To import pangasius from Vietnam you need: the correct HS code (0304.62), a Vietnamese exporter approved by your food authority, a health certificate from NAFIQAD, a Certificate of Origin (EUR.1 for EU / Form B for ASEAN), and a licensed customs broker. Anti-dumping duties apply for US importers — verify the rate for your specific exporter before ordering.
Importing frozen pangasius is operationally straightforward once you have the right exporter and understand your market’s documentation requirements. The complexity lies not in the logistics — frozen seafood moves in reefer containers on well-established lanes — but in the regulatory layer: which documents your food safety authority requires, which duty rate applies, and whether your exporter’s establishment number is on the approved list for your country.
This guide covers the four main import markets (EU, US, Middle East, ASEAN) and gives you a reusable clearance checklist at the end. For a broader overview of the sourcing process — selecting cut types, evaluating suppliers, negotiating MOQ — see the Complete Buyer’s Guide to sourcing pangasius from Vietnam →
The import process — 6 steps
Total lead time from order to warehouse receipt: 35–50 days for ocean freight. Here is what happens at each stage.
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1
Confirm your HS code and duty rate
Before placing an order, identify the applicable Harmonized System code for your product format and check the current import duty rate in your market (see the duties table below). Misclassifying the HS code is one of the most common causes of customs delay and can result in back-duties. Engage your customs broker at this stage — not after the shipment arrives.
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2
Verify the exporter’s establishment approval
Your exporter’s processing facility must be registered with your country’s food safety authority. EU: check the EU list of approved Vietnamese seafood establishments at the European Commission’s TRACES portal. US: confirm FDA registration. Middle East and ASEAN countries have their own national lists — ask your customs broker for the current approved-establishment registry link for your import country.
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3
Issue a Purchase Order with full product specification
Your PO should specify: product name, HS code, cut type, trim level, glaze rate (%), net drained weight per carton, gross weight, packaging format, Incoterms, port of loading, and destination port. A complete PO prevents misunderstandings and forms part of your customs entry documentation. Reference the sourcing guide for help specifying cut types and trim levels correctly.
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4
Receive and check the pre-shipment document set
Your exporter should send draft documents before loading for your review. Check the commercial invoice values, the HS code on the packing list, and that the health certificate number matches the lot. Errors are far easier to correct before the container is sealed than after it arrives at your port. See the full document matrix below for what to expect by market.
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5
Book cold store and notify your customs broker
Pre-book a licensed cold store (−18 °C or below) approved for food-grade seafood near your port of entry. Provide your customs broker with the complete document set at least 48 hours before vessel arrival. For EU importers: notify the relevant Border Inspection Post (BIP) via the IMSOC/TRACES system before the shipment arrives — this is a legal requirement, not optional.
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6
Inspect on arrival and release to cold store
On arrival, verify the container reefer temperature printout — look for the continuous log, not just the set point. Product core temperature should have remained at −18 °C or below throughout transit. If the customs authority orders a physical inspection, a cold-room facility at the port is required. Once released, transfer directly to your cold store. Do not allow thaw-refreeze at any point.
Required import documents — by market
The document set varies significantly between import markets. The matrix below shows what is required (✓), optional/conditional (◑), or not applicable (–) for each of the four main pangasius import regions. Print this and share it with your customs broker at the start of each new trade lane.
You must pre-notify the relevant Border Inspection Post (BIP) via the EU’s IMSOC/TRACES system at least 1 working day before arrival for frozen fish. Failure to notify can result in the consignment being held at port and inspected at your cost. Confirm which BIP covers your port of entry with your customs broker.
HS codes and import duty rates
The correct HS code for pangasius
Frozen pangasius fillets are classified under 0304.62 — Frozen fillets of catfish (Pangasius spp., Silurus spp., Clarias spp., Ictalurus spp.) in the 2022 HS nomenclature. The full 8- or 10-digit code varies by country. Your customs broker will identify the national tariff schedule extension; always confirm with them rather than assuming — misclassification under a related heading (e.g. 0304.89 “other frozen fish fillets”) carries a risk of penalty duty.
For whole or gutted pangasius (not fillets), the applicable heading is 0303.84 (frozen fish of Pangasiidae). Pangasius surimi or minced product may fall under 0304.99. Again, confirm with your broker.
| Market | HS heading | Standard (MFN) duty | Preferential duty | Preference instrument |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| European Union | 0304.62 |
9% | 0% (phased) | EVFTA (EU–Vietnam FTA) — requires EUR.1 |
| United Kingdom | 0304.62 |
9% | 0% (phased) | UK–Vietnam FTA (UKVFTA) — requires REX or Form B |
| United States | 0304.62 |
0% | + ADD varies | Anti-dumping duties apply — see section below |
| United Arab Emirates / GCC | 0304.62 |
5% | 5% | No FTA — standard GCC customs tariff applies |
| Saudi Arabia | 0304.62 |
5% | 5% | GCC uniform external tariff |
| China | 0304.62 |
7% | 2–4% (ASEAN–China FTA) | ACFTA — GACC registration of exporter required |
| ASEAN (intra-regional) | 0304.62 |
0–5% | 0% | ATIGA (ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement) — Form D or Form B |
| Brazil | 0304.62 |
12% | 12% | No FTA — Mercosur external tariff applies |
Duty rates are indicative as of July 2026. Rates may change — verify current rates at your national customs authority or the EU Access2Markets portal (trade.ec.europa.eu) before placing an order. VAT or GST on importation is additional and varies by country.
US anti-dumping duties on Vietnamese pangasius
The US maintains anti-dumping duties (ADD) on certain frozen fish fillets from Vietnam, including pangasius. ADD rates vary by exporter and are subject to annual administrative reviews by the US Department of Commerce. Importing without first verifying the applicable ADD rate for your specific Vietnamese exporter is a serious compliance risk.
The ADD order on frozen fish fillets from Vietnam (Case A-552-801) has been in place since 2003 and applies to pangasius and basa fillets. Individual exporters are assigned specific ADD rates based on periodic reviews; companies that did not participate in the original investigation are assigned the “all others” rate, which has historically been higher. ADD is assessed in addition to the standard 0% MFN tariff, making it the dominant cost variable for US importers.
What to check before importing to the US
- Look up your exporter’s current ADD rate in the US Department of Commerce ADD/CVD database at access.trade.gov.
- Confirm the rate is for the current review period — rates can change significantly between annual reviews.
- Check whether the exporter has applied for a “separate rate” status, which typically gives a lower ADD rate than the Vietnam-wide rate.
- File an FDA Prior Notice via the Prior Notice System Interface (PNSI) at least 2 hours before arrival at port (8 hours for ocean freight).
- Submit a SIMP entry — the US Seafood Import Monitoring Program requires harvest/production chain data for pangasius; your exporter must provide SIMP-compliant documentation.
US importers should work with a customs broker with specific experience in Vietnamese seafood ADD cases. The cash deposit rate at entry and the final liquidated duty rate can differ — your broker can advise on bonding requirements.
Import clearance checklist — tick each item before loading
Use this checklist on every pangasius shipment. Tick items as you confirm them with your exporter and customs broker. Progress is tracked locally in your browser.
📋 Pre-order
0304.62) with customs broker for my import country
📄 Documents
🚢 Logistics & arrival
Ticking items does not send any data — this checklist works entirely in your browser and resets on refresh. Print or screenshot it to share with your team.
Frequently asked questions
What HS code is used for importing pangasius from Vietnam?
0304.62 in the 2022 HS nomenclature (frozen fillets of catfish, Pangasiidae). The full 8- or 10-digit national code varies by country — your customs broker will confirm the complete tariff line. Whole or gutted pangasius (not fillets) falls under 0303.84.What documents are required to import pangasius from Vietnam?
What is the import duty on Vietnamese pangasius in the EU?
0304.62) benefit from a staged tariff reduction phasing to 0% with a valid EUR.1 certificate of origin. Without the EUR.1 claiming EVFTA preference, the standard MFN rate of approximately 9% applies. Verify the current rate and staging schedule at the EU Access2Markets portal.Does the US charge anti-dumping duties on Vietnamese pangasius?
How long does it take to import pangasius from Vietnam?
Can I import a smaller quantity than a full container for a trial?
What is NAFIQAD and why does the health certificate matter?
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