China announced the suspension of all retaliatory tariffs on a range of US agricultural products effective November 10.
This follows Washington's decision to halve fentanyl-related levies on Chinese exports.
In a recent statement, China's Ministry of Finance said the move involves the suspension of tariffs imposed since March 4 on US soybeans, corn, wheat, sorghum and chicken.
The move came just hours after US President Donald Trump signed two executive orders that lowered the reciprocal tariff rate from 34% to 10% and revised fentanyl-related duties on Chinese products.
The two actions are part of a year-long trade deal between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping, restoring trade relations between the world's two largest economies after long tensions.
Market analysts saw the development as boosting confidence in the recovery of global agricultural trade, with Chicago soybean futures up around 1% in Asian trading.
China had previously avoided buying US soybeans and shifted to the South American market, but has now returned to placing orders after the two leaders' summit in South Korea.