For decades, HTS classification has been performed by customs brokers, trade compliance specialists, or in-house import teams using manual research and professional judgment. This approach has served importers reasonably well, but it comes with inherent limitations: it is slow, expensive, inconsistent between practitioners, and difficult to scale. In 2026, AI-powered classification tools have matured to the point where they offer a compelling alternative, not to replace human expertise entirely, but to fundamentally change how classification work is done. Here is an honest comparison of the two approaches.
When a customs broker classifies a product, the process typically involves reviewing the product description and specifications provided by the importer, consulting the HTS schedule and relevant section and chapter notes, applying the General Rules of Interpretation, researching CBP ruling letters for guidance on similar products, and ultimately making a professional judgment call. A skilled broker with deep commodity expertise can deliver accurate, well-reasoned classifications. However, the process is time-intensive, typically requiring 30 minutes to several hours per product for complex goods. For importers with hundreds or thousands of SKUs, this creates a bottleneck that delays sourcing decisions, entry filings, and cost calculations.
AI-powered classification tools like TariffPro use machine learning models trained on millions of classification decisions, CBP ruling letters, court decisions, and the complete HTS legal framework. When you provide a product description, the AI analyzes the product's characteristics, identifies the applicable HTS provisions, applies the GRIs, cross-references ruling precedent, and produces a classification recommendation with a detailed rationale. The entire process takes seconds, not hours.
The most sophisticated importers in 2026 are not choosing between customs brokers and AI. They are using AI as the first line of classification, covering the vast majority of products quickly, consistently, and cost-effectively, and then directing broker expertise to the cases where human judgment adds the most value. This hybrid approach plays to the strengths of each method.
A mid-size importer with 2,000 active SKUs spending an average of $50 per broker classification incurs $100,000 annually in classification costs alone. By using TariffPro for initial classification and directing only 15-20% of products to specialist broker review, the same importer can reduce classification costs by 70% while improving accuracy and documentation. Calculate your savings with a free account.
Not all AI classification tools are created equal. When evaluating options, importers should look for several key capabilities. First, the tool should classify to the full 10-digit HTS level, not just the 6-digit HS level. Second, it should provide a detailed classification rationale that cites the relevant GRIs, section notes, and chapter notes. Third, it should automatically flag Section 301, Section 232, and AD/CVD exposure. Fourth, it should provide confidence scoring so users know when human review is advisable. Fifth, it should maintain classification history for audit and compliance purposes. And sixth, it should be continuously updated as the HTS, trade policy, and CBP rulings evolve.
TariffPro by Camtom delivers all of these capabilities in a platform designed specifically for US importers navigating the complexity of modern trade policy. Whether you are classifying your first product or your ten-thousandth, TariffPro provides the speed, accuracy, and documentation you need. Get started free today.
Camtom Team
Trade Intelligence
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