Industrial Grade Cane Molasses

Industrial grade cane molasses is a byproduct from sugarcane refining used in fermentation, yeast production, and biofuel manufacturing, with typical sucrose content below raw sugar thresholds. It is classified in HTS 1703.10.50.00 as other cane molasses, excluding animal feed varieties, due to its origin in sugar extraction processes. This covers non-food uses while adhering to Chapter 17 definitions.

Import Duty Rates by Country of Origin

Origin CountryMFN RateCh.99 SurchargesTotal Effective Rate
🇨🇳ChinaFree+17.5%17.5%
🇲🇽MexicoFree+10.0%10%
🇨🇦CanadaFree+10.0%10%
🇩🇪GermanyFree+10.0%10%
🇯🇵JapanFree+10.0%10%

Alternative Classifications

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

1703.90Lower: 10% vs 17.5%

If beet-derived for industrial applications

Source-specific split in 1703: cane vs. beet molasses, impacting quota eligibility.

3824.99Lower: 15% vs 17.5%

If chemically modified or blended for non-food chemical use

Processed beyond simple extraction into chemical preparations under Chapter 38.

2309.90.44Higher: 25% vs 17.5%

If packaged or prepared expressly for animal consumption

Feed-grade molasses relocates to Chapter 23 preparations for animal feed.

Not sure which classification is right?

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Import Tips & Compliance

Submit affidavits confirming non-feed use to avoid reclassification; industrial end-use letters help

Test for Brix and solids content to prove it's molasses, not syrup under quota restrictions

Register for USDA import licenses if volume exceeds TRQ thresholds for cane products

Related Products under HTS 1703.10.50.00

Blackstrap Cane Molasses

Blackstrap molasses is the dark, viscous byproduct obtained from the third extraction of sugar from sugarcane during refining, containing high levels of minerals and residual sucrose. It falls under HTS 1703.10.50.00 as cane molasses other than for animal feed, used primarily in food manufacturing, baking, and as a natural sweetener. This classification distinguishes it from beet molasses or those specifically designated for feed.

First Crop Cane Molasses

First crop cane molasses, also known as light or edible molasses, results from the initial sugarcane extraction with higher sugar content and lighter color, extracted during the first boiling in refining. Classified under HTS 1703.10.50.00 as other cane molasses, it's used in confectionery, rum production, and health foods. It meets the criteria as a direct byproduct from sugar refining, not qualifying for feed-specific subheadings.

Edible Unsulphured Cane Molasses

Unsulphured cane molasses is produced without sulfur dioxide processing, retaining a pure flavor from sugarcane refining extractions, ideal for baking and health supplements. Under HTS 1703.10.50.00, it qualifies as other cane molasses for human consumption, distinct from feed or quota-restricted sugars. Its natural microcrystalline structure and molasses residues confirm the classification.

Refinery Cane Molasses

Refinery cane molasses is the residual liquid from the final crystallization stages in commercial sugar refineries, rich in fermentable sugars from sugarcane. Classified as HTS 1703.10.50.00 other cane molasses, it supports uses in distilling and confectionery beyond feed applications. Chapter notes confirm inclusion as long as soluble non-sugar solids exceed 6%.

Organic Cane Molasses

Organic cane molasses is certified free from pesticides and synthetic additives, derived from the sugar extraction process in organic sugarcane farming and refining. It fits HTS 1703.10.50.00 as other cane molasses, used in organic foods, fertilizers, and supplements. Organic status doesn't alter base classification but requires additional certification.

High-Test Cane Molasses

High-test cane molasses, with elevated fermentable sugar content from partial sugar inversion during extraction, is used in alcohol production and baking. Under HTS 1703.10.50.00, it qualifies as other cane molasses from refining, not meeting raw sugar polarity. Its viscosity and impurities distinguish it from syrups.