Paano Kalkulahin si Fta Savings Calc
Ano ang Fta Savings Calc?
The Free Trade Agreement Savings Calculator computes the duty reduction available by importing goods under a preferential FTA rate instead of the standard MFN rate, helping businesses quantify the benefit of FTA utilization.
Pormula
Annual Savings = Annual Import Value × (MFN Duty Rate - FTA Preferential Rate)
- V
- Import Value ($) — Annual value of imports eligible for FTA treatment
- MFN
- MFN Rate (%) — Standard most-favored-nation duty rate
- FTA
- FTA Rate (%) — Preferential duty rate under the free trade agreement
- CC
- Compliance Cost ($) — Annual cost of origin documentation and auditing
Step-by-Step na Gabay
- 1Identify the applicable free trade agreement between origin and destination country
- 2Look up the MFN (standard) duty rate and the FTA preferential rate for your HTS code
- 3Multiply annual import value by the rate difference to calculate potential savings
- 4Factor in compliance costs (origin documentation, auditing, certificate of origin fees)
Mga Nalutas na Halimbawa
Input
$5M annual imports from Korea, MFN rate 8%, KORUS FTA rate 0%
Resulta
Savings = $5,000,000 × (0.08 - 0.00) = $400,000/year
Input
$2M from Mexico, MFN rate 12%, USMCA rate 0%, compliance cost $5K/year
Resulta
Gross savings = $240,000, Net savings = $235,000/year
Mga Karaniwang Mali na Dapat Iwasan
- ✕Not claiming FTA rates because origin documentation seems burdensome — leaving money on the table
- ✕Assuming FTA rates are automatic — you must claim them and have supporting documentation
- ✕Forgetting that FTA compliance costs (record-keeping, audits) reduce net savings
Mga madalas itanong
How many FTAs does the US have?
The US has 14 free trade agreements with 20 countries, including USMCA (Canada, Mexico), KORUS (South Korea), CAFTA-DR (Central America), and bilateral agreements with Australia, Singapore, Israel, and others.
What documentation is needed to claim FTA rates?
Typically a Certificate of Origin (or certification of origin under newer FTAs), supplier declarations, and records showing the product meets the rules of origin. You must retain records for 5 years.