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Korea removes tariffs on imported fruits, quotas remain

Government to continue tariff exemption for bananas, pineapples and other key products in first six months of 2025

The Korean government has announced it will continue to waive tariffs on a wide range of imported fruits in the first six months of 2025 as it battles food price inflation.

Imports of bananas, pineapples, mangoes, grapefruit, avocados, durian and mangosteen have all enjoyed tariff exemption since April last year.

Last Thursday (2 January), the government confirmed these items will continue to remain tariff-free in the first six months of 2025 albeit subject to quotas, Fruitnet notes.

Imports of bananas, pineapples, mangoes, grapefruit and avocados typically incur a duty of 30 per cent.

Read also: Top 10 most attractive segments of horticulture for investments in 2025

All these items will be tariff-free up to certain volume thresholds, which are set at similar levels to the total import volume for each product in 2024.

Banana imports are tariff-free up to a quota of 200,000 tonnes. Korea’s total banana imports topped 227,000 tonnes in 2024 [calendar year], up from 170,255 tonnes in 2023.

Pineapple imports are tariff-free up to 46,000 tonnes, roughly equivalent to the total import volume in 2024.

The tariff-free quotas for other items include mangoes (25,000 tonnes), grapefruit (6,000 tonnes), avocados (2,000 tonnes), durian (1,700 tonnes) and mangosteen (1,400 tonnes). Durian is usually subject to a tariff of 45 per cent.

Import duties on mandarins will be slashed from 50 per cent to 20 per cent under a quota of 2,800 tonnes. However, the import tariff on US mandarins is already lower than this – at 9.6 per cent – under the Korea-US Free Trade Agreement (KORUS).

The duty on orange imports will also be reduced from 50 per cent to 20 per cent on a quota of 10,000 tonnes, which is restricted to the months of January and February.

EastFruit

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