ECOWAS Common External Tariff: Complete Guide
ECOWAS CET five-band structure, sensitive products, ETLS preferences, and how to calculate duty for imports into West Africa.
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The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) adopted a Common External Tariff (CET) effective 1 January 2015. The CET applies to all 15 ECOWAS member states (Nigeria, Ghana, Cote d'Ivoire, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Benin, Togo, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Cape Verde, Gambia, Niger). For importers shipping into West Africa, the CET is the starting point for any duty calculation, alongside member-state-specific VAT, excise, and parafiscal charges.
This guide covers the five-band CET structure, the sensitive products, the ETLS preferences for intra-regional trade, and the practical calculation for imports into the bloc.
The five-band CET structure
| Band | Rate | Coverage |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | 0% | Essential social goods (basic medicines, school books, certain agricultural inputs) |
| 1 | 5% | Basic raw materials, capital goods, specific inputs |
| 2 | 10% | Intermediate goods (inputs not in category 1) |
| 3 | 20% | Final consumer goods |
| 4 | 35% | Sensitive products (selected agricultural and finished goods) |
About 85 percent of HS lines fall in the 5 percent or 10 percent bands. Category 4 (35 percent) is reserved for products where ECOWAS members elected to retain higher protection: certain cereals (rice in particular), tobacco products, finished textiles in some sub-categories, alcoholic beverages, and a few categories of finished consumer goods.
Sensitive products at 35 percent
The 35 percent band includes around 130 tariff lines. Key examples:
- Rice and prepared rice products (HS 1006)
- Onions and shallots (specific subheadings)
- Cigarettes and other manufactured tobacco
- Beer and certain spirits
- Cement and clinker (selected sub-categories)
- Iron and steel certain finished products
- Used clothing
For these lines, the 35 percent duty plus member-state VAT can produce effective rates above 50 percent on landed cost.
Member-state additional duties
Beyond the CET, member states can apply:
- Supplementary Protection Tax (TPI): a temporary additional duty up to 10 percent ad valorem on certain agricultural goods.
- Import Adjustment Tax (TAI): a temporary additional duty up to 50 percent on imports that compete with local production, set per member.
- ECOWAS Community Levy: 0.5 percent on imports from non-ECOWAS countries.
- UEMOA Community Solidarity Levy: 1 percent on imports into WAEMU members from non-WAEMU countries.
Nigeria, for example, has historically applied TAI on rice imports up to 50 percent for periods, raising the effective import duty on rice to 85 percent.
The ETLS preference
The ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme grants duty-free treatment among member states for goods of ECOWAS origin. To qualify:
- The good must be wholly obtained in an ECOWAS country, or
- Have undergone substantial transformation in ECOWAS such that the non-originating materials are no more than 60 percent of the ex-works price (or meet a CTH tariff shift test), or
- Have an ECOWAS regional value content of at least 30 percent.
The producer must apply to the relevant national ETLS committee to register the product. Once registered, exports to other ECOWAS members move duty-free upon presentation of an ETLS certificate of origin.
Worked example: importing electronics into Nigeria
A US exporter sends 80,000 USD of consumer electronics (HTS 8517.13, smartphones) to Lagos. CET band: most smartphones fall in band 1 (5 percent) or band 2 (10 percent). Use 10 percent here. Nigeria VAT: 7.5 percent. ECOWAS Community Levy: 0.5 percent.
| Charge | Rate | Base | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CET duty | 10% | 80,000 | 8,000.00 |
| ECOWAS Community Levy | 0.5% | 80,000 | 400.00 |
| Nigeria VAT (on CIF + duty + levy) | 7.5% | 88,400 | 6,630.00 |
| Total at border | 15,030.00 |
Effective rate on FOB: 18.8 percent. Add inland trucking from Lagos port to inland destination and the broker's fee (Nigeria customs broker fees typically 1 to 2 percent of CIF).
Worked example: importing rice into Senegal
A non-ECOWAS rice exporter ships 100,000 USD of rice to Dakar. HS 1006.30 (semi-milled or wholly milled rice). CET band 4 (35 percent). Senegal VAT: 18 percent. ECOWAS Community Levy: 0.5 percent. UEMOA Solidarity Levy: 1 percent.
| Charge | Rate | Base | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| CET duty | 35% | 100,000 | 35,000.00 |
| ECOWAS Community Levy | 0.5% | 100,000 | 500.00 |
| UEMOA Solidarity Levy | 1% | 100,000 | 1,000.00 |
| Senegal VAT (on CIF + duties) | 18% | 136,500 | 24,570.00 |
| Total at border | 61,070.00 |
Effective rate on FOB: 61 percent. Rice is the most protected category in West Africa. Local producers in Mali, Senegal, and Cote d'Ivoire benefit substantially from this protection.
Member-state specifics
| Country | VAT | Notable features |
|---|---|---|
| Nigeria | 7.5% | Largest market; FX restrictions affect import payment; pre-shipment inspection mandatory for some imports |
| Ghana | 12.5% (plus NHIS 2.5%, GETFund 2.5%) | Effective combined "VAT" around 17.5%; customs broker required |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 18% | Major regional hub for landlocked Mali and Burkina Faso |
| Senegal | 18% | DAKAR port major regional gateway |
| Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger | 18% | Landlocked; transit through Senegal, Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana, Togo |
| Liberia | 10% | USD-denominated economy |
| Cape Verde | 15% | Island state; smaller volume |
Customs procedures and parafiscal charges
ECOWAS member states retain their own customs administrations. Common parafiscal charges:
- Pre-shipment inspection (PSI) fee: roughly 1 percent of CIF in countries that retain PSI.
- Customs broker fees: 1 to 2 percent of CIF.
- Statistical surcharge: 1 to 2 percent in some countries.
- Terminal handling: USD 300 to 1,500 per container depending on port.
For Lagos and Tema (Ghana), congestion delays add 7 to 30 days to clearance routinely. Importers should budget for demurrage.
How the calculator handles ECOWAS destinations
When you select an ECOWAS destination in the calculator, the engine:
- Looks up the HS line in the CET schedule (5-digit or 6-digit identification).
- Applies the appropriate CET band (0 / 5 / 10 / 20 / 35 percent).
- Adds the ECOWAS Community Levy 0.5 percent for non-ECOWAS origin.
- Adds the UEMOA Solidarity Levy 1 percent for WAEMU destinations from non-WAEMU origin.
- Applies the member-state VAT on customs value plus duty.
- Surfaces any supplementary protection or member-specific TAI where active.
- Notes pre-shipment inspection requirements where applicable.
Related guides
- EAC Common External Tariff: Sensitive Items and Rates
- CARICOM CET: How Caribbean Imports Are Taxed
- Mercosur TEC: Calculating Argentina/Brazil/Paraguay/Uruguay Duty
- What Is a Customs Broker and When Do You Need One
- HS Code Lookup: How to Find Yours
- Incoterms 2020 vs Landed Cost: A Clear Guide
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Frequently asked questions
When did the ECOWAS CET enter into force?
1 January 2015. All ECOWAS member states adopted the common external tariff schedule from that date, replacing the prior UEMOA CET that had applied to the WAEMU subgroup.
How many ECOWAS member states use the CET?
All 15 ECOWAS member states use the CET, including Nigeria, Ghana, Cote d'Ivoire, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea, Niger, and others. The ECOWAS rules also include three observer or transitional states.
What are the five tariff bands?
0 percent (essential social goods), 5 percent (basic raw materials and capital goods), 10 percent (intermediate goods), 20 percent (final consumer goods), and 35 percent (sensitive goods).
What is ETLS?
The ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme. Goods of ECOWAS origin that have been approved under ETLS move duty-free among ECOWAS member states.
Does VAT apply at import?
Yes. Each ECOWAS member state applies its own VAT (typically 18 percent in Senegal, 7.5 percent in Nigeria, 12.5 percent in Ghana). VAT calculation base is customs value plus duty.
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