE process can refund
IEEPA duties paid on past entries. This does not affect Section 301, 232, 122, or fees.
Check your CAPE refund eligibility →
Recent changes
No rate changes have been recorded for this chapter recently — this tariff has been
stable.