HS code mistakes in fastener imports rarely start with bad intent.
They usually start with a vague product name.
“Bolt.”
“Steel screw.”
“Assorted fasteners.”
That may be enough for a purchase order. It is not enough for customs classification.
For U.S. importers, engineers, and sourcing teams, fasteners often fall under HTS heading 7318. But the correct subheading depends on details such as thread type, material, diameter, head style, function, and whether nuts or washers ship with the bolt.
A small wording error can trigger duty issues, customs delays, post-entry corrections, or supplier disputes.
Why Fastener HS Codes Are Easy to Get Wrong
Fasteners look simple. Classification is not.
A hex bolt, self-tapping screw, wood screw, rivet, washer, and anchor may all sit in the same warehouse bin area. Customs does not treat them as the same article.
The first mistake is classifying by commercial nickname instead of technical identity.
For example, many buyers call any externally threaded fastener a “bolt.” In practice, a self-tapping screw, machine screw, structural bolt, threaded rod, or custom-formed part may require a different classification path.
Before assigning an HS code, compare the product against drawings, standards, and actual use. A supplier’s invoice description should support that logic.
For product reference, buyers can review XZ Fastener’s fastener product range and category structure before preparing import documentation.
Common HS Code Mistakes in Fastener Imports
| Mistake | Real-World Example | Possible Result |
|---|---|---|
| Using one HS code for all fasteners | Bolts, washers, rivets, and clamps listed together | Incorrect duty and statistical reporting |
| Ignoring material | Stainless steel and carbon steel treated the same | Wrong subheading or duty exposure |
| Mislabeling function | Self-tapping screws declared as general screws | Customs query or entry correction |
| Skipping diameter details | Thread diameter under 6 mm not stated | Broker forced to guess |
| Treating kits too casually | Bolts shipped with nuts and washers | Wrong set or component classification |
| Relying only on supplier invoice text | “Hardware parts” used as description | Higher inspection risk |
The Details That Actually Matter
Material and Finish
Material is one of the first classification signals.
Carbon steel, stainless steel, alloy steel, brass, aluminum, and plastic fasteners may not follow the same tariff path. Finish also matters for product identification, even when it does not change the heading.
A zinc-plated carbon steel bolt should not be described only as “silver bolt.” A customs broker needs the base material, not the color.
Use descriptions like:
- Carbon steel hex bolt, zinc plated
- Stainless steel 316 full-thread screw
- Alloy steel socket head cap screw, black oxide
- Carbon steel washer, hot-dip galvanized
Thread and Function
Threading often separates one fastener from another.
A self-tapping screw cuts or forms its own mating thread. A machine screw usually needs a pre-threaded hole or nut. A bolt may be used with a nut and may have a different structural role.
This distinction matters in classification and in engineering review.
For drawing-based parts, custom geometry should be documented early. XZ Fastener’s customized service page is a useful internal link when discussing non-standard fasteners, special heads, or project-specific samples.
Diameter, Head Style, and Standard
Fastener standards help remove ambiguity.
DIN, ISO, ASTM, ASME, and SAE references can support a cleaner classification review. They also help the broker understand whether the part is a hex bolt, carriage bolt, socket screw, threaded stud, washer, or rivet.
| Data Point | Why It Helps |
|---|---|
| قياسي | Identifies product family and intended form |
| قطر | Supports subheading decisions |
| Length | Helps distinguish fasteners from pins or rods |
| Head style | Separates hex, round, socket, countersunk, and special heads |
| نوع الخيط | Confirms screw, bolt, stud, or self-tapping function |
| Material grade | Supports material declaration and compliance review |
A Practical Classification Workflow
Step 1: Separate Products Before Quoting Freight
Do not group unlike fasteners into one customs line.
Separate by:
- Product type
- مادة
- Size range
- قياسي
- Finish
- Packaging condition
- Whether nuts or washers are included
This makes the commercial invoice cleaner and reduces broker back-and-forth.
Step 2: Match the Product Name to the Drawing
The drawing should drive the description.
If the drawing says DIN 933 full-thread hex bolt, do not declare it as “screw accessories.” If the product is a T-bolt or slot connector, identify it clearly. See this example of T-bolts for aluminum profiles for how specific product naming supports better sourcing and documentation.
Step 3: Ask the Supplier for Technical Confirmation
A reliable supplier should confirm:
- Product standard
- Base material
- Finish
- نوع الخيط
- Diameter and length
- Unit weight
- Packing list breakdown
- Whether parts are sold separately or as a set
This is especially important for mixed cartons, maintenance kits, and project bundles.
Step 4: Let the Broker Review Before Shipment
Do not wait until the cargo lands.
Send the broker the quote sheet, invoice draft, packing list, drawings, photos, and material details before the shipment leaves the factory.
For U.S. entries, importers should verify current classification against the official HTSUS and relevant CBP CROSS rulings.
Red Flags Buyers Should Catch Early
Watch for these signs:
- The supplier uses one HS code for every product.
- The invoice says “metal parts” or “hardware.”
- The packing list mixes bolts, nuts, washers, and screws without line separation.
- Material grades are missing.
- The buyer changed the finish, but documents were not updated.
- The broker asks for photos after the vessel has already sailed.
These are preventable issues.
A clean fastener import file should let a third party understand the product without opening the carton.
Final Checklist Before Fastener Import
| Checkpoint | Pass Criteria |
|---|---|
| Product description | Clear technical name, not generic wording |
| قياسي | DIN, ISO, ASTM, ASME, SAE, or drawing reference listed |
| مادة | Base material and grade confirmed |
| Finish | Plating or coating identified |
| Size | Diameter, length, and thread type stated |
| Components | Nuts, washers, and kits separated where needed |
| Broker review | Completed before shipment |
| Internal records | Photos, drawings, invoice, and packing list saved |
Bottom Line
HS code mistakes in fastener imports are usually documentation problems before they become customs problems.
The fix is not complicated.
Describe the fastener the way an engineer would inspect it: material, standard, size, thread, finish, and function.
Then let the broker classify from facts, not guesses.
For more product-specific sourcing references, buyers can browse the Fastener Knowledge Library and الأدلة الفنية before preparing the next import file.