Customs

Tariff Engineering

A legal process whereby importers structure products or shipments to lawfully benefit from lower customs duty rates by classifying goods under specific tariff codes, per WCO and national customs law.

Quick answer: A legal process whereby importers structure products or shipments to lawfully benefit from lower customs duty rates by classifying goods under specific tariff codes, per WCO and national customs law.

This term page is part of the Protermify Logistics glossary and is published as static HTML for fast indexing and clear language coverage.

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Quick answer

A legal process whereby importers structure products or shipments to lawfully benefit from lower customs duty rates by classifying goods under specific tariff codes, per WCO and national customs law.

Why it matters

Tariff Engineering matters because it supports clear communication in Customs contexts for Freight Forwarders, Supply Chain Managers, and Customs Brokers. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as FIATA Diploma, CILT Certification, and IATA DGR.

Editorial context

This page is rendered as static HTML from source-backed terminology data so search engines and AI systems can parse the content without client-side code.

Questions and answers

Questions and answers

What is Tariff Engineering?

In this glossary, Tariff Engineering refers to: A legal process whereby importers structure products or shipments to lawfully benefit from lower customs duty rates by classifying goods under specific tariff codes, per WCO and national customs law.

How is Tariff Engineering used in logistics?

In logistics communication, this term appears in contexts such as: "Through tariff engineering, the importer reconfigured the product composition to fall under a lower-duty customs classification, as documented in the import declaration."

Why does Tariff Engineering matter in logistics?

Tariff Engineering matters because it supports clear communication in Customs contexts for Freight Forwarders, Supply Chain Managers, and Customs Brokers. It also connects to aviation training and exam language such as FIATA Diploma, CILT Certification, and IATA DGR.

Who uses Tariff Engineering?

Tariff Engineering is mainly used by Freight Forwarders, Supply Chain Managers, and Customs Brokers.

What category does Tariff Engineering belong to?

In this glossary, Tariff Engineering is grouped under Customs. Related pages in this category explain adjacent procedures, commands and operational concepts.

Where does this definition come from?

This definition is sourced from Incoterms 2020 (ICC), FIATA, IATA DGR, WCO and published by Protermify Logistics as a static logistics reference page.

Definition

A legal process whereby importers structure products or shipments to lawfully benefit from lower customs duty rates by classifying goods under specific tariff codes, per WCO and national customs law.

Operational example

Through tariff engineering, the importer reconfigured the product composition to fall under a lower-duty customs classification, as documented in the import declaration.

Definition language

English reference definition

Source

Incoterms 2020 (ICC), FIATA, IATA DGR, WCO

Category

Customs

Exam relevance

  • FIATA Diploma
  • CILT Certification
  • IATA DGR

Target audience

  • Freight Forwarders
  • Supply Chain Managers
  • Customs Brokers

Related terms

Use the related links below to continue through connected logistics terminology.

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