What Are Rules of Origin?

Definition and importance of rules of origin in trade agreements and customs classification.

BY Tijara Editorial Team· REVIEWED BY Tijara Trade Operations Team· PUBLISHED Apr 14, 2026· UPDATED Apr 14, 2026· 2 min read

Definition

Rules of Origin are the criteria used to determine the national source of a product. They are essential for applying trade agreement preferences, anti-dumping duties, quotas, and trade statistics.

Why it matters for traders

Without meeting the rules of origin, you cannot claim preferential duty rates under trade agreements — even if you have a certificate of origin. The rules determine whether your product "qualifies" for the agreement's benefits.

Main origin criteria

  • Wholly Obtained — Goods entirely produced in one country (e.g., minerals mined, crops grown)
  • Substantial Transformation — Goods that undergo a fundamental change in form, nature, or character
  • Change in Tariff Classification (CTC) — The finished product has a different HS code than its inputs
  • Value-Added Rule — A minimum percentage of the product's value must originate in the country
  • Specific Process Rule — A specific manufacturing process must occur in the country

Operational example

A garment manufacturer in India imports fabric from China and makes shirts for export to the UAE under CEPA. The rules of origin require that the fabric undergo a change in tariff classification (from fabric HS 5208 to garment HS 6109) in India. Since the manufacturing process in India changes the HS code, the shirts qualify for CEPA preferential duty rates.

FAQ

Questions, answered

Sources

  1. [1] Rules of Origin
    World Trade OrganizationAccessed: 2026-04-14

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