What is HS-4 8487 used for?
Use this as a comparison hint, then confirm the final decision with legal notes and country-specific rules.
HS-4 · Heading
Chapter 84: Nuclear reactors, boilers, machinery
Use HS-4 8487 when importing or exporting machinery parts that do not include electrical connectors or features. For example, if you're shipping a set of ships' propellers, this heading applies directly to your product.
To distinguish between the two subheadings under HS-4 8487, consider the specific use of the parts. HS-6 848710 is designated for ships' or boats' propellers and their blades, while HS-6 848790 covers all other machinery parts that fit the broader criteria but do not have electrical components.
If your shipment includes machinery parts like gears, levers, or other components that lack electrical features and are not propellers, you'll want to classify under HS-6 848790. This ensures you are compliant with customs regulations and avoids potential delays.
When determining the correct subheading, always assess the primary function of the part. If it’s specifically designed for marine applications, use HS-6 848710. For all other machinery parts that fit the criteria, HS-6 848790 is the appropriate choice.
Useful terms traders and brokers use for this HS-4 heading.
HS-4 8487 · machinery parts · ships' propellers · non-electrical machinery components · HS-6 848710 · HS-6 848790 · marine machinery parts · importing propellers · exporting machinery parts · customs classification
Drawn from the official tariff wording for this HS-4 heading. Always confirm against your published schedule and legal notes.
Frequent classification questions with short practical guidance.
Use this as a comparison hint, then confirm the final decision with legal notes and country-specific rules.
Write down material, use, and product form first, then compare nearby lines before you lock the code.
Use this as a comparison hint, then confirm the final decision with legal notes and country-specific rules.
Use this as a comparison hint, then confirm the final decision with legal notes and country-specific rules.
Match the product to the legal wording, then verify the final pick in your country tariff schedule before filing.
Use n.e.c. only when you have ruled out every more specific line in the same section.
Common real-world topics that come up during code comparison.
Use this topic to narrow your shortlist, then validate the final code against legal wording.
Compare adjacent HS lines and pick the one that matches material, function, and product form most closely.
Check the exact product specs and destination-country tariff notes before finalizing the code.
Check the exact product specs and destination-country tariff notes before finalizing the code.
Check the exact product specs and destination-country tariff notes before finalizing the code.
Check the exact product specs and destination-country tariff notes before finalizing the code.
Use this topic to narrow your shortlist, then validate the final code against legal wording.
Use this topic to narrow your shortlist, then validate the final code against legal wording.
For orientation only—the binding text is your national tariff and the WCO nomenclature your country uses.
Parent context
Nearby siblings
Pick one of these actions to move from reading to a defensible classification decision.
Heading-browse mode uses HS-6 848700 (first line of this block).
TradeTools uses cookies and similar technologies to support core features and to show ads via Google AdSense. You can accept or reject non-essential cookies at any time. See our Privacy Policy for details.