Dehydrated Butter Powder

Dehydrated butter powder is spray-dried butter with milkfat reconstituted onto carriers like whey or maltodextrin, resulting in powder form >45% butterfat. HTS 0405.90.20.40 covers as 'other' excluding true butter; used in instant foods and baking mixes. Exceeds water limits (essentially 0% water).

Import Duty Rates by Country of Origin

Origin CountryMFN RateCh.99 SurchargesTotal Effective Rate
🇨🇳China8.5%+17.5%26%
🇲🇽Mexico8.5%+10.0%18.5%
🇨🇦Canada8.5%+10.0%18.5%
🇩🇪Germany8.5%+10.0%18.5%
🇯🇵Japan8.5%+10.0%18.5%

Alternative Classifications

This product could be classified differently depending on its characteristics or intended use.

0405.90.10Higher: 27.5% vs 26%

If pure dehydrated butter without carriers

Explicit HTS provision for dehydrated butter/ghee separates from general 'other'

1901.10.21Higher: 35% vs 26%

If for infant use with sugar

Dairy powders for infant feeding have specific Chapter 19 provisions with quotas

2106.90.85Higher: 27.5% vs 26%

If compounded with flavors/sweeteners

Flavored dairy powders become food preparations under 2106

Not sure which classification is right?

Our AI classifier can analyze your specific product and recommend the correct HTS code with confidence.

Import Tips & Compliance

Analyze carrier content to ensure primary dairy fat classification; secure license under 6M kg butter substitute quota

Label accurately to avoid 1901 infant food misclassification; test moisture <5% confirming dehydration

Related Products under HTS 0405.90.20.40

Anhydrous Milkfat Butter Oil

Anhydrous milkfat, also known as butter oil, is a concentrated dairy fat product derived from milk with nearly 100% milkfat content after water, non-fat solids, and impurities are removed. It falls under HTS 0405.90.20.40 as 'other' dairy fats and oils from milk that do not meet the strict butter definition (80-95% fat, max 2% solids-not-fat, max 16% water) in heading 0405 notes. Commonly used in food manufacturing for its long shelf life and pure fat profile.

Ghee Clarified Butter

Ghee is clarified butter made by heating butter to separate milk solids and water, resulting in a product with over 99% milkfat that does not meet the water and solids limits for natural butter. Classified under HTS 0405.90.20.40 as 'other' per subheading note excluding dehydrated butter/ghee from 0405.10 butter definition. Traditional in Indian/South Asian cuisine for cooking and religious uses.

Whey Butter

Whey butter is produced from the fat recovered from whey, a milk processing byproduct, typically with composition exceeding butter's solids-not-fat limits despite 80%+ milkfat. It qualifies for HTS 0405.90.20.40 as 'other' dairy fats derived from milk per Chapter 0405 note (a) including whey butter but not meeting exact butter specs. Used in industrial baking and confectionery.

Recombined Butter

Recombined butter is manufactured by recombining milkfat with water, solids, and cultures to mimic butter but often exceeds compositional tolerances like water or solids-not-fat content. Falls under HTS 0405.90.20.40 as 'other' per heading 0405 note (a) explicitly including recombined butter outside strict butter parameters. Common in regions with limited fresh cream supply.

Rancid Butter Oil

Rancid butter oil is aged or naturally fermented butter-derived fat with off-flavors but still >95% milkfat, used in specialty cheeses or flavorings. Classified in HTS 0405.90.20.40 as 'other' including rancid forms per heading note (a), outside fresh butter limits on solids/water. Provides unique umami in gourmet applications.

High-Fat Dairy Spread

High-fat dairy spread is a butter-like product with 70-79% milkfat, spreadable emulsion not meeting dairy spread (39-80%) or butter thresholds due to formulation. Under HTS 0405.90.20.40 as residual 'other' dairy fats from milk. Popular for artisanal bread toppings.