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To make a claim for NAFTA preference, the importer must possess a certificate of origin at the time the claim is made. This is a trilaterally agreed upon form used by Canada, Mexico, and the United States to certify that goods qualify for the preferential tariff treatment accorded by NAFTA.
Canada, Mexico and the United States established a uniform Certificate of Origin to certify that goods imported into their territories qualify for the preferential tariff treatment accorded by the NAFTA.
CBP Form 434 - North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Certificate of Origin | U.S. Customs and Border Protection. An official website of the United States government. Here’s how you know.
What is the NAFTA Certificate of Origin? The NAFTA Certificate of Origin is used by the United States, Canada, and Mexico to determine if imported goods are eligible to receive reduced or eliminated duty as specified by the NAFTA.
NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN INSTRUCTIONS. For purposes of obtaining preferential tariff treatment, this document must be completed legibly and in full by the exporter and be in the possession of the importer at the time the declaration is made.
NORTH AMERICAN FREE TRADE AGREEMENT CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN INSTRUCTIONS. For purposes of obtaining preferential tariff treatment, this document must be completed legibly and in full by the exporter and be in the possession of the importer at the time the declaration is made.
Importers who are claiming preferential tariff treatment under NAFTA must make a declaration based on a valid Certificate of Origin in their possession, as well as the import documentation.
Required for products traded among the signatory countries of the North American Free Trade Agreement (Canada, Mexico, and the United States) if the goods are NAFTA qualified and the importer is claiming zero-duty preference under NAFTA.
Information on "NAFTA Certificates of Origin", how and when they are used and a sample of a certificate. This information is part of the U.S. Commercial Service's "A Basic Guide to Exporting".
The rules of origin are contained in Chapter Four and Annex 401. Additional rules are described in Annex 703.2 (certain agricultural goods), Annex 300-B, Appendix 6A (certain textile goods) and Annex 308.1 (certain automatic data processing goods and their parts).