Phone/whatsapp:+86177-2151-9382
Physical address:
Yangshanfan Road Intersection, Chengdong Village, Hengcun Town, Tonglu County, Hangzhou City, Zhejiang. China
Email address:
Quote@weaveessence.com
Scarf Import Compliance — B2B Buyer Reference
Scarf Import Compliance Guide — US & EU Textile Regulations
CPSC, REACH, fibre labelling, OEKO-TEX, HS codes — compliance reference for B2B buyers importing scarves from China.
Scarf import compliance is a multi-layered obligation spanning chemical safety, fibre content labelling, country of origin marking, and customs duty classification — and the requirements differ significantly between the US, EU, and UK. This guide is written for B2B buyers and importers who source scarves from China and need a clear, practical reference for what is required, what the factory provides, and what the importer must manage independently.
WeaveEssence is a BSCI-audited scarf manufacturer with OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certification. We provide full compliance documentation to support your import process — but buyers must understand the full picture of their obligations before goods ship. Factory certification does not transfer legal compliance responsibility to the importer.
The checklist and market-by-market breakdown below covers the primary frameworks for US, EU, and UK importers. Always verify current regulations with a licensed customs broker or legal counsel before importing.
Common Misconception: “OEKO-TEX Covers My Import Compliance”
Misconception: If the factory has OEKO-TEX certification, the importer’s compliance obligations are covered.
Reality: OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certifies that a textile product has been tested for harmful substances and meets defined limits — it does not cover fibre content labelling requirements, country of origin marking, HS code classification, or import duty obligations. US importers must separately comply with the Textile Fiber Products Identification Act (TFPIA). EU importers must comply with Regulation (EU) No 1007/2011 for fibre content disclosure. In practice, importers who rely solely on OEKO-TEX have been cited by customs authorities for missing fibre content labels — a separate and independently enforced requirement.
Key Compliance Requirements by Market
Requirements vary by destination market. The summary below covers the primary frameworks for the three largest import markets for WeaveEssence buyers.
United States
CPSC · TFPIA · CA Prop 65 · Section 301 tariffs
The FTC enforces TFPIA fibre content labelling — all scarves must carry a permanently attached label stating fibre content by percentage, country of origin, and the importer’s RN number. California Proposition 65 requires warnings if products contain listed chemicals above threshold levels, relevant for dyed textiles. Section 301 tariffs add 7.5%–25% additional duty on most Chinese-origin textile goods; the applicable rate depends on the HTS code. Misclassifying an HTS code to reduce Section 301 exposure constitutes customs fraud.
European Union
REACH · EU Textile Regulation 1007/2011 · GPSD
REACH Regulation restricts hazardous substances in textile articles, including azo dyes, formaldehyde, and nickel in metal components. EU Textile Regulation No 1007/2011 requires fibre content labelling in the official language(s) of the member state where the product is sold, with fibre names and percentages listed in descending order. The General Product Safety Directive imposes a general obligation that all consumer products placed on the EU market are safe. Importers acting as the EU responsible person bear legal liability for compliance.
United Kingdom
UK REACH · UK Textile Labelling Regulations
Following Brexit, the UK operates its own REACH regime administered by the HSE, which mirrors EU REACH restrictions but is maintained independently. The Textile Products (Labelling and Fibre Composition) Regulations 2012 require fibre content labelling in English for goods sold in Great Britain. UK importers must ensure their products carry a UK-responsible person address. Goods entering Northern Ireland may be subject to EU rules under the Windsor Framework — seek specific legal advice for NI distribution.
Compliance Checklist — Factory vs. Importer Responsibilities
Seven key requirements across US, EU, and UK markets, with a clear split of what the factory provides and what the importer must manage.
| Requirement | US | EU | UK | Factory provides | Importer must do |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibre content labelling | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Fibre composition test report | Produce compliant label; attach before sale |
| Country of origin marking | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Certificate of origin; “Made in China” label | Verify marking is present and correct |
| REACH chemical compliance | — | ✓ | ✓ | REACH test report from accredited lab | Review report; retain for 10 years |
| OEKO-TEX Standard 100 | Optional | Optional | Optional | OEKO-TEX certificate (product-level) | Verify certificate scope covers your product |
| HS / HTS code classification | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Product specification sheet | Confirm HTS code with customs broker |
| Section 301 tariff (US-China) | ✓ | — | — | Commercial invoice with correct HS code | Calculate and pay correct duty; do not misclassify |
| BSCI / social audit | Optional | Optional | Optional | BSCI audit report | Review findings; assess supply chain risk |
Questions Buyers Ask Most
What labelling is required for scarves imported to the US?
TFPIA requires a permanently attached label stating fibre content by percentage, country of origin, and the importer’s RN number. Labels must be legible and in English.
Does OEKO-TEX cover all import compliance requirements?
No — OEKO-TEX covers harmful substance limits only. Fibre content labelling, country of origin marking, and HS code classification are separate requirements enforced independently.
What is the HS code for knitted scarves?
Knitted scarves generally fall under HS 6117.10; woven scarves under HS 6214. Confirm the exact 8- or 10-digit code with a licensed customs broker before importing.
How do Section 301 tariffs affect scarf imports from China?
Section 301 adds 7.5%–25% on top of standard MFN duty rates for most Chinese-origin textile goods. Verify the current rate for your HTS code and include it in landed cost calculations.
What compliance documentation can WeaveEssence provide?
We provide factory-side documentation to support your import compliance process. The standard compliance pack includes:
- OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certificate — product-level, covering harmful substance limits
- REACH test report — from an accredited third-party laboratory, covering EU restricted substances
- Fibre content test report — confirming actual fibre composition for labelling compliance
- BSCI audit report — social compliance audit covering labour standards and factory conditions
- Certificate of origin — confirming “Made in China” for customs declaration purposes
Note: Importers remain responsible for their own labelling, HTS classification, and duty payment obligations. Contact us to request a compliance documentation pack for your specific product.
Need Compliance Documentation for Your Scarf Order?
OEKO-TEX · REACH test reports · BSCI audit · Certificate of origin — all available on request