A furniture importer in Chicago ordered $420,000 worth of solid wood dining sets from a manufacturer in Vietnam. The shipment qualified for duty free treatment under the US ASEAN Trade and Investment Framework, potentially saving the importer $25,200 in customs duties. But when the shipment arrived at the Port of Los Angeles, the importer could not produce the correct preferential certificate of origin. The manufacturer had issued a generic commercial certificate instead of the ASEAN specific Form D. US Customs assessed the full duty rate, and the importer spent four months filing a post entry amendment to recover the overpaid duties, ultimately recovering only $18,000 after legal and administrative costs.
A certificate of origin is one of the most misunderstood documents in international trade. Many shippers treat it as a formality. In reality, it is a legal instrument that determines duty rates, qualifies goods for free trade agreement benefits, establishes compliance with trade regulations, and can make or break the profitability of an import transaction.
This guide explains the different types of certificates of origin, how to obtain them, common mistakes that cost importers money, and how freight forwarders can add value by guiding customers through the process.
A certificate of origin (CO) is an official document that certifies the country where the goods being exported were manufactured, produced, or processed. It serves as a declaration of the "nationality" of the product and is required by customs authorities at the destination country to determine the applicable tariff treatment.
Key facts:
The single most important distinction in certificates of origin is between preferential and non preferential types.
A non preferential certificate of origin simply certifies where the goods were made. It does not entitle the importer to any reduced duty rates. Goods enter the destination country at the standard Most Favored Nation (MFN) tariff rate.
When required:
Who issues it: Typically issued by the local chamber of commerce in the exporting country. In the United States, many local and state chambers of commerce are authorized to certify non preferential COs.
A preferential certificate of origin certifies that the goods meet the specific rules of origin under a free trade agreement (FTA) and qualifies the importer for reduced or zero duty rates.
Examples of preferential COs:
| Free Trade Agreement | Certificate Form | Key Members |
|---|---|---|
| USMCA (US Mexico Canada) | USMCA Certificate of Origin | US, Canada, Mexico |
| ASEAN Trade in Goods | Form D | 10 ASEAN nations |
| EU FTAs | EUR.1 or EUR MED | EU member states plus partners |
| RCEP | RCEP Certificate of Origin | 15 Asia Pacific nations |
| CPTPP | CPTPP Certificate of Origin | 11 Pacific nations |
| US Korea FTA (KORUS) | KORUS FTA CO | US, South Korea |
| US Australia FTA | AUSFTA CO | US, Australia |
The financial impact is significant. Under USMCA, qualifying goods can enter duty free between the US, Canada, and Mexico. Without the correct preferential CO, the same goods might face duties of 5% to 25%. On a $500,000 shipment, that difference can exceed $125,000.
A certificate of origin is only as valid as the product's actual qualification under the applicable rules of origin. These rules determine what "made in" a particular country actually means.
Goods that are entirely grown, harvested, mined, or produced in a single country. Examples: agricultural products, minerals, fish caught in national waters.
Goods that have undergone sufficient manufacturing or processing in the country of origin to be considered a new product. The test varies by agreement but typically involves:
Many FTAs use regional value content (RVC) calculations that require a minimum percentage of the product's value to originate within the FTA region. USMCA, for example, requires 75% RVC for automotive goods to qualify for preferential treatment.
Identify the destination country, applicable trade agreements, and whether your goods qualify for preferential treatment. Check the HS code classification of your product and cross reference it against the rules of origin for the relevant FTA.
Typical documentation requirements include:
Each type of CO has a specific format. Preferential COs must be completed on the exact form specified by the trade agreement. Non preferential COs follow the format required by the issuing chamber of commerce.
Common information required on all COs:
Non preferential COs are typically certified by the local chamber of commerce. The process involves submitting the completed CO with supporting documentation, paying a certification fee ($20 to $100 per certificate), and receiving the stamped and signed original.
Preferential COs may be self certified by the exporter (under some FTAs like USMCA and CPTPP) or must be certified by a designated government authority (under other FTAs like ASEAN Form D).
The certificate of origin must be included with the customs clearance documentation at the destination. Failure to present the CO at the time of entry may result in the importer paying full duties, with the option to file for a refund later (a process that is time consuming and not always successful).
The most expensive mistake. Submitting a non preferential CO when a preferential CO is available means paying full duties. Submitting the wrong preferential CO form (using EUR.1 when Form D is required) means the customs authority will reject the claim.
Prevention: Maintain a reference guide matching each trade lane to the applicable trade agreement and correct CO form.
If the product description on the CO does not match the commercial invoice, packing list, and customs entry, the customs authority may reject the certificate. Descriptions must be consistent across all documents.
Prevention: Use standardized product descriptions across all shipping documents. GoFreight's document management capabilities help forwarders maintain consistency by centralizing product descriptions and customer data, reducing the copy errors that occur when operators re type information across multiple documents.
Claiming preferential treatment without verifying that the goods actually meet the rules of origin is not just an error. It is a customs violation. Penalties for false origin claims range from fines to seizure of goods to criminal prosecution for repeated offenders.
Prevention: Request supplier declarations and manufacturing documentation that verify origin qualification. Maintain these records for at least five years.
Preferential COs typically have a validity period (often 12 months from the date of issuance). Presenting an expired certificate results in the claim being denied.
Prevention: Track CO expiration dates and request new certificates before the old ones expire.
Many importers pay full duties simply because they do not know their goods qualify for preferential treatment. If your customer imports goods from a country with which the US has a free trade agreement, verify whether the products qualify.
Prevention: When onboarding new customers, review their trade lanes against active FTAs. A forwarder who identifies $50,000 in annual duty savings for a customer has earned a relationship that price alone cannot break.
Certificates of origin are where freight forwarders transform from transportation arrangers into strategic advisors. Many importers and exporters lack the trade compliance expertise to navigate the complex world of rules of origin, FTA qualification, and CO documentation.
Advise on FTA opportunities. When a customer books a shipment from a country covered by an FTA, proactively ask whether they are claiming preferential duty treatment. If they are not, explain the potential savings and guide them toward the correct CO.
Coordinate with suppliers. For import customers, help coordinate with overseas suppliers to obtain the correct preferential CO before shipment. A forwarder with offices or agents at origin can verify that the CO is correctly completed and certified before the goods leave the factory.
Integrate CO tracking into your workflow. Track CO status alongside other clearance documentation using Workflow Automation Software for Forwarders. Flag shipments that are missing COs before they arrive at destination to prevent clearance delays.
Build a CO reference library. Create internal reference guides that match each trade lane to the applicable FTA, CO form, and rules of origin requirements. This institutional knowledge prevents errors and enables your entire team to advise customers consistently.
Track every certificate of origin, FTA claim, and shipment document in one cloud platform built for freight forwarders.
Request a GoFreight Demo →A certificate of origin is an official document that certifies the country where goods were manufactured, produced, or processed. It is required by customs authorities at the destination to determine the applicable tariff treatment. The CO can be issued by the exporter, a chamber of commerce, or a designated government authority depending on the trade agreement in use, and it must accompany the shipment for customs clearance.
A non preferential certificate of origin only states where the goods were made; goods enter the destination country at the standard Most Favored Nation (MFN) tariff rate. A preferential certificate of origin certifies that the goods meet the rules of origin under a specific free trade agreement, which qualifies the importer for reduced or zero duty rates. Choosing the right type can be the difference between paying full duties and clearing the goods duty free.
Certificates of origin fall into two broad categories. Non preferential COs are typically issued by chambers of commerce and cover shipments that do not qualify for an FTA. Preferential COs are tied to specific free trade agreements and use named forms such as the USMCA Certificate of Origin, ASEAN Form D, EUR.1 or EUR MED for EU FTAs, RCEP Certificate of Origin, CPTPP Certificate of Origin, KORUS FTA CO, and AUSFTA CO. Each form has its own rules of origin and certification requirements.
An FTA certificate is a preferential certificate of origin issued under a specific free trade agreement. It documents that the goods meet the rules of origin set out by that agreement, which entitles the importer to reduced or zero duties at clearance. Common examples include the USMCA Certificate of Origin for US Mexico Canada trade, ASEAN Form D for intra ASEAN trade, EUR.1 for EU FTAs, and the RCEP Certificate of Origin across 15 Asia Pacific nations.
Not every country requires a certificate of origin for all imports, but most do for goods above a minimum value threshold. Even when not legally required, a CO may be needed to claim preferential duty rates under a free trade agreement, which makes it financially important. Some countries also require COs for specific product categories regardless of value. Check the import requirements of your destination country and the applicable trade agreements to determine whether a CO is needed for your specific shipment.
A commercial invoice is a billing document between the seller and buyer that describes the goods, their value, and the terms of sale. A certificate of origin is a separate document that specifically certifies the country where the goods were manufactured or substantially transformed. While a commercial invoice may include origin information, it does not substitute for a formal certificate of origin when one is required by customs authorities or when claiming preferential duty treatment under a free trade agreement.
Non preferential certificates of origin are typically issued by the local chamber of commerce in the exporting country. Preferential certificates of origin are either self certified by the exporter (allowed under USMCA and CPTPP), issued by a designated government authority (required under ASEAN Form D and several other FTAs), or issued under an approved exporter program in the EU. Freight forwarders do not issue COs but routinely guide customers through the process and coordinate with suppliers to obtain the correct certificate.
Freight forwarders do not typically issue certificates of origin. Non preferential COs are issued by authorized chambers of commerce. Preferential COs are issued by designated government authorities or, under some FTAs, self certified by the exporter. However, freight forwarders play a critical role in advising customers on which CO is needed, coordinating with suppliers to obtain the correct certificate, verifying that the CO is properly completed, and ensuring it accompanies the shipment documentation for customs clearance.
Validity periods vary by trade agreement and CO type. Under USMCA, a certificate of origin can cover a single shipment or a blanket period of up to 12 months for identical goods. Under most ASEAN agreements, the Form D is valid for 12 months from the date of issuance. Non preferential COs do not have a universal validity period, but some countries require them to be issued within a specific timeframe relative to the shipment date. Always check the specific requirements of the trade agreement and destination country.
If a certificate of origin is required but not presented at the time of customs entry, several outcomes are possible. The customs authority may assess duties at the full MFN rate rather than the preferential rate, resulting in higher costs. In some cases, the goods may be held until the CO is produced. For certain countries and product categories, goods may be denied entry entirely. If you realize after the fact that a CO was available, many countries allow post entry amendments to claim preferential treatment, but the process is time consuming and not guaranteed to succeed. It is always better to have the correct CO ready before the goods arrive.