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HS Code for Frozen Shrimp: 0306.17 by Species, FDA Prior Notice, ADCVD

Frozen shrimp classifies into HTS 0306.17 by species and presentation (peeled, shell-on, breaded). FDA Prior Notice required at least 4 hours before arrival. Active ADCVD orders cover shrimp from India, Vietnam, Indonesia, Ecuador, Thailand. Here is the classification and full landed cost stack.

Updated 2026-06-205 min read
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HS Code for Frozen Shrimp: 0306.17 by Species, FDA Prior Notice, ADCVD

Frozen shrimp is one of the highest-volume seafood imports into the US. India, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Ecuador together supply roughly 85 percent of US frozen shrimp consumption. The 2026 duty stack on frozen shrimp is dominated by active ADCVD orders against most major source countries. FDA Prior Notice and FSVP compliance add documentation overhead but no duty.

This guide covers the HTS 0306.17 classification by species and presentation, the active ADCVD orders by country, the FDA framework, and worked landed cost examples.

Heading 0306 structure

HTS 0306 covers crustaceans whether in shell or not, live, fresh, chilled, frozen, dried, salted, or in brine. Frozen shrimp specifically:

  • 0306.16: Frozen coldwater shrimps and prawns (Pandalus spp).
  • 0306.17: Other frozen shrimps and prawns (mainly Penaeid warmwater species).

Within 0306.17, statistical annotations split by:

  • Species (vannamei, monodon, indicus, etc).
  • Shell status (shell-on vs peeled).
  • Presentation (raw, cooked, breaded, headless, head-on).
  • Count size (per kilogram or per pound).

Worked example: Indian peeled vannamei shrimp

200,000 USD of HTS 0306.17.0040 (peeled warmwater shrimp) from India. Subject to AD A-533-840 at producer-specific rate (assume 4.5 percent typical).

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
MFN duty0 percent200,0000
AD (India producer-specific)4.5 percent200,0009,000
CVD (Indian shrimp CVD activated 2024)5.77 percent200,00011,540
Section 12210 percent200,00020,000
MPF0.3464 percent200,000614.35 (capped)
HMF0.125 percent200,000250
Total41,404.35

Effective rate 29.7 percent. India is the largest frozen shrimp source by volume; the combined AD plus CVD plus Section 122 stack is the binding cost.

Worked example: Vietnamese frozen shrimp

100,000 USD of HTS 0306.17.0040 from Vietnam. Subject to AD A-552-802 producer-specific (assume 0 percent for clean producer like Minh Phu Seafood).

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
MFN duty0 percent100,0000
AD (Vietnam producer-specific)0 percent00
Section 12210 percent100,00010,000
MPF0.3464 percent100,000346.40
HMF0.125 percent100,000125
Total10,471.40

Effective rate 14.5 percent. Vietnamese frozen shrimp from a 0 percent AD producer is among the cheapest landed cost options. Section 122 is the only material layer.

Worked example: Ecuadorian frozen shrimp

300,000 USD of HTS 0306.17.0040 from Ecuador. Subject to AD A-331-803 (newer order, 2024 to 2025) at country-wide 1.69 percent and CVD at 3.78 percent.

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
MFN duty0 percent300,0000
AD (Ecuador)1.69 percent300,0005,070
CVD (Ecuador)3.78 percent300,00011,340
Section 12210 percent300,00030,000
MPFcapped300,000614.35
HMF0.125 percent300,000375
Total47,399.35

Effective rate 10.8 percent. Ecuadorian frozen shrimp is currently the lowest landed cost source thanks to low AD/CVD rates and low Section 122. Volume from Ecuador has grown rapidly since 2022.

Worked example: Thai breaded frozen shrimp

100,000 USD of HTS 1605.21 prepared and preserved shrimp (the breaded line moves out of chapter 03 into chapter 16). From Thailand.

The chapter shift from 0306 (raw frozen) to 1605 (prepared) significantly changes the classification. Breaded shrimp:

ChargeRateBaseAmount (USD)
MFN duty5 percent100,0005,000
AD on Thailand 1605 (if applicable, check current order)0 to 6 percent100,000varies
Section 12210 percent100,00010,000
MPF0.3464 percent100,000346.40
Total (no AD assumed)15,346.40

Effective rate 10.3 percent. The shift to chapter 16 brings positive MFN but generally lower AD exposure since most 0306 AD orders specifically cover raw frozen, not breaded prepared.

FDA Prior Notice requirements

Required for all imported food per Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002. For frozen shrimp:

  • Filed at least 4 hours before arrival (air freight).
  • 8 hours before arrival (truck and rail).
  • 5 days before arrival or by departure of vessel (ocean), whichever is later.

Filed via FDA's Prior Notice System (PNS) or in ACE.

Information required:

  • Importer of record name and FDA registration number.
  • Carrier information.
  • Country of origin.
  • FDA product code (specific to shrimp species, presentation).
  • Quantity and packaging.
  • Manufacturer/processor name and FDA Food Facility Registration number.

Failure to file results in CBP refusal of admission. Detained product is held at importer expense.

FSVP compliance

Foreign Supplier Verification Program under 21 CFR 1.500-1.514. The US importer must verify the foreign supplier's food safety controls. Verification activities include:

  • Reviewing the supplier's food safety records.
  • On-site audits (annually for high-risk foods like shrimp).
  • Sampling and testing.
  • Reviewing the supplier's HACCP plan.

FSVP records must be maintained for 2 years.

For frozen shrimp specifically, the high-risk classification means annual on-site audits are typically required.

Documentation Aduana / CBP wants

  • Commercial invoice with HTS 10-digit, country of origin, species, presentation, count size.
  • Packing list with weights per carton.
  • Bill of lading.
  • FDA Prior Notice confirmation.
  • FDA Food Facility Registration number for processor.
  • FSVP documentation.
  • For ADCVD-covered shipments: producer-specific rate documentation.
  • For organic or specialty certifications: USDA NOP or equivalent.

Run your frozen shrimp entry now

The LandedFees calculator handles 0306.17 with the active ADCVD orders by country and producer, the Section 122 stacking, the FDA Prior Notice timing flag, and the FSVP requirement check.

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Section 122 status as of June 20 2026

The May 7 2026 Court of International Trade ruling in Oregon v. United States (consolidated with Burlap and Barrel v. United States) struck down the Section 122 proclamation. The Federal Circuit issued an administrative stay on May 12 2026, so CBP is still collecting the duty pending appeal. Importers paying now should preserve protest rights and refund claims in case the government loses on the merits. The underlying Section 122 authority sunsets July 24 2026 under the statutory 150-day ceiling, regardless of the appeal outcome, unless Congress extends or a fresh proclamation restarts the clock.

Citations

Frequently asked questions

What is the right HTS for frozen warmwater shrimp?

HTS 0306.17 covers other frozen shrimps and prawns. Subheadings split by species (warmwater 0306.17.0040, coldwater 0306.17.0080), shell status (peeled 0306.17.0003 / 0006, shell-on), and presentation (raw, cooked, breaded). Always classify at 10-digit specificity.

Is FDA Prior Notice required?

Yes for all imported food including frozen shrimp. Prior Notice must be filed at least 4 hours before arrival (8 hours for vessels). Failure to file results in detention. FSVP (Foreign Supplier Verification Program) compliance is also required for the US importer.

What ADCVD orders cover frozen shrimp?

Active US AD orders against India (A-533-840), Vietnam (A-552-802), Ecuador (A-331-803), Indonesia (A-560-823), Thailand (A-549-822). Country-wide AD rates 2 to 25 percent. Some countries also face CVD (Indian and Ecuadorian recently). Verify producer-specific rates.

What's the MFN on shrimp?

0 percent on most frozen shrimp lines under the WTO schedule. The duty stack on shrimp is dominated by AD/CVD, not MFN. Section 122 applies on top of AD/CVD based on country.

Are there FSVP exemptions?

Small importers and very low-risk products have FSVP modifications, but commercial frozen shrimp imports from major source countries are in full scope. The importer must verify the foreign supplier's safety controls per 21 CFR 1.500-1.514.

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