1. What Are the Core Tariff and Customs Obligations New York Importers Must Meet?
Every product entering through a New York port of entry triggers a specific set of legal obligations. The table below summarizes the five most critical requirements and their regulatory basis.
| Obligation | Legal Basis | What It Requires |
|---|---|---|
| Tariff Classification | HTSUS | Assign the correct HTS code to every imported product |
| Country-of-Origin Marking | 19 U.S.C. § 1304 | Mark products and packaging with country of origin |
| Duty Valuation | 19 U.S.C. § 1401a | Declare transaction value, including assists |
| Record Retention | 19 C.F.R. § 163.4 | Retain all entry records for a minimum of five years |
| Reasonable Care | 19 U.S.C. § 1484 | Importer of record bears responsibility for entry accuracy |
The Reasonable Care Standard
The Reasonable Care standard deserves particular attention. Under 19 U.S.C. § 1484, the importer of record is legally responsible for the accuracy of every customs entry, regardless of whether an external broker or freight forwarder prepared it. I have seen importers receive penalty notices for misclassifications that occurred years prior, simply because no internal verification process existed. Tariff and customs advisory helps you establish the protocols that satisfy this standard and protect your business when CBP questions arise.
2. What Are the Most Common Tariff Compliance Risks for New York Importers?
Most tariff compliance problems I encounter fall into one of four categories. Understanding where exposure tends to arise is the first step toward managing it.
Hts Misclassification
A single HTS code error can shift a duty rate by 10 to 25 percentage points and expose the importer to back-duty liability spanning multiple entry cycles. Products in gray-zone categories, such as goods with both commercial and industrial applications, require documented classification rationale, not just a code carried over from a prior shipment.
Unsupported Preferential Origin Claims
Claiming duty-free treatment under USMCA without the required regional value content documentation, production records, and supplier certifications can result in substantial penalties under 19 U.S.C. § 1592. CBP audits preferential claims regularly, and this risk is not limited to large importers.
Valuation Errors and Missing Assists
Undervaluing goods or omitting assists, such as buyer-provided tooling or materials, can trigger CBP scrutiny and result in a CF-28 Request for Information. Valuation errors are especially common when importers rely on invoice value alone without reviewing what additional costs must be included.
Record-Keeping Failures
Importers who cannot produce contemporaneous records during a CBP audit lose the ability to defend their classification and valuation decisions. Without a structured retention system, a CF-29 Notice of Action can turn a manageable compliance gap into a significant financial liability.
3. How Do New York Importers Get Started with Tariff Advisory?
The right time to engage tariff and customs advisory counsel is before your first shipment, not after a CBP notice arrives. Here are the three steps that matter most.
Engage Counsel before Your First Shipment
Pre-import advisory allows counsel to review HTS classifications for your product line, identify trade agreement eligibility, and flag origin issues before they are locked into procurement contracts. Fixing classification errors retroactively, after multiple entries have already cleared CBP, is significantly more costly and legally complex.
Request a Cbp Advance Ruling
For high-volume products or gray-zone classifications, a CBP Advance Ruling through the National Commodity Specialist Division provides binding classification guidance. Rulings take approximately 60 to 90 days and remain one of the most underused tools in tariff advisory practice.
Build an Internal Compliance Framework
A one-time tariff advisory engagement has limited value without internal protocols to sustain it. The core components are:
- Assign HTS classification responsibility to a specific team or individual
- Establish entry review procedures before each shipment clears CBP
- Implement a five-year record retention system for all entry documents
- Schedule periodic classification audits as your product lines evolve
Tariff and customs advisory helps you design this framework to fit your actual operations, so compliance does not become a bottleneck in your import process.
22 Aug, 2025

