IEEPA Refunds Applications Start Monday

Many of ASA’s members paid a significant amount in IEPPA duties. Those duties were ruled illegal and now we have an opportunity to seek a refund. Rather than using its own resources to provide refunds of 100% of the illegal duties, the government is requiring those who paid the illegal duties to affirmatively apply for the refunds. At present, if you fail to apply then you may lose out on those refunds!

The U.S. government has developed the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) mechanism. This is a part of the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) system. It is the government’s mechanism for processing refunds for Importers of Record (IOR) who have paid the duties that were ruled illegal.

In summary, requesting refunds of IEEPA duties requires a little bit of infrstructure:

  • The applicant should be the Importers of Record (IOR) or the IOR’s authorized Customs broker (who filed the import records for the IOR);
  • The applicant should have an ACE Portal account;
  • The refund recipients should have already used the ACE Portal account to establish bank account information for electronic refunds;
  • The IOR (or the IOR’s authorized Customs broker) submits the CAPE Declaration in the ACE Portal (in the form of a CSV file).

The CAPE process starts with the filing of the CAPE Declaration in the ACE Portal by the IOR or the authorized broker who filed entries on behalf of the IOR. This CAPE Declaration will include a comma-separated values (CSV) file that is uploaded to the new CAPE tab in the ACE system. The CAPE tab will be available in the Importer, Organizational Broker, and Filer sub-accounts in ACE. The CSV file, called a CAPE Declaration, will contain a list of entry numbers for which IEEPA refunds are requested. Each individual CAPE Declaration is limited to 9,999 entries, but multiple CAPE Declarations may be submitted. A downloadable
CAPE Declaration template file will be available through the “Upload” button in the CAPE tab – use this to ensure you are formatting the file the right way.

Once the CSV file has been uploaded, the CAPE system will validate the submission and provide feedback to the filer as described below. For valid entry numbers, ACE will update the entry summary lines to remove the dutiable IEEPA Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) Chapter 99 codes and duties, resulting in a new version of the entry summary. Once the IEEPA duties have been removed, ACE will recalculate the duties owed without the dutiable IEEPA HTS code(s). In general, following CBP review, entries will be liquidated or reliquidated, and refunds will be consolidated and then issued.

If your entries were filed through your customs broker, then please work with your customs broker to file the CAPE Declaration and process the refund application.

ACE Portal users with Importer sub-account access can monitor refund activity using ACE Reports. The REV-603 Trade Refund report covers successful refunds. The REV-613 ACH Rejected Refunds report highlights any refunds that have been rejected due to the recipient not being enrolled in ACH Refunds.

To learn more, check out CBP’s CAPE Information Notice.

CAPE is a brand-new system – don’t be surprised if there are some unexpected hurdles. If you run into problems with the CAPE system, then let us know (and if you solve them, then let us know how you solved them so we can spread the word to the entire community).

All CBP Refunds Are Now Electronic – Get Your Account Ready If It Isn’t Already Prepared

Many companies in the ASA community are anticipating refund applications based on the recent Supreme Court case (Learning Resources Inc. v. Trump) that ruled some IEEPA tariffs to be illegal, and the Court of International Trade tariff order directing the duties to be refunded.

There are reports that today, CBP amended its order, to remove the “immediacy” from the requirement to issue refunds. But the refunds still have to be issued. CBP is creating the CAPE system within ACE and has suggested that it could be ready within 45 days of the CIT order (so, mid-to-late-April).

In order to make use of the CAPE system – indeed in order to receive any refund – you will need an ACE account. This is because CBP recently changed the rules to require all refunds to be processed through the ACE system. Some importers rely on their customs broker or their carrier to process all of the imports, and may not yet have an ACE account. If that is your situation, then now is the time to obtain an ACE account.

The expected tariff refund process will be something like this:

  1. File a declaration that itemizes the entries on which you’ve paid IEEPA-based duties; this will be filed within the ACE system (probably within the CAPE subsystem)
  2. The ACE system validates the application against its own data and recalculates the duty owed without the IEEPA tariffs (to verify the refund amount)
  3. CBP verifies the declaration and processes the refunds
  4. CBP liquidates or reliquidates each validated entry
  5. The ACE system should allow CBP to certify that the refund is owed and then the refund will be released by the Treasury
  6. The refund will be deposited in the bank account that you registered for electronic refunds, through your ACE account

U.S. CBP has published a number of resources to assist in obtaining ACE accounts and setting them up to process refunds.