BMAD (Anti-Dumping Import Duty)
Anti-Dumping Import Duty (BMAD) is an additional levy on imported goods whose export price is below the normal value in their country of origin and that cause material injury to a like domestic industry. Its legal basis is Article 23B of Law 17/2006 amending Law 10/1995 on Customs, with implementing rules in Government Regulation 34/2011. The Indonesian Anti-Dumping Committee (KADI) conducts investigations to confirm a dumping margin, injury, and causal link before the Minister of Finance fixes a rate by ministerial regulation (PMK). BMAD is calculated as a percentage of customs value (CIF) on top of the MFN duty. Rates are producer-specific and apply for a maximum of five years, subject to sunset review.
This article is for education, not tax advice.
Example
PMK 14/2026 imposes BMAD of 2.6 to 7.1 percent on BOPET imports from India, China, and Thailand for five years from 4 April 2026. Importers sourcing BOPET from listed producers must name the producer on the certificate of origin to claim the individual rate.
Source: Law 17/2006 Article 23B; PP 34/2011; PMK 14/2026
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