ADCVD Scope on Vietnam Steel Pipe: How to Check Before You Buy
Vietnam-origin steel pipe sits inside multiple US antidumping and countervailing duty scope rulings. Rates can exceed 100 percent and apply retroactively. Here is how to verify scope before the entry, not after liquidation.
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Open calculatorADCVD Scope on Vietnam Steel Pipe: How to Check Before You Buy
Antidumping and countervailing duty (ADCVD) is the single highest landed-cost surprise in US imports. Rates can exceed 100 percent ad valorem. They apply per producer, per country, per product, and they extend retroactively. Vietnam-origin steel pipe sits inside multiple active orders and a long list of circumvention findings. If you are sourcing pipe from Vietnam without checking scope, you are gambling with margin.
This guide covers the active orders on Vietnamese steel pipe, the HTS lines typically in scope, how Commerce finds circumvention when Chinese substrate is processed in Vietnam, the cost of getting it wrong, and the workflow to verify scope before the container leaves the port.
Why Vietnam, why pipe
Chinese steel mills face the highest ADCVD rates in the US system. China-wide AD rates on hot-rolled steel, cold-rolled steel, and welded pipe range from roughly 30 percent to over 200 percent on specific orders. CVD adds another 15 to 90 percent in countervailable subsidies.
Faced with those rates, Chinese producers ship hot-rolled coil to processors in Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Korea, where the coil is slit, formed, welded, and finished into pipe. The pipe enters the US under a Vietnamese mill name. The HTS line is the same as it would be for any other Vietnamese pipe, often HTS 7306 (other tubes, pipes, hollow profiles) or HTS 7304 (seamless).
Commerce has investigated this pattern for over a decade. The result is a stack of circumvention findings under section 781(b) of the Tariff Act of 1930 that extend the China rate to the Vietnamese producer when the Vietnamese processing does not substantially transform the upstream Chinese coil.
Active orders that catch Vietnamese pipe
The relevant active US ADCVD orders that bear on Vietnam-origin steel pipe include:
- Welded carbon steel standard pipe and tube from China (AD order A-570-910). Vietnam circumvention inquiry resolved with affirmative finding. Country-wide China AD rate applies to Vietnamese pipe produced from Chinese hot-rolled.
- Light-walled rectangular pipe and tube from China (AD A-570-914). Circumvention found via Vietnam in 2019, affirmed on appeal.
- Circular welded carbon-quality steel pipe from China (AD A-570-940, CVD C-570-941). Vietnamese transformation finding negative for some producers, affirmative for others. Check producer-specific.
- Corrosion-resistant steel products from China (AD A-570-026, CVD C-570-027). Anti-circumvention extended to Vietnam in 2018. CIT ruling December 2025 vacated part of the finding on a sufficient-substantial-transformation basis but left the cash-deposit obligation pending remand.
- Stainless steel pipe and tube from China (AD A-570-105). Active scope inquiry on Vietnam-processed material.
The Federal Register notices for each list specific producer names with company-specific rates. Always check the producer first.
HTS lines typically in scope
The orders listed above touch the following HTS chapter 73 subheadings most often:
- 7306.30: welded iron or non-alloy steel pipe, circular, of an external diameter not exceeding 406.4 mm. Standard pipe core.
- 7306.40: welded stainless steel pipe, circular.
- 7306.61: welded steel pipe of square or rectangular cross section. Light-walled rectangular core.
- 7306.69: welded steel pipe of other non-circular cross section.
- 7304.19: seamless line pipe of iron or non-alloy steel, of a kind used for oil or gas pipelines.
- 7304.39: other seamless steel pipe.
- 7210.30 and 7210.49: corrosion-resistant flat-rolled products (when re-formed into pipe downstream).
A line being in HTS scope does not by itself mean ADCVD applies. The product description in the order controls. A line being out of scope by HTS does not exempt you if the description fits another order.
The cost of getting it wrong
A worked example. You import 100,000 USD of HTS 7306.30 welded standard pipe from a Vietnamese mill that Commerce has found to be circumventing the China A-570-910 order.
| Charge | Rate | Base | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MFN duty | 0 percent | 100,000 | 0 |
| Section 232 (steel, 50 percent post-June 2025) | 50 percent | 100,000 | 50,000 |
| AD (China country-wide, A-570-910) | 85.55 percent | 100,000 | 85,550 |
| CVD | N/A on this order | 0 | 0 |
| MPF | 0.3464 percent | 100,000 | 346.40 |
| HMF | 0.125 percent | 100,000 | 125 |
| Total | 136,021.40 |
Effective rate 136 percent. The commercial invoice from Vietnam said 100,000 USD. The landed cost is 236,021 USD. The 86,000 USD AD line was unbudgeted by every importer who did not check the producer name against the scope ruling.
Worse: if Commerce had already announced suspension of liquidation when the order was filed, the cash deposit was due at entry. If the importer entered without paying the deposit, the entry is subject to reliquidation plus interest and possible 1592 penalties.
How to check scope before the shipment
The workflow that prevents the surprise above is the same five steps every time.
1. Identify the active orders by HTS prefix. Pull the Commerce ADCVD orders list at https://access.trade.gov and filter by HTS chapter 73 plus country China and any third country adjacent to your supplier (Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia, Korea, Indonesia, Mexico for steel pipe). The list is maintained by Enforcement and Compliance and updated continuously.
2. Read the most recent Federal Register notice for the order. The notice contains the scope description, the producer list with rates, and the cash-deposit instructions. Free at federalregister.gov.
3. Match the product description, not just the HTS. The scope writes "welded carbon steel pipe of circular cross section, of an outside diameter from 0.375 inches to 16 inches, regardless of wall thickness, surface finish, or end finish". If your pipe fits the description, you are in scope regardless of how it is classified by your broker.
4. Get the producer cert and substrate origin documentation. The mill must identify the hot-rolled or cold-rolled coil source by heat number, country of origin, and mill name. If the coil is Chinese, the circumvention findings apply.
5. Get a binding scope ruling if there is ambiguity. A scope ruling request to Commerce takes 45 to 120 days and gives you a written determination you can rely on at the time of entry. Far cheaper than discovering scope at liquidation 18 months later.
What changed in late 2025 (CIT ruling)
In December 2025 the Court of International Trade vacated a portion of the corrosion-resistant steel anti-circumvention finding on Vietnam-processed product, ruling that Commerce had not adequately supported the substantial transformation test. The remand is pending. This does not exempt importers: cash deposit obligations remain in place during the remand and any final negative determination would be prospective only.
If you are importing under A-570-026 or C-570-027 with Vietnamese pipe today, continue paying the cash deposit and document substrate origin carefully. The window for reliquidation refunds will depend on the final remand outcome.
Run your shipment now
Use the LandedFees calculator to model the China-rate AD scenario alongside the no-AD scenario for any Vietnamese pipe shipment. The calculator pulls the active orders from access.trade.gov nightly and flags producer matches automatically. If your supplier is on a scope list, you see the deposit rate before the container leaves the port.
Calculate a Vietnamese steel pipe shipment
Citations
- Commerce ADCVD orders list: https://access.trade.gov/ADCVD_Search.aspx
- Federal Register ADCVD notices: https://www.federalregister.gov/agencies/international-trade-administration
- Tariff Act of 1930, section 781(b) anti-circumvention: 19 USC 1677j(b)
- CIT December 2025 ruling on corrosion-resistant steel Vietnam circumvention (pending citation: Court 25-XXX)
Frequently asked questions
Is Vietnamese steel pipe always subject to ADCVD?
Not always, but it is subject to multiple scope inquiries. Pipe processed in Vietnam from Chinese hot-rolled coil has been ruled circumvention by Commerce in multiple cases. Pipe made from Vietnam-origin substrate is normally outside scope. The substrate origin is the determining fact.
What is the maximum rate I could pay?
The country-wide AD rate from China can exceed 100 percent. Anti-circumvention findings extend the China rate to the Vietnam producer if substrate is Chinese. Combine with countervailing duty (CVD) and you can see total ADCVD over 150 percent ad valorem.
Can I get hit retroactively?
Yes. ADCVD applies from the date of suspension of liquidation set in the Federal Register notice. Entries already filed and paid can be reliquidated, with cash deposits owed plus interest. This is the highest landed-cost-surprise risk in US imports.
How do I check scope before the shipment leaves Vietnam?
Pull the Commerce scope rulings database (https://access.trade.gov), match your HTS line and product description against active orders, get a binding scope ruling if there is doubt, and ask the mill for substrate origin documentation (mill certs identifying the heat number and the country where the coil was rolled).
Does a USMCA or FTA eligibility help?
No. ADCVD is independent of preferential tariff programs. A USMCA-qualifying Mexican producer can still owe full ADCVD if Commerce finds the underlying steel is in scope.
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