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02 April 2026 US Customs and Border Protection updates court on process to refund IEEPA duties; Phase 1 scope refined and progress milestones reported
In a declaration filed on 31 March 2026 with the United States (US) Court of International Trade (CIT), US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reported material progress on its new Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) functionality within the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) to calculate and refund International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) duties. CBP also refined the CAPE Phase 1 scope to align with orders the CIT issued on 20 March and 27 March 2026. Phase 1 will process unliquidated entries and entries within the 90-day voluntary reliquidation window. CBP estimates that Phase 1 can cover approximately 63% of IEEPA paid/deposited entries, with later phases to address entries that are liquidated and final and other complex scenarios. (Liquidation of an entry being imported into the US occurs when the CBP determines the total duties, taxes and fees due on the imported goods. Either CBP or the importer may request voluntary reliquidation within 90 days of liquidation to correct errors. The importer may file a protest within 180 days of liquidation.) Phase 1 will exclude entries flagged for reconciliation, entries designated on drawback claims, entries subject to an open protest, entries not filed in ACE or missing an ACE liquidation status, and certain entries subject to Anti-Dumping and Countervailing Duties (AD/CVD). Electronic refunds are mandatory for all IEEPA refunds. As of 26 March 2026, 26,664 importers of record have completed electronic refund setup, covering 78% of affected entries (approximately US$120b principal). CBP reports that, as of 30 March 2026: the Claim Portal is ~85% complete; Mass Processing is ~60% complete; Review and Liquidation/Reliquidation is ~80% complete; and Refund Processing is ~75% complete. Responding to the CIT's 20 March 2026 amended order (and further amendment on 27 March 2026) in Atmus Filtration, Inc. v. United States, CBP detailed the design and development status of CAPE, a new capability within ACE to administer valid refunds of additional ad valorem duties imposed under IEEPA. CAPE comprises four integrated components: Claim Portal, Mass Processing, Review and Liquidation/Reliquidation, and Refund. Since its prior filings, CBP has advanced core development and testing, including the Claim Portal's user interface, automated validations and refund processing within ACE Collections. For more on the CIT's original order requiring CBP to establish a process to liquidate and reliquidate entries, see EY Global Tax Alert, US Court of International Trade orders CBP to liquidate and reliquidate entries without IEEPA duties, dated 6 March 2026. For coverage of CBP's initial update to the CIT, see EY Global Tax Alert, US Customs and Border Protection details new CAPE process in ACE to administer IEEPA duty refunds; phased rollout planned, dated 13 March 2026. Note that the CIT amended its original order on 27 March 2026, directing CBP to liquidate or reliquidate all entries subject to IEEPA duties whether unliquidated, liquidated but not final, or liquidated and final without regard to those duties. To meet near-term timelines, Phase 1 will process (1) unliquidated entries and (2) entries liquidated within the preceding 80 days (so they can be reliquidated within the 90-day window under 19 U.S.C. Section 1501). CBP estimates this will cover approximately 63% of entries on which IEEPA duties were paid or deposited.
However, Phase 1 will not include: (1) entries flagged for reconciliation (including Entry Type 09, a reconciliation filing that allows the importer to flag data elements at the time of entry and submit the corrected values); (2) entries designated on a drawback claim (for recovery of customs duties, taxes and fees on imported goods that are later exported or destroyed); (3) entries covered by an open protest; (4) entries not filed in ACE or lacking an ACE liquidation status; or (5) AD/CVD entries for which the DOC has issued liquidation instructions and liquidation is pending under 19 U.S.C. Section 1504(d). CBP estimates that it may take up to 45 days from acceptance of a CAPE Declaration to review and liquidate validated entry summaries (absent compliance concerns requiring further review). In future phases, CBP plans to expand CAPE functionality to address more complex scenarios. These enhancements will include additional compliance and financial tools to support reconciliation entries, drawback entries, complex interest calculations involving multiple collection dates, and situations in which non-IEEPA bills are outstanding. Future phases will also support entries with final liquidation as well as non-Automatic Broker Interface (ABI) entries that lack entry summary lines. CBP will issue additional guidance as these subsequent phases are developed and deployed.
Under Executive Order 14247 (25 March 2025) and CBP's Interim Final Rule (published 2 January 2026; effective 6 February 2026), CBP is required to issue refunds electronically, with limited exceptions. CBP reports that as of 26 March 2026, 26,664 importers of record have completed electronic refund setup. These importers account for approximately 78% of affected entries and approximately US$120b in principal for IEEPA duty payments. Near-term refunds will become available in stages, with Phase 1 prioritizing unliquidated entries and entries liquidated within the preceding 80 days to allow reliquidation within the 90-day window under 19 U.S.C. Section 1501, while entries with a final liquidation status and other complex categories will be addressed in later phases. Electronic refund readiness is critical; payments will route to the importer of record or a Form 4811 designee via electronic fund transfer once processed. CAPE will remove IEEPA HTS codes and recalculate duties for certain suspended/warehouse scenarios now, and the resulting refunds will be triggered upon normal liquidation events. Importers that apply post-importation transfer pricing adjustments should assess how CAPE refunds intersect with customs valuation. Although CAPE removes IEEPA HTS codes and recalculates duties, it does not independently reassess transaction value. Companies with retroactive price adjustments, intercompany true-ups or pending reconciliation filings may need to evaluate whether affected entries fall outside the scope of Phase 1 or require additional coordination to ensure refunded amounts align with final customs values.
Document ID: 2026-0781 | ||||||