Children's Apparel Sourcing: Turkey vs Bangladesh vs Portugal (2026)
Comparative analysis of the three leading children's apparel sourcing countries on cost, lead time, MOQ, certification, and EU market proximity.
Why EU buyers pay no customs duty on children's apparel from Türkiye while China shipments carry 10-12% MFN tariffs. A.TR certificate workflow, covered HS codes, and a landed-cost comparison for 2026.
EU retailers sourcing children's apparel from Türkiye pay zero customs duty — while the same shipment from China, Vietnam, or India carries a 10.5-12% Most-Favoured-Nation (MFN) tariff at the EU border. This is not a trade preference, a quota, or a temporary exemption. It is a customs union — a deeper integration than any free-trade agreement in the world, in force since 1996, covering all industrial goods including textiles and apparel classified under HS Chapters 50-63. For kids apparel buyers, the financial impact is concrete: on a typical 10,000-piece children's knit-top order, the duty differential alone is USD 5,400-6,000 per shipment.
By the Zeynep Textiles Trade & Compliance team · Updated 2026-04-24
Key Takeaways
- EU imports from Türkiye reached €98.4 billion in 2024, with bilateral trade crossing €210 billion — a record ([European Commission](https://policy.trade.ec.europa.eu/eu-trade-relationships-country-and-region/countries-and-regions/turkiye_en), 2025).
- EU MFN tariff on apparel averages 12%; Türkiye pays 0% on HS Chapter 61 and 62 under the Customs Union.
- Türkiye's 2024 apparel exports totalled USD 19.7 billion, with knitted garments (HS 61) generating USD 6.1 billion in H2 alone ([İHKİB / TİM](https://kohantextilejournal.com/turkeys-apparel-falls-textile-surges-2024/), 2025).
- The A.TR movement certificate is the proof of free circulation — issued electronically by TOBB chambers via MEDOS, valid 4 months.
- The revised PEM Convention entered into force on 1 January 2025, updating rules of origin including double-transformation for textiles.
The EU-Türkiye Customs Union came into effect on 1 January 1996 under Decision 1/95 of the EC-Turkey Association Council. It covers all industrial products, processed agricultural goods, and coal and steel — including every HS code from Chapter 50 (silk) through Chapter 63 (made-up textile articles). Bilateral trade under this framework reached €210 billion in 2024, a record, with EU imports from Türkiye at €98.4 billion ([European Commission — Access2Markets](https://trade.ec.europa.eu/access-to-markets/en/content/eu-turkiye-customs-union), 2025).
A customs union is a deeper integration than a free-trade agreement (FTA). Under an FTA, each party keeps its own external tariff and rules of origin determine which goods qualify. Under a customs union, parties share a common external tariff and goods move in free circulation once duties have been paid (or the goods originate) on either side. For Turkish apparel manufacturers, this means a knit children's t-shirt produced in İzmir moves to a warehouse in Hamburg with no customs duty, no quota, and no rules-of-origin inspection — only the A.TR movement certificate is required as proof of customs status.
This framework is fundamentally different from the trade preferences available to Asian competitors. Bangladesh benefits from the Everything But Arms (EBA) arrangement — duty-free, quota-free — but that ends with LDC graduation scheduled for November 2029. India lost its Standard GSP preferences for apparel effective 2026. Vietnam's EVFTA tariffs are phasing down over 7-10 years but remain non-zero for most kids apparel headings today. Türkiye's zero tariff is not a preference; it is permanent customs union law.
The Customs Union covers all textiles and apparel classified in HS Chapters 50-63. For kids apparel buyers, the relevant headings are:
| HS Code | Product | EU MFN (third countries) | Türkiye Under CU |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6111 | Babies' garments and accessories, knitted or crocheted | 10.5% - 12% | 0% |
| 6209 | Babies' garments and accessories, woven | 10.5% - 12% | 0% |
| 6104 | Women's/girls' suits, jackets, dresses, trousers, knitted | 12% | 0% |
| 6204 | Women's/girls' suits, jackets, dresses, trousers, woven | 12% | 0% |
| 6103 / 6203 | Boys'/men's suits, jackets, trousers | 12% | 0% |
| 6110 | Sweaters, pullovers, sweatshirts (knit) | 12% | 0% |
| 6105 / 6106 | Boys'/girls' shirts and blouses (knit) | 12% | 0% |
On a 10,000-piece children's knit-top order at FOB USD 4.50, the duty differential alone is USD 5,400. That is a conservative single-SKU scenario. Annualised across a typical private-label catalogue of 30-60 SKUs moving through multiple drops, the saving scales into six figures per brand. The 88.9% of EU apparel tariff lines sit at the 12% MFN rate ([UN DESA](https://www.un.org/development/desa/dpad/wp-content/uploads/sites/45/Garment-Study-Bangladesh.pdf), 2024), so the Customs Union advantage applies to nearly every kids apparel heading a retailer buys.
A Hamburg-based e-commerce retailer orders 10,000 boys' hoodies (HS 6110) at FOB USD 7.80 — order value USD 78,000. Ocean freight from Shanghai to Hamburg runs USD 4,500; road freight from İstanbul to Hamburg runs USD 3,800. Insurance and handling are similar. The differential lies in duty:
| Cost Line | Türkiye (via A.TR) | China (MFN) |
|---|---|---|
| FOB value | $78,000 | $78,000 |
| Freight + insurance | $3,800 | $4,500 |
| CIF value | $81,800 | $82,500 |
| EU customs duty | $0 | $9,900 (12% of CIF) |
| Landed cost | $81,800 | $92,400 |
| Per-unit landed | $8.18 | $9.24 |
The Türkiye route delivers USD 10,600 savings on this single order — an 11.5% reduction in landed cost before any quality, lead time, or MOQ consideration. For buyers running 20+ orders per year, the cumulative saving finances the price premium Turkish FOB often carries over China, and then some. See our detailed breakdown of children's clothing manufacturing cost in Türkiye for the full unit economics.
Three tariff-map shifts are compressing the duty gap between Türkiye and its competitors — and all three favour Türkiye. First, the EU withdrew Standard GSP preferences for Indian apparel effective 2026, moving India from preferential to full MFN. Second, Bangladesh's LDC graduation in November 2029 ends EBA coverage; the transition to GSP+ is not automatic and covers 66% of tariff lines at best. Third, EU anti-dumping reviews on Chinese textiles are ongoing. Türkiye's zero tariff remains permanent customs-union law, unaffected by these shifts.
The A.TR movement certificate is a customs document — not a certificate of origin — that proves a consignment is in free circulation within the Customs Union. Unlike EUR.1 or FORM A documents used in FTA and GSP regimes, A.TR does not require the goods to be of Turkish origin; it only certifies that customs duties have been paid (or the goods qualify for customs union coverage). It is issued electronically via the MEDOS system operated by the Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges (TOBB) and stamped by the local chamber of commerce ([TOBB](https://www.tobb.org.tr/), 2025). Validity is four months from the date of endorsement.
From the Zeynep Textiles export team processing hundreds of EU-bound shipments: A.TR adds about 45 minutes to export documentation preparation and USD 20-40 in chamber fees per shipment. The duty saved on a typical container load is USD 5,000-15,000. The ROI is immediate and total.
Landed cost is the only honest comparison — FOB alone hides the tariff gap. The table below summarises the 2026 picture for a typical kids apparel buyer shipping to the EU:
| Origin | EU Tariff Regime | Duty on Kids Apparel | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Türkiye | Customs Union | 0% | Permanent; A.TR certificate required |
| Bangladesh | EBA (until Nov 2029) | 0% | Phasing out 2029-2032; GSP+ only covers 66% lines |
| China | MFN | 10.5-12% | No preferential access |
| Vietnam | EVFTA phase-down | 4-12% | Most kids headings not yet at 0% |
| India | MFN (GSP withdrawn 2026) | 12% | Preferences ended for apparel in 2026 |
| Portugal / Italy | EU internal market | 0% | No duty but 2-3x FOB vs Türkiye |
The practical competitive set for kids apparel in 2026 narrows to Türkiye, Bangladesh, and Portugal — the only origins that combine zero EU duty with credible capacity. Bangladesh wins on FOB but loses on lead time (25-35 days ocean vs 3-7 days road from Türkiye). Portugal wins on proximity but at a 50-70% FOB premium. Türkiye sits at the intersection. For a detailed three-way analysis see our Türkiye vs Bangladesh vs Portugal sourcing guide. If minimum order size is your constraint, our low-MOQ manufacturer guide covers supplier short-listing at 300-500 pieces.
The UK is no longer part of the EU-Türkiye Customs Union. Instead, the UK-Türkiye Free Trade Agreement, in force since 1 January 2021, preserves tariff-free access for qualifying goods — but through FTA mechanics, not customs union mechanics. The practical consequence: UK-bound consignments require a EUR.1 movement certificate, not A.TR, and the goods must meet rules-of-origin requirements (typically double transformation for textiles).
For kids apparel, this means Turkish fabric cut and sewn in Türkiye qualifies for UK preferential tariff. Turkish cut-and-sew operations using imported Chinese fabric do not qualify under the yarn-forward rule. UK retailers sourcing from Türkiye should confirm their supplier issues EUR.1 certificates — and that the fabric supply chain supports origin status. The duty saving on a typical UK shipment is 12% of CIF under UKGT (UK Global Tariff) — similar to the EU.
The revised Pan-Euro-Mediterranean Convention on rules of origin entered into force on 1 January 2025, modernising the regulations that govern origin status across 25+ contracting parties including the EU, EFTA, Türkiye, Western Balkans, and Mediterranean partners ([European Commission — PEM](https://taxation-customs.ec.europa.eu/customs/international-affairs/pan-euro-mediterranean-cumulation-and-pem-convention_en), 2025). The revised rules introduce updated origin lists for textiles, simplify diagonal cumulation, and clarify the "double transformation" threshold for garments.
For kids apparel buyers, two points matter in 2026. First, within the EU-Türkiye Customs Union itself, origin status is not required for duty-free circulation — A.TR simply certifies free circulation, regardless of origin. Second, for products moving beyond the Customs Union (for example, Turkish-made garments re-exported from the EU to a third PEM country under preferential terms), the revised PEM rules apply. Under the updated yarn-forward rule, garments qualify as originating if the knitting or weaving of the fabric, plus cutting and sewing, are performed within the cumulation zone.
Practical implication: a Turkish manufacturer using Turkish-knit fabric confers origin status for both A.TR-based EU circulation and PEM-based onward preferential trade. A manufacturer importing Chinese woven fabric for cut-and-sew only satisfies A.TR requirements (because free circulation does not require origin) but does not confer Turkish origin for onward PEM claims. Brands selling into dual markets — EU plus non-EU PEM parties — should verify fabric sourcing with their supplier. For brands using Türkiye as a cut-and-sew hub, our cut-and-sew manufacturer guide details the fabric-sourcing and origin-qualification trade-offs.
Turning the Customs Union from a theoretical benefit into realised savings requires five operational steps on the buyer side. Each step maps to a binding EU customs obligation under the EU Taxation & Customs Union rules ([European Commission](https://taxation-customs.ec.europa.eu/turkey-customs-unions-and-preferential-arrangements_en), 2025):
For new importers running their first shipment, our step-by-step sample costs, lead times and shipping guide covers the operational sequence from tech pack to delivery.
Yes. The Customs Union covers HS Chapters 50-63, which include all textiles and apparel. Children's knitwear (HS 6111), babies' woven garments (HS 6209), outerwear (HS 6103/6104/6203/6204), hoodies (HS 6110), and pyjamas (HS 6207/6208) all qualify for 0% EU import duty when accompanied by a valid A.TR certificate.
An established Turkish exporter with MEDOS access can issue an A.TR within one working day of the shipment being ready. The electronic application is processed by TOBB and endorsed by the local chamber of commerce. Chamber fees typically run USD 20-40 per certificate. Validity is four months from endorsement.
A.TR certifies free circulation within the EU-Türkiye Customs Union; it does not require the goods to be of Turkish origin. EUR.1 certifies preferential origin under an FTA such as the UK-Türkiye agreement or PEM-based third-country trade. Customs union (A.TR) is broader and simpler; FTA (EUR.1) requires origin proof.
Only processed agricultural products. Basic agricultural goods — fresh produce, most dairy, live animals — fall under a separate preferential regime, not the Customs Union. Textiles and apparel are fully covered as industrial goods.
No current proposal exists. Türkiye is an EU candidate country and the Customs Union remains the operational framework. Modernisation negotiations have been discussed for a decade but would expand, not contract, coverage. For kids apparel buyers the 2026-2030 tariff outlook is stable.
The EU-Türkiye Customs Union is the single largest structural advantage Türkiye offers apparel buyers — permanent, automatic, and quantifiable in dollars per shipment. As competing preferential regimes tighten (India GSP withdrawn 2026, Bangladesh EBA ending 2029), the gap between Türkiye's 0% duty and competitor tariff exposure is widening, not shrinking. For private-label kids apparel brands planning 2027 collections, the landed-cost calculation increasingly favours a Mediterranean sourcing strategy.
Ready to model your first shipment? Our team can provide line-by-line landed-cost comparison, confirm A.TR coverage for your SKU mix, and share sample certificates from recent EU consignments. Start with our buyer enquiry form or review our full children's apparel sourcing library for adjacent guides on MOQ, lead times, and certifications.
Read More
Comparative analysis of the three leading children's apparel sourcing countries on cost, lead time, MOQ, certification, and EU market proximity.
How international buyers shortlist the best children's clothing manufacturers in Turkey — certification, MOQ, production capacity, and QA standards.
Realistic sample fees, production lead times, and EU/US shipping durations for children's apparel from Turkey — planning ranges for importers and private-label brands.
Partnership
With 55 years of experience, we offer private label and wholesale manufacturing in kids, baby and women's apparel.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. By continuing to use our site, you accept the use of cookies as described in our Privacy Policy .