HS 2005.70: Vegetable preparations; olives, prepared or preserved otherwise than by vinegar or acetic acid, not frozen
Brazil import duty rates — Updated May 2026
HS 2005.70 covers vegetable preparations; olives, prepared or preserved otherwise than by vinegar or acetic acid, not frozen under Brazil's NCM classification. This heading maps to 1 Brazilian NCM code with import duty (II) of 12.6%. Under the EU-Mercosur agreement, EU-origin products in this category benefit from progressive tariff reduction. In 2024, Brazil imported $264.8M worth of these products, with Argentina as the leading supplier.
Regulatory agencies
Products under this heading may require pre-approval before customs clearance. Learn more
EU-Mercosur impact
Gradual tariff reduction. Canned tomatoes and olives benefit directly.
Brazil imports — 2024
Source: UN ComtradeTop exporters to Brazil
CIF values in USD. Percentage = share of Brazil's total imports for this HS heading.
NCM codes under HS 2005.70
| NCM Code | Description (PT — official) | II | IPI | Ex-Tarif. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005.70.00 | - Azeitonas | 12.6% | 0% | — | Calculate → |
How to import vegetable preparations; olives, prepared or preserved otherwise than by vinegar or acetic acid, not frozen into Brazil
- Confirm the NCM code — the table above shows 1 NCM code under HS 2005.70. Your Brazilian customs broker will determine the exact 8-digit NCM.
- Check the import duty — rates for this heading are 12.6%. This is the base rate before other taxes.
- Calculate the full landed cost — Brazil charges 7 cascading taxes on imports: II, IPI, PIS, COFINS, ICMS, AFRMM, and Siscomex fee.
- Verify regulatory requirements — check if ANVISA, INMETRO, MAPA, or other agencies require pre-clearance for your product.
Brazil Import Taxes Explained
Complete guide to the 7 cascading taxes on every import.
How to Export to Brazil
Step-by-step guide for foreign companies.
Calculate your landed cost
Enter CIF value and get a breakdown of all 7 Brazilian import taxes for HS 2005.70.