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Home Risk & Resilience Geopolitics

CBP launches first tariff refund expansion for pending duty reconciliations

2026/07/02
in Geopolitics, Risk & Resilience, Trade & Tariffs
0 0
CBP launches first tariff refund expansion for pending duty reconciliations

According to www.supplychaindive.com, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has launched the first of two planned expansions to its tariff refund portal, extending eligibility to import entries awaiting final duty reconciliation.

Refund portal now covers reconciling entries

The expansion, effective as of June 30, 2026, enables importers to file for refunds on duties paid on goods subject to provisional assessments—entries where final duty rates remain undetermined pending administrative or legal resolution. Previously, the CBP refund portal only accepted claims for entries with fully liquidated duties. This change broadens access to cash flow relief for companies managing prolonged customs valuation disputes or classification challenges.

The agency confirmed the rollout in an official notice issued on June 30, 2026, aligning with a broader effort to streamline post-entry processes amid rising trade compliance complexity. According to the report, the portal update applies retroactively to eligible entries filed since January 1, 2025, provided they meet statutory deadlines for protest and refund claims under 19 U.S.C. § 1514 and § 1520.

Legal context: Court order vs. administrative action

The expansion occurs against the backdrop of ongoing litigation involving tariffs imposed under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. A federal court previously ordered CBP to issue universal refunds on duties collected under now-defunct or invalidated tariff actions—a mandate the Trump administration has formally challenged. The source states that CBP’s new portal functionality does not constitute compliance with that court order but rather represents an administratively driven, targeted enhancement to existing refund mechanisms.

Antone Gonsalves, Reporter at Supply Chain Dive, noted that the move reflects “a pragmatic, incremental step—not a wholesale policy reversal.” As reported, CBP emphasized that this first expansion is distinct from the second phase, which the agency has indicated will focus on automated reconciliation triggers and real-time duty adjustment notifications.

Impact on supply chain operations

For supply chain professionals, the change reduces working capital strain by accelerating access to recoverable duties—particularly for high-volume importers handling thousands of entries annually across multiple ports of entry, including New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago. According to the report, companies with active reconciliation cases in CBP’s Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) system can now initiate refund requests without waiting for formal liquidation notices.

The source states that early adopters include firms in the electronics, automotive parts, and pharmaceutical sectors—industries frequently impacted by tariff exclusions and classification disputes. One unnamed importer cited in the article estimated potential annual refund recoveries of $2.4 million across 1,200+ pending reconciliations. CBP officials did not disclose aggregate refund volume projections but confirmed the second expansion is scheduled for implementation before the end of Q4 2026.

Practitioner implications

From an operational standpoint, the update requires procurement and customs teams to audit their ACE reconciliation dockets and prioritize submissions for entries meeting the new criteria. Practitioners must also verify that protest filings—required to preserve refund rights—were submitted within 180 days of the original liquidation date, as stipulated under CBP regulations.

Supply chain finance specialists advise cross-functional alignment between treasury, logistics, and legal units to ensure timely documentation retention and claim validation. The source notes that CBP has published updated guidance documents and hosted two webinars for stakeholders in May 2026 and June 2026 to support implementation.

Source: Supply Chain Dive

Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.

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