In international trade, every product crossing a border must be accurately identified and documented. In the European Union, the Combined Nomenclature (CN) is the system that organizes this process, ensuring compliance, efficiency, and proper duty assessment. Understanding CN codes is more than an administrative chore—it’s essential to minimizing compliance risk, ensuring correct duty payments, and keeping global supply chains running smoothly.
The Combined Nomenclature (CN) is the EU’s system for classifying goods for customs and statistical purposes. It builds upon the Harmonized System (HS) — an internationally standardized product nomenclature maintained by the World Customs Organization (WCO).
Outside of the EU, other jurisdictions have their own versions:
Each product, from electronics to textiles, chemicals to food, is assigned a specific CN (or equivalent) code that determines the applicable duties and regulatory requirements.
While the terms CN, TARIC and HS are sometimes used interchangeably, they serve different roles:
|
Term |
Scope |
Managed By |
Digits |
Example |
|
HS Code |
International |
World Customs Organization |
6 |
8505 11 |
|
CN Code |
European Union |
European Commission – DG Taxud |
8 |
8505 11 90 |
|
TARIC Code |
European Union |
European Commission – DG Taxud |
10 |
8505 11 90 10 |
The CN builds on the HS framework by adding EU-specific detail necessary for the bloc’s customs policies and trade controls.
3. Why Accurate Classification Matters
Accurate classification is the cornerstone of customs compliance and trade strategy. Small errors can have big consequences:
A single misclassification can cost thousands in unnecessary duties or expose your to duty underpayment and penalties. You may misjudge your exposure to CBAM and EUDR based on incorrect classifications. Precision pays.
Proper classification requires more than keyword searches. A robust process should include:
Consistency and clear documentation are key to avoiding costly mistakes and withstanding regulatory scrutiny.
Even experienced importers slip up. Frequent errors include:
Regular internal training and classification audits go a long way in preventing costly missteps.
The tariff evolves annually to reflect new products, technologies, and trade policies. Countries around the world update their tariff at least once per year. The EU usually publishes the new tariff just before the beginning of a new year in late December, whereas the US has generally published updates in October. Sometimes mid-year changes are published in June too.
Importers must monitor these changes and reassess classifications: especially for high-volume or high-value goods. Even minor updates can significantly affect duties and sourcing costs.
HS classification might seem technical, but it is the foundation of compliant and cost-effective global trade. Accurate classification ensures smooth customs clearance, proper duty payments, and reduces compliance risk.
HS classification doesn’t have to be guesswork.
At Veros, we combine AI-driven classification with automated workflows to help trade professionals make faster, more accurate, and defensible decisions; all while staying current with every tariff update across jurisdictions like the EU, UK, US, and Brazil.
Discover how intelligent automation can simplify your CN classification workflow, and keep your supply chain running smoothly.