Changes to imports in 2021 - the UK Global Tariff

Changes to imports in 2021 - the UK Global Tariff

What are the key changes in Incoterms 2020?

What is the UK Global Tariff?

The UK Global Tariff (UKGT) is the UK-specific tariff regime that will apply to goods imported into the UK from January 2021. The UKGT will replace the EU’s Common External Tariff (CET), which applies until 31 December 2020. The UKGT includes a UK applied Most Favoured Nation tariff schedule that is intended to apply to all countries by default, although this may change with respect to EU countries depending on the deal reached by the UK with the EU. 

The UKGT will not apply to:

  • Countries that the UK has a trade deal with
  • Countries that are part of the UK Generalised Scheme of Preferences (more information on this can be found here) or
  • Where an exception applies, such as relief or tariff suspension

What are some of the key changes?

The net effect of the tariff regime according to a summary by the Department for International Trade is as follows:

  • 47% of products will be tariff-free, compared to 27% under the CET and
  • Average tariffs will be reduced from 7.2% under the CET to 5.7% under the UKGT

This is achieved through changes to rates of tariff by lowering rates, reducing rates to zero or rounding rates down.

Outside of these changes, the UKGT will convert CET rates into GBP sterling and maintain tariffs in certain sectors including agriculture, ceramics and chemicals.

What could the UKGT mean for business?

The impact of the UKGT on business will depend on what the UK’s trade relationship looks like with the EU and the relevant business sector. This is currently a moving picture.

In the event of a no-deal Brexit, it is likely to become more expensive to import goods from the EU to the UK as tariffs will now apply to certain goods from the EU where they have not previously applied. With time in increasingly short supply, it is time to take stock (perhaps literally) to ensure additional costs are factored into the business planning process.

However, businesses importing goods from outside of the EU into the UK are likely to benefit from the UKGT due to the Government liberalising, simplifying and reducing tariff rates on a number of goods meaning importation should be comparably cheaper.

For more information on the UKGT and to check tariffs that will apply to goods that are imported when the UKGT takes effect on 1 January 2021, the Government has published updated guidance here.

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