IEEPA Refunds Are Starting — Importers Should Check Their Paperwork

IEEPA tariff refunds have started moving through the system, and importers should pay attention.


This does not mean every importer will receive money automatically. It also does not mean every entry is handled the same way.

But it does mean importers should stop guessing and start reviewing their paperwork.

For many companies, the most important first step is simple:

Talk to the customs broker that filed the entry.

Importers should ask:

1. Were IEEPA-related duties paid?
2. Which entries are eligible for review?
3. Has a CAPE declaration been submitted?
4. Is the company’s ACE information current?
5. Is bank/refund information properly set up?
6. Are any entries excluded, delayed, protested, or outside the current phase?
7. Who will receive the refund if one is issued?

This is especially important for apparel importers and consumer goods importers who may have used overseas-controlled freight arrangements.

If an importer does not know who filed the entry, who acted as importer of record, or whether duties were paid correctly, it may be harder to recover money or even understand what happened.

Cargo Bridge helps importers create a cleaner and more transparent shipping process.

We are not a law firm or customs authority, but we help importers organize freight information, communicate with suppliers, coordinate with brokers, and ask the right operational questions.

If your company imported goods into the U.S. and paid additional tariffs, now is the time to review your entry records.

Do not assume there is nothing to recover.

Do not assume everything is automatic.

Start with the paperwork.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why Importers Should Prepare for AI-Driven Customs Enforcement

Why Importers Should Review Their IEEPA Tariff Refunds Now