Calculate countervailing duty (CVD) costs on subsidized imports. Estimate CVD rates and total duty impact for goods receiving foreign government subsidies.
Countervailing duties (CVDs) are imposed on imported goods that benefit from foreign government subsidies. When a government provides financial assistance to its exporters — through direct grants, tax incentives, preferential loans, or below-market inputs — importing countries can impose CVDs to offset the unfair price advantage.
CVDs work alongside anti-dumping duties in the trade remedy toolkit. While AD duties address below-market pricing by companies, CVDs address government subsidies that distort trade. A product can be subject to both AD and CVD simultaneously, significantly increasing the total duty burden.
This calculator estimates the total import duty cost including standard customs duty and countervailing duty. Use it to assess the true cost of importing goods from countries known to subsidize their exports.
Supply-chain managers, warehouse operators, and shipping coordinators rely on precise countervailing duty data to maintain efficiency and control costs across complex distribution networks. Revisit this calculator whenever conditions change to keep your logistics plans aligned with real-world performance.
CVDs can add 5-50%+ to the cost of imported goods. Knowing the CVD rate before sourcing decisions prevents uneconomical purchases and helps identify when alternative, non-subsidized sourcing is more cost-effective. Accurate CVD calculation is essential for landed cost analysis. Real-time recalculation lets you model different scenarios quickly, ensuring your logistics decisions are backed by accurate, up-to-date numbers.
Standard Duty = Customs Value × Standard Rate % CVD = Customs Value × CVD Rate % AD Duty = Customs Value × AD Rate % (if applicable) Total Duties = Standard + CVD + AD Effective Rate = Total / Customs Value × 100
Result: Total Duties = $32,250
Standard duty = $150,000 × 3% = $4,500. CVD = $150,000 × 18.5% = $27,750. No AD duty. Total = $4,500 + $27,750 = $32,250. Effective rate = 21.5%.
A CVD investigation begins when a domestic industry files a petition. Commerce Department examines the foreign government's subsidy programs, while the ITC assesses injury to the domestic industry. Preliminary duties may be imposed within 65-85 days, with final determinations within 205-280 days of initiation.
Governments subsidize exports through many mechanisms: direct cash grants, tax holidays for exporters, preferential lending rates through state banks, free or discounted land in economic zones, provision of raw materials at below-market prices, and currency manipulation. Each program is evaluated separately during CVD investigations.
When CVDs make a sourcing country uneconomical, evaluate alternatives methodically. Identify all countries with capable suppliers, assess their production quality and capacity, calculate complete landed costs including any applicable trade remedies, and consider the lead time and supply chain risk. Sometimes paying slightly more for non-subject goods yields better total value.
Actionable subsidies include direct government grants, export subsidies, preferential tax treatment, below-market government loans, input subsidies (cheap raw materials), and land/infrastructure provided at below-market rates. The subsidy must be specific to certain industries, not generally available.
Commerce Department calculates the subsidy rate by quantifying the benefit received by the exporter from government programs, expressed as a percentage of the export price. Each identified subsidy program is measured separately and summed for the total CVD rate.
Yes. Many products face both simultaneously. For example, certain Chinese steel products face AD duties (for selling below fair value) plus CVD duties (for receiving government subsidies). The combined rate can exceed 200% in extreme cases.
If Commerce's investigation finds the subsidy rate is below the de minimis threshold (less than 1% for developed countries, less than 2% for developing countries), no CVD order is issued. The subsidy is deemed too small to cause injury.
No. CVD orders are country-specific, applying only to the country whose subsidies were investigated. Products from other countries are not affected. This is why country diversification is an effective strategy for avoiding CVDs.
CVD orders remain in effect indefinitely but are subject to sunset reviews every 5 years. If the ITC determines that revoking the order would lead to recurrence of subsidization and injury, the order continues. Many orders have been in place for decades.