
Imagine your business facing increased operational costs and compliance risks in cross-border trade due to misinterpretations of the "price actually paid or payable" concept in customs valuation. This scenario, which many enterprises strive to avoid, may soon become less likely thanks to new international guidance.
The World Customs Organization (WCO) Technical Committee on Customs Valuation (TCCV) has developed a new interpretive instrument - Explanatory Note 7.1 - following extensive discussions at its 61st session regarding Uruguay's technical question about the meaning of this critical valuation concept. Scheduled for submission to the WCO Council for approval in June 2026, this document provides comprehensive interpretation of "price actually paid or payable" to help businesses better understand and apply customs valuation rules.
I. The Core of Cross-Border Customs Valuation
Under the WTO Customs Valuation Agreement, the transaction value method - based on the price actually paid or payable for imported goods - serves as the primary basis for customs valuation. This value directly determines tariff liabilities, making its accurate determination crucial for trade operations.
However, the concept extends beyond simple purchase prices, encompassing various payment forms, direct and indirect payments, and multiple adjustment factors. Misinterpretations can lead to valuation errors with significant financial consequences.
II. Explanatory Note 7.1: Clarifying the Framework
The new Explanatory Note provides critical clarification on several key aspects:
- Payment forms: Explicitly covers cash, letters of credit, barter transactions, and other payment methods
- Direct and indirect payments: Clarifies which third-party payments made for the seller's benefit should be included
- Article 8 adjustments: Details proper treatment of commissions, packing costs, transport expenses and other adjustments
- WTO Valuation Committee decisions: Incorporates relevant case interpretations into the guidance framework
- Permissible deductions: Identifies excludable costs such as post-importation expenses
III. Practical Applications for Businesses
Enterprises can leverage this guidance to optimize their customs valuation processes through several practical steps:
- Conduct comprehensive reviews of all payment components related to imported goods
- Implement accurate price adjustments based on Article 8 provisions
- Maintain detailed documentation supporting valuation determinations
- Establish proactive communication channels with customs authorities
- Develop robust internal controls for valuation processes
- Consider professional valuation advisory services when needed
IV. Illustrative Case Example
Consider an electronics importer with a $1 million contract price plus additional payments:
- $50,000 commission
- $20,000 packing costs
- $30,000 transport fees
- $10,000 post-import installation
- $100,000 third-party patent license fee (seller requirement)
Under the new guidance, the customs value would aggregate to $1.2 million, excluding only the post-import installation fee.
V. Strategic Implications
This interpretive guidance represents more than technical clarification - it offers businesses an opportunity to transform customs valuation from a compliance challenge into a strategic advantage. Proper implementation can yield significant cost savings and risk mitigation in global trade operations.
The complete framework will become available through the WCO Customs Valuation Compendium and Trade Tools platform following Council approval.