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Tariffs Defense: Steps to Respond to Cbp Duty Disputes

Área de práctica:Corporate

Tariff disputes often hinge on how a product is classified under trade agreements, and misclassification can expose your company to substantial retroactive duties and compliance penalties.



When the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) assesses duties or challenges the basis for tariff treatment, companies must understand both the administrative appeal process and the substantive legal standards that govern tariff classification and valuation disputes. Trade agreements establish preferential duty rates and exemptions, but only if a product meets specific origin, content, or processing requirements that CBP interprets with increasing rigor. Procedural missteps—such as incomplete documentation or missed filing deadlines—can foreclose remedies even when the underlying tariff position is defensible.

Contents


1. Tariff Classification and Trade Agreement Compliance


Tariff classification determines the rate of duty your goods face when entering the U.S. .arket. Under the Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS), products are assigned numerical codes that trigger specific duty rates, and trade agreements such as the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) may provide reduced or zero rates if goods meet origin and content requirements. The CBP Ruling Program allows importers to seek advance classification guidance, but these rulings are binding only on the specific importer and product described. In practice, disputes arise when CBP reclassifies goods during entry review or audits, or when the agency challenges whether a product qualifies for preferential treatment under a trade agreement. From a practitioner's perspective, many companies discover tariff exposure only after the fact, when CBP initiates a post-entry audit or demand for additional duties.



Understanding Valuation and Duty Calculations


The value assigned to imported goods determines the base on which tariff rates are applied. U.S. .aw follows the transaction value method, which uses the price actually paid or payable for goods, adjusted for certain costs and charges. Trade agreements may impose additional valuation requirements, such as regional value content thresholds that require a minimum percentage of production costs to originate within the trade agreement zone. When CBP questions valuation, the burden shifts to the importer to provide contemporaneous documentation supporting the declared value. These disputes are often contested in the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT), where the agency's determination receives substantial deference unless the importer demonstrates clear error or unsupported reasoning.



Origin Certification and Trade Agreement Preferences


Trade agreements grant preferential tariff rates only to goods that originate in member countries. Origin is determined by where the good was produced, which country supplied the materials, and whether the product underwent sufficient processing or transformation within the agreement zone. Exporters and importers must maintain origin certifications and supply chain documentation to support claims for preferential treatment. When CBP suspects that goods were transshipped through non-member countries or that materials were sourced outside the agreement zone, the agency may deny preferential rates and assess duties at the Most Favored Nation (MFN) rate. Documentation gaps discovered during audit create significant compliance risk because retroactive duty assessments can apply to entries made months or years earlier.



2. Administrative Review and Protest Procedures


When CBP issues a tariff decision or duty assessment that your company disputes, the initial remedy is a formal protest filed within 90 days of the CBP decision. The protest must identify the specific grounds of objection and include supporting documentation or legal argument. The CBP Protests and Liquidation Branch reviews the protest on the administrative record; if the agency denies the protest or does not respond within a statutory period, the importer may appeal to the U.S. Court of International Trade. This administrative layer is critical because it creates a record of the company's position and allows CBP an opportunity to reconsider without litigation.



Litigation in the U.S. Court of International Trade


The CIT is a specialized federal tribunal with exclusive jurisdiction over tariff classification, valuation, and trade agreement disputes. Unlike federal district courts, the CIT reviews CBP determinations under a standard that gives the agency considerable deference; the importer must prove that CBP's decision was unsupported by substantial evidence or contrary to law. The court examines the administrative record created during the CBP protest phase, so thorough documentation and clear legal arguments submitted during that phase directly influence litigation outcomes. Procedural timing is strict: a civil action must be filed within 180 days of the CBP protest denial or deemed denial. Missed deadlines bar judicial review entirely, making early legal review of CBP decisions essential to preserve your company's rights.



3. Tariff Defense Strategies and Risk Mitigation


Effective tariff defense begins long before a CBP challenge arises. Companies should conduct regular internal audits of tariff classifications, verify that product coding aligns with CBP guidance, and maintain contemporaneous documentation of origin, valuation, and supply chain sources. When CBP initiates a post-entry audit or assessment, the response strategy depends on whether the dispute involves classification, valuation, origin, or a combination of factors. Early consultation with counsel experienced in trade law can clarify which defenses are strongest and whether settlement or litigation is more likely to achieve favorable results. In many cases, companies discover that CBP's position rests on outdated rulings or factual assumptions that can be rebutted with current documentation.



Documentation and Record-Keeping Best Practices


The foundation of any tariff defense is accurate, contemporaneous documentation. Maintain invoices, bills of lading, certificates of origin, and supply chain certifications that support your tariff classification and valuation claims. Trade agreements often require specific certifications or origin statements; failure to obtain or preserve these documents weakens your position in any dispute. When CBP requests information during an audit, respond promptly and completely. Incomplete or delayed responses create inference of unfavorable facts and may result in CBP making adverse determinations without full information. Consider implementing a compliance management system that tracks product classifications, duty rates, and trade agreement eligibility so that you can respond quickly to CBP inquiries and demonstrate good-faith compliance efforts.



Coordination with Trade Agreement Partners


Trade agreements such as USMCA include consultation and dispute resolution mechanisms between governments. If CBP's interpretation of a trade agreement provision conflicts with how your company's home country or production partners understand the agreement, there may be opportunities to raise the issue through government-to-government channels. Companies operating in aerospace and defense sectors often benefit from industry advocacy and trade association engagement on tariff classification disputes affecting entire supply chains. In some cases, CBP issues guidance clarifications or revised rulings in response to industry feedback or interagency coordination, which can affect pending disputes or future entries.



4. Procedural Risks and Timing Considerations


Tariff disputes are governed by strict procedural deadlines that, if missed, can eliminate your company's ability to challenge CBP decisions. The 90-day protest deadline is absolute; filing even one day late bars the protest. Similarly, the 180-day deadline to file a civil action in the CIT cannot be extended except in narrow circumstances. Beyond procedural timing, companies face substantive risks if they fail to preserve issues during the administrative phase. Arguments not raised in the CBP protest may be waived in later litigation. Additionally, if CBP initiates a post-entry audit, the audit period is typically limited to three to five years, but the agency may extend this period if it suspects fraud or negligence in tariff treatment. Companies that fail to maintain adequate records face the risk that CBP will make adverse inferences about valuation, origin, or classification based on incomplete information.



Duty Assessments and Penalty Exposure


When CBP reclassifies goods or denies trade agreement benefits, the company owes the difference between duties already paid and the higher duty rate. In addition to back duties, CBP may assess penalties for misclassification or valuation errors. Penalties range from 20 percent of the underpayment for negligence to 100 percent for fraud. Demonstrating reasonable care in maintaining records and following CBP guidance can reduce or eliminate negligence penalties, but the burden falls on the company to prove good-faith compliance efforts. Early legal review allows counsel to assess penalty exposure and identify mitigation strategies before CBP issues a formal demand.

Procedural StepDeadlineKey Documentation
CBP Post-Entry Audit RequestTypically 3–5 years after entryInvoices, bills of lading, origin certificates, supply chain records
Response to CBP Audit30–60 days from requestComplete entry records, classification support, valuation calculations
CBP Duty AssessmentIssued after audit conclusionDemand for payment notice
Formal Protest Filing90 days from CBP decisionProtest form, legal argument, supporting documentation
CIT Civil Action180 days from protest denialAdministrative record, briefs, evidence


5. Strategic Evaluation before Dispute Resolution


When CBP challenges your tariff treatment, the first step is to evaluate whether the company's original position is defensible under current law and CBP guidance. This assessment requires reviewing the product's physical characteristics, manufacturing process, and supply chain to confirm that the tariff classification and trade agreement eligibility claims are accurate. Companies should also assess whether CBP's position reflects a reasonable interpretation of ambiguous tariff language or trade agreement provisions. If the company's position is strong, pursuing a formal protest and, if necessary, litigation in the CIT may be warranted. If CBP's position has merit or the cost of litigation outweighs the duty exposure, settlement discussions or voluntary reclassification may be more practical. Counsel should also evaluate whether the dispute affects only a single entry or represents a systemic classification issue affecting multiple shipments, because systemic issues warrant more aggressive defense efforts.

The overlap between tariff defense and broader trade compliance obligations means that early documentation and record-keeping decisions directly influence your company's ability to defend against CBP challenges. Companies should formalize their tariff classification methodology, document the basis for trade agreement eligibility claims, and maintain audit trails showing how products are coded and duties are calculated. Before CBP initiates a formal audit or assessment, companies can request advance rulings or classification opinions from CBP to lock in favorable treatment for future entries. When disputes arise, prompt legal review ensures that procedural deadlines are met and that the company's strongest arguments are preserved for administrative and judicial review.


23 Apr, 2026


La información proporcionada en este artículo es únicamente con fines informativos generales y no constituye asesoramiento legal. Los resultados anteriores no garantizan un resultado similar. La lectura o el uso del contenido de este artículo no crea una relación abogado-cliente con nuestro despacho. Para asesoramiento sobre su situación específica, consulte a un abogado calificado autorizado en su jurisdicción.
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