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85499900
ELECTRICAL MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT AND PARTS THEREOF; SOUND RECORDERS AND REPRODUCERS, TELEVISION IMAGE AND SOUND RECORDERS AND REPRODUCERS, AND PARTS AND ACCESSORIES OF SUCH ARTICLESElectrical and electronic waste and scrap

Other

Standard EU duty
0%
VAT
23%
Additional duties / sanctions
0 rules
Docs required
19 docs
C669C670C672Y923X844Y719+13
Preferences
ERGA OMNES 0%AD 0%CAMER 0%CARI 0%CH 0%CI 0%CL 0%CM 0%CO 0%DZ 0%EBA 0%EC 0%EEA 0%EG 0%EH 0%ESA 0%FJ 0%FO 0%GB 0%GE 0%GH 0%GSP 0%GSP+ 0%IL 0%JO 0%KE 0%KR 0%LB 0%LOMB 0%MA 0%MD 0%MX 0%PG 0%PS 0%SADC EPA 0%SB 0%SG 0%SM 0%SWITZ 0%SY 0%TN 0%TR 0%VN 0%WS 0%XC 0%XL 0%ZA 0%
Notes
CD303The relief from or reduction of customs duties shall be subject to the specific request expressed by the declarant in box 44 "Additional information/Documents produced/Certificates and authorisations", of the Single Administrative Document (SAD)
TM904Preferences granted under the agreement between the European Union and Morocco in force from 19 July 2019.As of 3 October 2025, products originating in Western Sahara subject to controls by the customs authorities of the Kingdom of Morocco shall benefit from trade preferences under the terms of the new Agreement in the form of exchange of letters between the EU and Morocco, The European Union and the Kingdom of Morocco have agreed to allow those products to be identified by reference to the region of origin to be included in the proof of origin and as provided for in Protocol 4.In view of the application of these measures, the origin certificates codes U179 and U180 must be declared.The country code to be entered in the origin declaration when these proofs of origin are used is “EH”.
CD906The list of non-eligible locations and their postal codes is available at the following address: http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/customs/technical-arrangement_postal-codes.pdf
CD500Eligibility to benefit from this preference is subject to the presentation of a proof of origin stating the community origin of the goods, in the context of the agreement between the European Union and the Swiss Confederation.
CloseMRN — potwierdzenie wywozu z każdego portu UE
5

Binding Tariff Information

BTI classification examples

ROgold5/005153

Waste of electrical/electronic equipment with CFC

plasticGRI 1GRI 6
BEgold.019.963

Empty used laser toner cartridges for return

plasticGRI 1GRI 6
ROgold5/005155

Waste of electrical and electronic assemblies

plasticGRI 1GRI 6
ROgold5/005157

Waste fluorescent tubes with mercury content

glassGRI 1GRI 6
ROgold4/004625

Waste primary batteries for recycling

zincGRI 1GRI 6

BTI (Binding Tariff Information) is an official EU customs decision confirming the classification of goods. Valid for 3 years, binding across all EU member states.

Definition and scope of subheading 854999

Subheading 854999 is a residual heading covering all remaining waste and scrap of electrical and electronic equipment not classified under more specific subheadings of heading 8549. Typical goods include electrical equipment waste without precious metals, household appliance waste, spent electronic equipment intended for recycling, cable and wire waste, and mixed electronic waste. Subheading 854999 covers the broadest scope of electrical and electronic waste and is the heading of last resort. Classification follows the GIR, rules 1 and 6.

Regulatory requirements - WEEE, Basel Convention and waste management

Transboundary movement of waste under 854999 is subject to the Waste Shipment Regulation (EU) 1013/2006 and the Basel Convention. Electronic waste may be classified as hazardous depending on composition. The Basel Convention prohibits export of hazardous waste from OECD to non-OECD countries - the Basel Ban Amendment is of key importance for transboundary e-waste trade. The WEEE 2 Directive (2012/19/EU) establishes a system for collection, processing and recycling of waste electrical equipment. CBAM does not apply. Import requires a waste shipment permit, authorised recipient status and waste processing capacity.

Customs duties and transboundary e-waste trade

Current MFN duty rates should be verified in TARIC. Transboundary e-waste trade is subject to strict control by environmental and customs authorities. The Basel Convention and Waste Shipment Regulation constitute the primary legal framework. The EU promotes recycling and material recovery from e-waste under the circular economy strategy. Current TARIC codes should be checked before clearance. VAT is charged on import.

Other electrical waste - waste shipment regulations

Importing other electrical waste (CN 8549 99) into the European Union requires compliance with RoHS 2 (2011/65/EU), WEEE 2 (2012/19/EU) and CE marking. An EORI number and correct customs declaration are mandatory. MFN duty rates should be verified in TARIC, as ITA preferences or EU FTA rates (e.g. CETA, EPA, EU-Korea) may apply. Import from Russia and Belarus is subject to EU sanctions. National import VAT applies at the destination Member State rate.

Frequently asked questions

Does importing e-waste under 854999 require a permit?
Yes. Transboundary movement of electrical and electronic waste requires compliance with the Waste Shipment Regulation (EU) 1013/2006. The procedure depends on classification as hazardous (full notification and consent) or non-hazardous (simplified procedure). The importer must hold authorised recipient status and waste processing capacity. The Basel Convention prohibits export of hazardous waste from OECD to non-OECD countries.
Is other e-waste under 854999 subject to CBAM?
No. CBAM covers only emissions-intensive products: iron and steel, aluminium, cement, fertilisers, electricity and hydrogen. Electrical waste under subheading 854999 is waste from Chapter 85 and is not subject to CBAM. Recovered metals after processing may be subject to CBAM depending on their customs classification.
What waste is classified under subheading 854999?
Subheading 854999 is a residual heading covering electrical and electronic waste that does not fall under more specific subheadings of heading 8549 (batteries, accumulators, catalysts, waste with precious metals). Typical goods include spent household appliances, computer waste, cable waste without precious metals and mixed e-waste intended for recycling.
What regulations apply when importing other electrical waste CN 8549 99?
Importing other electrical waste (CN 8549 99) requires RoHS 2 (2011/65/EU), WEEE 2 (2012/19/EU) compliance, CE marking and an EORI number. Check the duty rate in TARIC. Import VAT applies.