Import from China to Egypt
Egypt has emerged as a 2026 dark-horse import market driven by Suez Canal disruption rerouting cargo around the Cape and a 57% MoM April 2026 air-freight spike from China. Alexandria handles ~70% of seaborne trade; Damietta and Port Said East serve specialized cargo. The Egyptian Customs Authority assesses duty on CIF, then layers VAT (14%) and selective Schedule Tax. Updated for 2026 with current Suez transit timing and commercial freight benchmarks.
📋 Key Import Fees — China to Egypt
- ✓ Import Duty: 0–60% (most consumer goods 5–40%)
- ✓ VAT: 14% on (CIF + Duty + Schedule Tax)
- ✓ Schedule Tax (luxury items): varies by product
- ✓ Service Fee: 1% of CIF
- ✓ Stamp Duty: small percentage per declaration
Import Process — China to Egypt
Commercial imports require registration with the Importers Registry, a Tax Card, and submission via the Nafeza single-window platform. Goods clear through ACI (Advance Cargo Information) before arrival. Licensed customs brokers handle most commercial entries.
How to plan imports from China to Egypt
Country-guide queries in Google tend to rank when they answer the full import decision, not just one fee. Searchers want to understand the customs authority, the duty basis, the key taxes, the shipping process, and the tools that help them model the shipment before they commit stock or cash. This page is built around that intent. It combines a country overview, key fees, calculators such as Landed Cost Calculator - Total China Import Cost Per Unit, Sea Freight Cost Calculator — China to USA/UK/Australia, CBM Calculator — Cubic Meter Calculator for Sea Freight, and Incoterms Cost Calculator — EXW vs FOB vs CIF vs DDP, and an official-source layer so an importer can move from early budgeting into real execution with fewer blind spots.
For Egypt, the major planning anchors are the customs authority, cif value, VAT at 14%, and the de minimis threshold of EGP 1,500 (~$30) for personal parcels; no commercial de minimis. Those inputs shape how an importer should compare suppliers, structure quotations, and decide whether a small shipment, a trial order, or a full replenishment makes commercial sense. The best time to model those variables is before production is approved, because once a deposit is paid the room to correct pricing, route choice, or documentation mistakes gets much smaller.
High-performing import-guide pages in the SERP also explain what needs to be verified beyond the estimate. That usually includes product classification, valuation basis, any extra tariffs or trade remedies, and the documents required to clear cargo. This hub is designed to support that workflow by showing the economic structure of the destination market first and then linking you into more detailed duty, freight, and landed-cost tools.
What importers usually need to confirm before shipment
Before relying on a number for Egypt, confirm the transaction value, the incoterm, the product classification, the shipment mode, and any market-specific compliance obligations. Those checks matter because the cost stack is not just duty. It can include Import Duty, VAT, Schedule Tax (luxury items), and Service Fee, local handling, brokerage, and inventory timing risk. When Google surfaces practical country guides, they almost always pair duty discussion with documentation and shipping context for exactly this reason: importers do not experience customs costs in isolation from freight, paperwork, and timing.
The basic process also needs to line up with how cargo actually enters Egypt. That means understanding the filing sequence, who can make entry, whether a customs broker or equivalent intermediary is typically used, and what commercial documents must be accurate on arrival. If the value basis or classification is wrong on the invoice, the estimate on paper can drift away from the real landed result very quickly. The role of this guide is to make those dependencies visible before you rely on any one calculation.
A strong workflow is to use the country calculators as the first pass, then compare the result against the official references and your shipment documents. If the shipment is large, regulated, or margin-sensitive, rerun the model after the final packing details and freight assumptions are known. That approach is much closer to how experienced import teams work than a one-time lookup made weeks before the cargo ships.
Free Calculators for Egypt Importers
Selected tools for duty, freight, landed cost, and import planning
Landed Cost Calculator - Total China Import Cost Per Unit
Calculate full U.S. landed cost per unit from China using FOB, freight, insurance, HTS duty, Section 301, the current temporary surcharge, MPF, HMF, broker cost, and local delivery.
Sea Freight Cost Calculator — China to USA/UK/Australia
Compare LCL vs FCL sea freight from any China port. Enter CBM, weight, and route to get 2026 benchmark rates including BAF, THC, documentation fees, and destination handling charges.
CBM Calculator — Cubic Meter Calculator for Sea Freight
Cubic meters determine your LCL rate and whether you should upgrade to FCL. Enter carton dimensions and quantity to calculate total CBM, check container fill rates, and optimize your loading plan.
Incoterms Cost Calculator — EXW vs FOB vs CIF vs DDP
EXW, FOB, CIF, DDP — each Incoterm shifts risk and cost differently between buyer and seller. Model the total cost under each term to see which Incoterm gives you the best control over your landed cost.
Currency Exchange Impact Calculator Import
A 5% move in CNY/USD on a $50,000 order is $2,500 gone. Model the impact of exchange rate fluctuations on your landed cost and decide whether forward contracts or timing strategies are worth it.
Cargo Insurance Calculator — Marine Freight Insurance Cost
Marine cargo insurance costs 0.3–0.5% of CIF value — roughly $150 on a $30,000 shipment. Calculate your premium and understand Institute Cargo Clauses (A vs B vs C) before you decide to skip it.
Frequently Asked Questions — Importing from China to Egypt
Compare Import Costs by Country
Key duty and tax differences when importing the same product from China to each country