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SYMBOL
LAST
BID
ASK
HIGH
LOW
NET CHG.
%CHG.
SPREAD
SOURCE
SPX
S&P 500 Index
7365.45
7365.45
7365.45
7424.17
7347.60
-107.33
-1.44%
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--
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
51666.83
51666.83
51666.83
51872.56
51301.77
-45.87
-0.09%
--
--
IXIC
NASDAQ Composite Index
25587.05
25587.05
25587.05
25882.57
25513.26
-579.54
-2.21%
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--
USDX
US Dollar Index
101.220
101.220
101.300
101.250
101.110
+0.090
+ 0.09%
--
--
EURUSD
Euro / US Dollar
1.13647
1.13647
1.13654
1.13837
1.13610
-0.00164
-0.14%
--
--
GBPUSD
Pound Sterling / US Dollar
1.31938
1.31938
1.31945
1.32044
1.31868
-0.00087
-0.07%
--
--
XAUUSD
Gold / US Dollar
4077.18
4077.18
4077.61
4114.95
4050.25
-33.30
-0.81%
--
--
WTI
Light Sweet Crude Oil
72.423
72.423
72.453
73.018
71.927
-0.440
-0.60%
--
--

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          trade.gov.ng Tariff Search: Find Nigerian HS Codes & Duties

          zhan chen
          Summary:

          Decode the trade gov ng tariff portal to master Nigerian import costs. Learn to calculate hidden levies, avoid port penalties, and protect your bottom line.

          Navigating Nigeria's import regulations requires precise knowledge of the exact taxes and levies attached to your specific goods. The trade.gov.ng tariff search tool acts as the primary gateway for calculating these financial liabilities before a shipment ever reaches the port. This guide breaks down how to effectively query the database, interpret the dense layers of regional tariffs and domestic surcharges, and utilize formal customs procedures when the portal's baseline estimates fall short. By mastering this system, importers can avoid costly delays, ensure accurate budgeting, and prevent unexpected reclassification penalties.

          trade.gov.ng Tariff Search: Find Nigerian HS Codes & Duties

          What Is trade.gov.ng and How Does Its Tariff Search Tool Work?

          The Nigeria Trade Portal (trade.gov.ng) is the official digital single window maintained by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment (FMITI) in partnership with the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS). Its tariff search tool enables importers, exporters, and clearing agents to identify exact import duties, levies, and regulatory documentation requirements by querying the ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET) framework.

          The search mechanism executes through a straightforward sequence to translate broad product concepts into exact tax liabilities:

          1. Input Execution: Users enter either a broad commodity keyword (e.g., "agricultural tractors") or an existing Harmonized System (HS) code. The system accepts inputs ranging from a 2-digit chapter heading to a precise 10-digit national code.
          2. Framework Cross-Referencing: The engine runs the query against the localized ECOWAS CET schedule. This schedule merges the five-band regional tariff structure with Nigeria-specific fiscal policy deviations.
          3. Classification Mapping: If a keyword is used, the system displays all matching 10-digit HS codes, forcing the user to select the exact technical specification of their good to reveal the attached rates.

          What Data Does the Tariff Database Actually Cover?

          The database returns the complete tax matrix required to calculate the total landed cost of an import, rather than just a single baseline duty percentage. A standard search output aggregates the base tariff with mandatory federal and regional levies.

          When a user pulls an HS code file or queries a specific item, the portal delineates the following variables:

          Tax / Levy ComponentOperational MechanismStandard Rate Range
          Import Duty (ID)The base ECOWAS CET rate assigned by product necessity. Raw materials and capital goods sit lower; finished consumer goods sit higher.0% to 35%
          Value Added Tax (VAT)Applied not just to the item's cost, but to the CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) value plus the import duty and all other levies.7.5%
          CISS FeeThe Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme fee. Calculated directly on the FOB (Free on Board) value of the shipment.1%
          ETLS LevyThe ECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme funding tax. Assessed on the CIF value of goods originating outside the ECOWAS bloc.0.5%
          Port SurchargeA national port development surcharge calculated directly as a fraction of the base import duty itself.7% of Import Duty
          Specific LeviesProtectionist taxes (e.g., National Automotive Council levy, sugar levy) applied selectively to restrict specific imports and protect local industry.15% to 75%

          Beyond tax rates, the search output explicitly lists the regulatory agencies governing that specific HS code. If a product requires a SONCAP certificate from the Standards Organisation of Nigeria or a NAFDAC permit, the database tags the commodity accordingly.

          How Current Are the Duty Rates Listed on the Site?

          The rates published on trade.gov.ng reflect the active ECOWAS CET schedule and the current Nigerian Fiscal Policy Measures (FPM), but they are vulnerable to update latency during periods of rapid regulatory change.

          When the Federal Ministry of Finance issues a new fiscal circular—such as introducing a new excise duty on plastics or adjusting the import levy on used vehicles—the Nigeria Customs Service immediately updates its internal clearing system (NICIS II) to enforce the new rates on incoming shipments. However, the public-facing trade.gov.ng portal can experience a delay of several days to weeks before mirroring these systemic updates.

          Because total duty payable is calculated at the exact moment a Pre-Arrival Assessment Report (PAAR) is generated, clearing agents cannot rely on the portal as a legal defense if rates have shifted. For highly volatile categories—particularly agricultural commodities, automotive imports, and textiles subject to import substitution policies—the portal provides the baseline structure, but the final liability must be verified against the most recent Ministry of Finance circulars.

          How to Search for HS Codes and Import Duties on trade.gov.ng

          Executing a successful query on the portal requires entering either a specific product description or a standard Harmonized System (HS) code to retrieve the exact ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET) rates and statutory levies. The system generates a line-item breakdown of duties, taxes, and statutory levies required for clearing goods through the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS).

          How to Look Up a Product Using the AI-Powered HS Code Search Engine

          The portal’s search engine at trade.gov.ng/en/tools/tariff/search accepts both numerical inputs and natural language descriptions. Because Nigeria utilizes a 10-digit HS code system—where the first six digits align with World Customs Organization (WCO) standards and the final four represent regional ECOWAS and Nigerian specifics—precision in your search query dictates the accuracy of the returned rates.

          1. Locate the Search Interface: Navigate to the tariff search tool on the Trade Portal homepage.
          2. Enter the Identifier: Input the exact 10-digit HS code if known. If unknown, enter a specific, noun-based product description (e.g., "lithium-ion battery" rather than "electronics") to leverage the semantic search function.
          3. Filter by Section/Chapter: Use the drop-down menus to isolate specific CET Chapters (e.g., Chapter 85 for Electrical Machinery) to filter out false positives.
          4. Select the Exact Match: Click on the specific 10-digit item line in the results table to expand the associated duty profile.

          How to Read the Tariff Results: Duty Rate, Levy, and VAT Explained

          A standard trade.gov.ng tariff search result displays multiple percentage-based charges. These figures do not represent a single flat tax; they stack sequentially based on either the Cost, Insurance, and Freight (CIF) or Free on Board (FOB) value of the shipment.

          Charge TypeCurrent Rate / RangeCalculation BasisPurpose / Mechanism
          Import Duty (ID)0% to 35%CIF ValueThe baseline ECOWAS CET rate. Capital goods and raw materials typically incur 0-5%, while finished consumer goods attract 20-35%.
          Value Added Tax (VAT)7.5%(CIF + ID + Levy + Excise)Standard Nigerian consumption tax applied to the total landed cost of the imported goods, not just the base value.
          Import Levy0% to 50%+CIF ValueAdditional protectionist surcharges applied by the Nigerian government to restricted or locally manufactured items (e.g., specific vehicles or agricultural products).
          CISS1%FOB ValueComprehensive Import Supervision Scheme fee, mandated for all imports to fund destination inspection processes.
          ETLS0.5%CIF ValueECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme charge applied to goods originating outside the West African trading bloc.

          What to Do When a Product Returns No Results or an Incorrect Code

          The digital search tool frequently fails on highly specialized machinery or newly categorized chemicals. When a query yields zero results or a logically incorrect classification, execute the following fallback procedures.

          • Truncate to WCO Defaults: Search using only the first six digits of your international HS code. The portal often struggles with regional 10-digit variations imported from other jurisdictions (like the US Schedule B or EU TARIC). Finding the 6-digit WCO parent code will guide you to the correct Nigerian 10-digit sub-heading.
          • Cross-Reference the CET Tariff PDF: Download the official ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET) PDF document directly from the Nigeria Customs Service. Searching the raw document via Ctrl+F bypasses the portal's indexing errors and lag.
          • Examine the General Rules of Interpretation (GRI): If a product fits multiple categories (e.g., a smart refrigerator with an integrated tablet), apply WCO GRI 3(b), which dictates classifying the product by the component that gives it its "essential character."
          • Request an Advance Tariff Ruling: If classification remains ambiguous and capital is at risk, file a formal request with the Tariff and Trade Department of the NCS. This provides a legally binding 10-digit code prior to shipping, preventing costly port delays or demurrage at Apapa or Tin Can Island.

          What Charges Will You Actually Pay Beyond the Listed Duty Rate?

          The base import duty listed on the trade.gov.ng tariff portal is only the starting point for calculating landed costs in Nigeria. Importers typically face a composite tax burden that adds 10% to 25% to the statutory duty rate through mandated port surcharges, regional trade levies, and domestic consumption taxes. Relying solely on the headline Harmonized System (HS) code rate guarantees a severe undercapitalization of customs clearance funds.

          How ECOWAS CET, Excise Duties, and VAT Stack on Top of Each Other

          Nigerian customs calculations follow a strict sequential formula where subsequent taxes compound on top of the base duty and prior levies. The final assessment is not a simple addition of percentages; it is a waterfall calculation that artificially inflates the taxable base for Value Added Tax (VAT).

          To calculate the exact total payable at the port, the Nigeria Customs Service processes charges in this specific order:

          1. Base Duty (ECOWAS CET): Between 0% and 35%, applied to the CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight) value of the shipment.
          2. Port Surcharge: A flat 7% applied directly to the base import duty amount, not the goods' value.
          3. CISS (Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme): A mandatory 1% fee calculated on the FOB (Free on Board) value of the goods, intended to fund destination inspection agencies.
          4. ETLS (ECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme): A 0.5% levy applied to the CIF value. This is charged on goods imported from outside the ECOWAS region to fund the bloc's administrative commission.
          5. National Levies & Excise Duties: Additional product-specific percentages applied to the CIF value. For example, environmental levies or automotive council charges.
          6. Value Added Tax (VAT): Nigeria’s 7.5% VAT is calculated on the aggregate total. The formula is: 7.5% × (CIF + Base Duty + Surcharge + CISS + ETLS + Excise/Levies).

          Because VAT is calculated on the combined sum of the goods' value and all preceding taxes, the effective VAT rate on your original CIF value is often closer to 9% or 10%.

          Which Product Categories Face the Highest Total Import Cost in Nigeria?

          The Nigerian government uses punitive tariff bands and targeted import levies to protect domestic manufacturing, conserve foreign exchange, and discourage the consumption of non-essential items. If your product falls into these categories, the final cost multiplier will significantly exceed standard ECOWAS CET rates.

          • Fully Built Vehicles (Automobiles): Imported vehicles face the maximum 35% CET band. To protect the domestic assembly industry, the government stacks an additional National Automotive Council (NAC) levy ranging from 15% to 35% depending on the vehicle type and age. When combined with VAT and standard port surcharges, the effective tax rate on imported passenger vehicles routinely exceeds 70% of the CIF value.
          • Agricultural Staples (Rice, Sugar, Wheat): To force import substitution, basic commodities face severe baseline tariffs and extraordinary levies. Rice, for instance, historically attracts a 10% base duty paired with an aggressive import levy that can add 20% to 60%, making formal importation commercially prohibitive without specific government waivers.
          • Alcohol and Tobacco (Sin Taxes): Spirits and cigarettes incur the 20% to 35% CET rate, compounded by ad valorem excise duties and specific taxes (e.g., fixed Naira amounts per centiliter or per stick). These excise taxes are applied before VAT, dramatically inflating the final clearance cost.
          • Single-Use Plastics and Packaging: Recently targeted under fiscal policy shifts for environmental management, these materials face standard 20% CET rates plus a specialized 10% excise duty on single-use plastics, penalizing FMCG importers who rely on foreign packaging materials.

          When trade.gov.ng Doesn't Give You the Answer You Need

          Even with a firm understanding of high-cost product categories, discrepancies can still arise during clearance because the portal rarely reflects the final landed cost. Importers frequently budget based on the single percentage found in the search tool, only to face significantly higher financial obligations upon cargo arrival due to compounded domestic levies, automated currency valuations, and customs reclassification.

          Common Reasons the Listed Rate May Not Match What Customs Charges

          Discrepancies between the portal's stated duty and the final port invoice occur because the search tool isolates the base tariff while ignoring cumulative Nigerian fiscal policies. The final payable amount is an aggregate of baseline duties, administrative surcharges, and fluctuating foreign exchange rates.

          Cost ComponentWhat trade.gov.ng ShowsWhat Nigeria Customs Actually Charges
          Base DutyStatic ECOWAS CET percentage (0% to 35%)Base percentage applied to the CIF value
          Foreign ExchangeOften displays a static, legacy FX rateLive CBN exchange rate ingested via the B'Odogwu platform
          Administrative LeviesGenerally excluded1% CISS (on FOB value) + 0.5% ETLS (on CIF value)
          Value Added TaxRarely factored into the primary search7.5% calculated on the aggregate of CIF + Duty + CISS + ETLS + Surcharge
          Sector LeviesBase duty onlyAdditional protections (e.g., 15% NAC levy on vehicles, up to 85% on wheat)
          • Cumulative Administrative Surcharges: The base duty listed online excludes mandatory federal fees. Importers must also pay a 1% Comprehensive Import Supervision Scheme (CISS) charge calculated on the Free on Board (FOB) value, plus a 0.5% ECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme (ETLS) levy applied to the Cost, Insurance, and Freight (CIF) value.
          • The 7.5% VAT Compounding Effect: Nigeria applies a standard 7.5% Value Added Tax to imports, but it is not calculated solely on the item's value. VAT is assessed on the aggregate of the CIF value plus the base duty, a 7% port surcharge, CISS, and ETLS, significantly increasing the effective tax burden.
          • Sector-Specific Protection Levies: The CET search results often omit supplemental levies designed to protect domestic industries. For example, while the base tariff for used vehicles remains at 20%, the National Automotive Council (NAC) applies an additional 15% levy. Agricultural imports face similar protections, with effective duties reaching 85% for wheat and 75% for sugar.
          • B'Odogwu Platform FX Valuations: The legacy trade.gov.ng portal frequently displays outdated exchange rates. Actual import valuation is processed through the NCS B'Odogwu digital clearance system, which automatically ingests the live Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) exchange rate at the time the Form M is opened.
          • Port-Level HS Code Reclassification: Importers often select the lowest-duty HS code (e.g., 5% for industrial machinery) when searching online. Customs officers at the destination port hold the authority to reject this classification based on physical inspection, reassigning the goods to a higher-duty band (e.g., 20% for finished consumer goods).

          How to Use the New Advance Ruling System (ARS) to Verify Tariffs With Nigerian Customs (NCS)

          To eliminate tariff ambiguity before shipping, importers can utilize the Advance Ruling System (ARS), launched by the NCS in May 2024 to provide legally binding decisions on classification, origin, and valuation. Securing an advance ruling prevents arbitrary reclassification at the port and establishes exact cost predictability for high-value shipments.

          1. Compile Technical Documentation: Gather exhaustive proof of the product's nature, including commercial invoices, chemical compositions, manufacturer blueprints, or detailed technical specifications. Vague product descriptions are the primary cause of rejected ARS applications.
          2. Submit Application via the NCS Portal: Route the request through the official Nigeria Customs Service trade portal rather than relying on legacy information sites. The application must clearly state the importer's suggested HS code alongside the supporting evidence.
          3. Undergo Tariff and Trade Department Review: Customs technical experts evaluate the submission against the five-band ECOWAS CET nomenclature. This process bypasses individual port officers, centralizing the decision at the federal level based on World Customs Organization (WCO) standards.
          4. Receive the Binding Ruling: If approved, the NCS issues a formal ruling detailing the definitive HS code and duty rate. This decision remains legally binding on both the importer and customs formations for a specified validity period, ensuring the goods will clear at the ruled rate regardless of port-level disputes.

          FAQs about trade gov ng tariff

          How can I access the Nigerian Customs Service Common External Tariff (CET) schedule?

          You can access the Common External Tariff (CET) schedule directly through the official Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) website or the Nigeria Trade Hub portal. These digitized platforms allow importers to search for specific Harmonized System (HS) codes and view the applicable duty rates for their goods. Using the official online portal ensures you are compliant with the most up-to-date ECOWAS regional tariff categories.

          What are the current import prohibition and restriction lists for trade in Nigeria?

          The Nigerian Customs Service maintains a strict Import Prohibition List designed to protect domestic industries and manage trade balances. Prohibited items include frozen poultry, pork, beef, bagged cement, refined vegetable oils, certain medications like paracetamol, and specific textiles such as African prints (Ankara). A comprehensive and updated list of restricted goods and their corresponding HS codes can be found on the official NCS website.

          How is import duty calculated for goods entering Nigeria?

          Import duty in Nigeria is calculated using the CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight) value of the imported goods. The base duty rate is determined by the product's Harmonized System (HS) code under the ECOWAS Common External Tariff (CET). To determine the final total payable to customs, several other levies are added to this base duty, including a 7% port surcharge, a 7.5% Value Added Tax (VAT), a 1% CISS administrative fee, and a 0.5% ECOWAS trade levy.

          What is the US tariff on Nigeria?

          In April 2025, the United States imposed a 14% reciprocal tariff on exports originating from Nigeria. This policy was enacted to address perceived trade imbalances and to directly counter the existing high average tariffs that Nigeria levies on American goods. Consequently, key Nigerian exports now face this 14% rate when entering the U.S. market, marking a shift from previously lower tariff rates.

          Conclusion

          Successfully clearing goods through the Nigeria Customs Service demands more than a quick glance at the base Harmonized System rates. Mastering the trade.gov.ng tariff search tool allows importers to build accurate landed-cost models that account for cascading port surcharges, regional levies, and precise VAT calculations. When classification ambiguities threaten supply chain budgets, leveraging the Advance Ruling System provides essential legal protection against unexpected port fees. Relying on accurate, legally binding data ultimately protects profit margins and ensures seamless compliance with shifting ECOWAS trade frameworks.

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