6005.35.00.00 - Fabrics specified in subheading note 1 to this chapter
Details
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Unit of Quantity | kg |
| General Rate of Duty | 10% |
| Special Rate of Duty | Free (AU,BH, CL,CO,IL,JO, KR,MA,OM, P,PA,PE,S,SG)
AU
🇦🇺
BH
🇧ðŸ‡
CL
🇨🇱
CO
🇨🇴
IL
🇮🇱
JO
🇯🇴
KR
🇰🇷
MA
🇲🇦
OM
🇴🇲
P
🇨🇷
🇩🇴
🇸🇻
🇬🇹
ðŸ‡ðŸ‡³
🇳🇮
PA
🇵🇦
PE
🇵🇪
S
🇨🇦
🇲🇽
SG
🇸🇬
|
| Column 2 Rate of Duty | 113.5% |
| Quota Quantity | N/A |
| Additional Duties | N/A |
Overview
This classification, HTS Code 6005.35.00.00, specifically encompasses warp knit fabrics, excluding those detailed in headings 6001 through 6004, that are identified by subheading note 1 to Chapter 60. These are fabrics produced using a warp knitting process, where yarns are fed from creels or beams and interlooped in a way that forms a stable fabric structure, often with a distinct right and wrong side. This specific subheading is reserved for those warp knit fabrics of synthetic fibers that do not fall under the other specified categories within heading 6005.3.
The distinction between this category and its siblings lies in its specific exclusion of certain types of warp knit fabrics. Unlike 6005.36.00 (other, unbleached or bleached), 6005.37.00 (other, dyed), 6005.38.00 (other, of yarns of different colors), and 6005.39.00 (other, printed), this subheading is for warp knit fabrics of synthetic fibers that are not described by these finishing or construction characteristics. Essentially, it acts as a residual category for warp knit synthetic fabrics that don't fit into the more precisely defined sibling classifications.
As this is a leaf node in the HTS classification, there are no further subcategories. Therefore, practical classification under HTS 6005.35.00.00 relies on confirming that the fabric is indeed a warp knit construction made from synthetic fibers and that it does not meet the specific criteria outlined in the other subheadings of 6005.3 (i.e., it is not merely unbleached/bleached, dyed, made of yarns of different colors, or printed). Subheading note 1 to Chapter 60 will be crucial for definitively identifying the scope of fabrics covered.