Unlocking Refunds: What U.S. Importers Need to Know About the IEEPA Tariff Ruling 

  • By Jean-Daniel VERMETTE
    • Apr 07, 2026
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IEEPA

In early 2026, a U.S. court decision opened the door to significant duty refunds for many importers who paid tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). 

If your business imported goods into the United States in 2025, you could be entitled to recover those additional duties, with interest. 

Below is a simple overview of what happened, what it means for importers, and how you can take action before key deadlines expire. 

What Happened 

In 2025, the federal government imposed tariffs on certain imports under the IEEPA. These surcharges applied broadly across a range of goods and countries.  

In 2026, the U.S. Court of International Trade (“CIT”) ruled that these IEEPA‑based tariffs were unlawful

That ruling means importers who paid those duties can now claim refunds from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). 

The refund process is straightforward from a legal perspective, but the route you take depends on the status of each import entry in CBP’s system. 

Step 1: Determine the Status of Your Entries 

When goods enter the United States, the importer of record files a customs declaration showing the product description, value, and duties due. 

After that filing, CBP typically has about 314 days (roughly one year) to review and “liquidate” the entry, finalize the account. 

  • Unliquidated entries are still open. The importer can modify them by filing a Post‑Summary Correction (PSC).  
  • Liquidated entries are finalized. The importer must file a formal protest within 180 days of liquidation to claim any refund. 

Recent court orders also allow reliquidation, a reopening of finalized entries, for certain IEEPA‑related duties. 

Step 2: Match Each Route to the Right Process 

Entry StatusWhat It Means Refund Path
Unliquidated (Still Open) CBP has not finalized the duty amount. Submit a PostSummary Correction (PSC) through the ACE portal. This is usually the fastest path to recovery. 
Liquidated (Closed) Entry finalized and duties set. File a Protest within 180 days of liquidation. CBP reviews the claim and re‑liquidates the entry if approved.
Finalized / Older Entries Usually beyond the protest window. Some may still qualify based on the March 2026 CIT orders allowing reliquidation for unlawful IEEPA tariffs. 

Step 3: Prepare the Essentials 

To process a refund successfully, importers need: 

  • Entry documentation (CBP Form 7501) and payment records  
  • Confirmation of IEEPA tariff codes that applied  
  • Access to CBP’s ACE portal and enrollment in the Automated Clearing House (ACH) program, CBP now issues refunds electronically only  
  • Support from a customs broker or specialist familiar with the refund mechanisms 

Step 4: Act Quickly 

Timing is everything. 

Once CBP finalizes an entry, the protest clock starts ticking and after 180 days, regular protest rights expire.  

Acting while entries are still unliquidated is simpler and faster. 

For older entries, opportunities may still exist, but they require specific documentation and legal references under the CIT orders. 

How Leyton Can Help 

At Leyton, we partner with licensed drawback and customs specialists to help importers: 

  • Identify which of their imports qualify for refunds under the IEEPA ruling  
  • Navigate the PSC, protest, or re‑liquidation process  
  • Handle data gathering, documentation, and CBP communication  
  • Ensure compliance with all customs and trade regulations  
  • Recover maximum eligible refunds quickly and correctly 

Our experts take care of the legwork so you can focus on running your business. 

Key Takeaways

  • Refunds are real: The 2026 court decision invalidated certain 2025 IEEPA tariffs.  
  • Know your status: Unliquidated entries → PSCs; Liquidated entries → Protests.  
  • Deadlines matter: 180 days from liquidation to act.  
  • Electronic only: CBP sends refunds via ACH – no paper checks.  
  • Leyton advantage: Fast eligibility assessment + full management of the recovery process. 

Ready to See If You Qualify? 

If your business paid IEEPA‑related duties in 2025, don’t wait to find out if you can recover those funds. 

Our trade consultants can review your import data quickly and tell you exactly which entries may be refundable. 

Contact our Trade & Customs Recovery Team and start your refund claim today 

Author

IEEPA Tariff Refund
Jean-Daniel VERMETTE

SR Custom Duty Manager

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