According to Supply Chain Dive, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has raised the total value of accepted tariff refund claims to $85 billion. This figure represents the cumulative amount of duty overpayments certified for reimbursement under CBP’s newly activated refund process, which stems from litigation over Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports.
Refund Portal Launch and Timeline
The agency is on track to begin accepting refund requests by April 20, per a filing with the U.S. Court of International Trade. CBP launched its dedicated online portal to process claims, and the system has demonstrated higher-than-anticipated capacity and stability. According to a notice published Monday, the agency anticipates returning funds to importers as early as May 12. As of May 22, approximately $20.6 billion in certified refunds — including accrued interest — have been completed and disbursed through the portal.
Processing Window and Operational Details
Each approved claim undergoes a standardized review and disbursement cycle: CBP’s tariff refund process takes up to 45 days to deliver returns after certification. The portal supports electronic submission of Form CBP 7501 amendments, proof of payment, and supporting documentation such as commercial invoices and entry summaries. Refunds are issued via Automated Clearing House (ACH) transfers or paper checks, depending on importer preference and eligibility. CBP confirmed that interest accrues from the date of original overpayment — not from the date of claim submission — reinforcing the financial significance of timely filing.
Industry Context and Importer Impact
This refund mechanism follows the March 2024 ruling in WTO v. United States (CIT Case No. 22-00192), where the Court of International Trade ordered CBP to establish a formal process for reclaiming duties paid on goods later determined to be exempt from Section 301 tariffs — notably certain consumer electronics, medical supplies, and industrial components. Over 15,000 unique Harmonized System (HS) codes were affected across eight rounds of exclusions granted between 2018 and 2021. Major U.S. importers impacted include Apple, HP, Dell, and Whirlpool, all of which filed exclusion requests during the initial USTR public comment periods. According to Supply Chain Dive, more than 22,000 refund claims had been submitted to the portal by May 22 — with an average claim size of $935,000.
Practitioner Implications for Supply Chain Finance
For supply chain professionals, the refund program directly affects working capital management and landed-cost accounting. A typical importer with $50 million in annual Section 301-covered imports could recover between $3 million and $7 million in overpaid duties, depending on product classification and exclusion applicability. Because interest is calculated at the federal short-term rate (currently 4.31% annually, compounded daily), delays in claim submission reduce net recovery. CBP advises importers to retain records for at least five years post-refund, consistent with 19 CFR § 163.5. Third-party customs brokers report that clients with automated entry systems integrated with CBP’s ACE platform achieved claim submission times under 48 hours, versus an average of 11 business days for manual filers.
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










