What is HS code 551339 used for?
Use this as a comparison hint, then confirm the final decision with legal notes and country-specific rules.
HS-6 · Subheading
Fabrics, woven; of yarns of different colours, containing less than 85% of synthetic staple fibres (other than polyester, plain weave), mixed mainly or solely with cotton, not exceeding 170g/m2
Heading 5513 — Woven fabrics of synthetic staple fibres, containing less than 85% by weight of such fibres, mixed mainly or solely with cotton, of a weight not exceeding 170g/m2
Chapter 55: Man-made staple fibres
Use HS-6 551339 when importing or exporting woven fabrics made from synthetic staple fibres mixed mainly with cotton, where the synthetic content is less than 85% and the weight is under 170g/m2. For example, a shipment of cotton-blend fabric used for lightweight shirts would fall under this code.
This code specifically covers fabrics woven from yarns of different colors, which distinguishes it from HS-6 551331, where the focus is on plain weave fabrics. If your fabric features a colorful pattern and meets the weight and fiber composition criteria, 551339 is the correct classification.
When classifying fabrics, note that HS-6 551339 is distinct from HS-6 551341, which includes polyester blends. If your fabric contains synthetic fibres other than polyester, you should use this code. Always consider the fiber composition and weight to ensure proper classification.
Useful terms traders and brokers use for this HS-6 subheading.
woven fabrics · synthetic staple fibres · cotton blend fabrics · lightweight fabrics · HS code 551339 · colorful woven fabrics · fabric classification · importing fabrics · exporting cotton fabrics · synthetic fibre content · fabrics under 170g/m2 · mixed fibre fabrics · plain weave vs patterned · yarns of different colours · fabric weight limit · classification tips · customs brokerage for fabrics
Drawn from the official tariff wording for this HS-6 subheading. 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.
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.
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.
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.
Use this topic to narrow your shortlist, then validate the final code against legal wording.
Check the exact product specs and destination-country tariff notes before finalizing the code.
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.
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.
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.
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