Following the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Learning Resources, Inc. v. United States, which struck down the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) duties as unlawful, importers of record are eligible to recover their portion of the $166 billion in collected duties. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is actively issuing these disbursements through its new electronic Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) platform in the ACE portal. Because the recovery timeline, documentation rules, and eligibility criteria vary dramatically depending on whether your shipments are unliquidated, flagged for reconciliation, or finally liquidated, navigating the multi-phase rollout is critical to preventing lost revenue.
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Following the landmark ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, importers who paid emergency border or reciprocal trade duties can now claim substantial financial recoveries. To secure your customs duties refund, your business must navigate a shifting regulatory landscape managed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).
This guide breaks down exactly who is eligible, how the newly launched Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) framework functions, and what tactical steps you need to take to protect your bottom line. CAPE Phase 1 launch date: April 20, 2026.
A: Yes. Following the Supreme Court’s February 20, 2026 decision in Learning Resources v. United States, tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were ruled to have been unlawfully enacted. In direct response, the administration revoked the executive orders (EOs) that established these trade barriers.
If your business paid duties under any of the following directives, those funds are eligible for recovery:
Eligible Windows: You can claim refunds on all “fentanyl” tariffs paid since February 4, 2025, and all “reciprocal” tariffs paid since April 5, 2025, up through their termination on February 24, 2026, alongside the targeted country programs for Venezuela, Brazil, and Russia.
A: Not necessarily, but the situation is evolving. The U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) ordered CBP to establish an administrative pathway to return the money without forcing every importer into a lawsuit. This resulted in the CBP CAPE refund process inside the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE).
However, the Department of Justice (DOJ) has appealed the broad scope of this remedy, arguing that non-plaintiffs should not receive automatic administrative relief.
A: CAPE (Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries) is a mass-processing tool implemented inside the ACE portal. Instead of forcing you to amend imports line-by-line, it lets you upload a single batch file to claim thousands of entries at once.
Only the Importer of Record (IOR) who originally paid the duties has the legal standing to file a CAPE declaration. If you are a distributor, retailer, or end-consumer who absorbed these costs down the supply chain, you cannot file directly. You must coordinate with the IOR to secure your share of the recovery or have them formally route the refund to you.
A: Phase 1—which launched on April 20, 2026—is strictly gated by an entry’s status:
If your entries were liquidated more than 80 days ago, they are excluded from Phase 1. Later phases (such as Phase 2 for reconciliation entries and Phase 3 for finalized liquidations) are planned, but their availability for non-plaintiffs remains tied to the ongoing DOJ appeals.
A: CBP states that valid, error-free CAPE claims will generally be processed and paid out within 60 to 90 days of file acceptance. Early trade data indicates that straightforward, clean entries are frequently paying out even faster—sometimes within a few weeks.
To execute a flawless import tariff refund strategy, your compliance team should follow this precise sequence:
Prerequisite
Ensure your trade compliance team or licensed customs broker has an active, verified ACE Secure Data Portal account. Look for the newly deployed “CAPE” tab in your account dashboard.
Critical Delay Prevention
CBP will not issue paper checks for these mass refunds. You must have your corporate bank details registered for Automated Clearing House (ACH) processing inside ACE. If this step is missing, CBP will validate your claim but hold the cash indefinitely.
Data Gathering
Run an Entry Summary Detail Report (ES-003) within ACE for the applicable 2025–2026 tariff windows. Export this data directly into Excel to isolate your target records.
Isolate Eligible Tariffs
Filter the HTSUS column specifically for IEEPA-related provisions: 9903.01.xx and 9903.02.xx. Further refine the data by country of origin at the 8-digit level to cross-reference against the revoked executive orders.
Submission
Create a clean .csv file containing only a single column of your validated 11-character entry numbers (maximum 9,999 entries per file). Upload this directly via the CAPE file upload tool.
A: CBP runs a strict two-stage validation check: File Validation (checking for correct CSV formatting and authorized IOR matching) and Entry Validation (checking if the entry number actually contains IEEPA codes and fits the Phase 1 timeline).
Your filing will face delays or outright rejection if it involves complex variables that the Phase 1 automation cannot handle. Flag these high-risk categories for manual review:
| Entry Characteristic | Complication / Action Required |
|---|---|
| Reconciliation (Type 09) | Excluded from Phase 1. Unfiled "Type 09" entries are slated for Phase 2 processing. |
| AD/CVD Flags | Shipments with Antidumping or Countervailing duties require heightened compliance reviews. |
| Open Protests or Injunctions | Active legal challenges must be manually reconciled; you may need to withdraw standard protests to utilize CAPE. |
| Duty Drawback Claims | Entries tied to active drawback claims cannot be processed automatically through Phase 1. |
| Missing HTSUS Lines | Typos or incorrect Chapter 99 data in the original filing will trigger an Entry Validation failure. |
A: No. CBP has explicitly stated that Post Summary Corrections are not the correct vehicle for obtaining IEEPA refunds. CAPE is the exclusive administrative mechanism.
Once your CAPE declaration is successfully processed, the system automatically strips away the illegal Chapter 99 provisions, recalculates your standard duties (including any normal trade relations or Section 301 China duties), and updates the entry version for reliquidation.
Warning: You cannot edit or cancel a CAPE declaration once it is uploaded. If you realize an entry required a standard data correction, that window closes the moment the CAPE file is submitted.
A: Yes, but it requires proactive setup. If you want a broker or a supply chain partner to receive the funds, you must complete a two-step sequence before hitting submit on CAPE:
If these designations are not established in the system prior to filing your CAPE declaration, the system will default payment strictly to the original IOR, and it cannot be altered post-submission.
A: Absolutely not. The Supreme Court’s decision was strictly focused on the statutory limits of IEEPA. All other active trade remedies remain fully enforceable, and enforcement is actively intensifying through 2026.
A: When the Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA duties in February 2026, the administration immediately turned to Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 to implement a temporary 10% global import surcharge under balance-of-payments authority.
The legal status of these Section 122 replacement tariffs is heavily contested:
CBP is actively collecting the 10% Section 122 surcharge right now while the appeals play out. Your compliance team must track these payments closely, as they will likely become the target of the next massive wave of customs refund claims.
With Phase 1 of the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) portal actively paying out standard claims, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is expanding the system. Following testimony before the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT), CAPE Phase 2 launch date: June 29, 2026.
This phase targets more complex transactions—specifically reconciliation entries and entries involving trade remedy friction—unlocking an estimated $28.7 billion in potential recoveries. This guide covers the operational rules, strict eligibility criteria, and preparation steps required to secure your reconciliation tariff refund.
A: CAPE Phase 2 expands the automated CBP CAPE refund process to handle two highly complex, data-heavy import categories that were blocked during Phase 1:
A: To successfully process a Type 09 entry in Phase 2, your filing must satisfy two strict criteria simultaneously:
If you have already filed the final reconciliation summary and it liquidated more than 80 days ago, the automated logic in Phase 2 will flag it as an Entry Validation failure.
A critical trap exists for historical imports. Entries filed during the early months of the IEEPA tariff period (e.g., February through May 2025) that moved through a standard 314-day liquidation cycle have already passed the 80-day post-liquidation window.
Because they liquidated more than 80 days before the June 29 launch, these legacy entries are completely excluded from Phase 2. Importers cannot rely on Phase 2 to recover duties on these early shipments and must shift to alternative legal remedies.
A: CBP expects valid, error-free Phase 2 declarations to follow a 60 to 90-day processing window from the date of file acceptance. However, because Type 09 and AD/CVD entries carry high compliance risks, automated validation will be paired with heightened agency scrutiny. Expect data matching errors to occur more frequently than they did in Phase 1.
A: For entries tied to active AD/CVD cases, ACE will perform a secondary verification check. If the Department of Commerce has issued final liquidation instructions and the entry is pending finalization under 19 U.S.C. § 1504(d), CAPE Phase 2 will strip the invalid IEEPA Chapter 99 line, recalculate the base duty, and seamlessly pass the entry to the standard AD/CVD liquidation queue.
To ensure your mass-upload does not face immediate rejection, your trade compliance team or licensed customs broker must execute this precise data-cleansing sequence before June 29:
Data Extraction
Access your ACE Secure Data Portal and run the updated ES-022 report alongside your standard entry data. This serves as your primary diagnostic dashboard to isolate open Type 09 entries.
Data Cleansing
Filter your data to isolate entries that contain IEEPA tariff codes (9903.01.xx and 9903.02.xx) AND carry an active, unfiled reconciliation flag. Ensure these entries are still open or sit safely within the 80-day liquidation window.
Validation Check
Verify that the 3-digit prefix of your filing customs broker’s ACE filer code matches the alphanumeric data on the underlying entry summaries. If the filer codes do not align perfectly, the ACE portal 447958reject the entire upload.
File Formatting
Download the official CAPE CSV upload template. Input your validated 11-character entry numbers into a single column (maximum 9,999 entries per file).
Syntax Protection
If any of your entry numbers begin with a zero, you must manually insert an apostrophe (‘) directly before the zero in Excel (e.g., ‘000XXXXXXXX) before saving as a .csv. Failure to do this will cause Excel to drop the leading zero, leading to immediate validation failure.
A: A file-level rejection happens instantly upon upload, blocking the entire document. The most common causes are formatting errors within the CSV (such as missing the leading zero-saver apostrophe), exceeding the 9,999 entry limit, or attempting to submit entries where your broker code does not match the historical electronic file.
A: If your file passes the initial check, ACE evaluates each entry number line-by-line. An entry will be single out and rejected if:
Crucial Warning: You cannot edit, amend, or recall a CAPE declaration once it is uploaded. If an entry fails validation or requires standard data adjustments, you cannot use a Post Summary Correction (PSC). Any post-liquidation adjustments must be handled via a formal administrative protest or prior disclosure.
A: No. Like Phase 1, Phase 2 is an automated administrative tool open to all valid Importers of Record, regardless of whether your business was a plaintiff in the original Learning Resources litigation.
A: While Phase 2 is open to non-plaintiffs, the Department of Justice (DOJ) is actively appealing the nationwide scope of these administrative remedies. Furthermore, CBP has explicitly stated that Phase 3 (targeting entries liquidated more than 80 days ago) will be restricted exclusively to importers with active lawsuits before the CIT.
If your business has substantial capital tied up in legacy 2025 reconciliation entries that missed the 80-day Phase 2 window, you should actively consider filing a protective Section 1581(i) lawsuit at the CIT. Taking this step protects your independent right to a refund, ensuring your historical claims remain viable even if the government wins its pending appeals.
Phase 2 opens a critical window for complex entries, but the clock is ticking on legacy 2025 transactions that are rapidly aging out of the 80-day post-liquidation buffer. Your compliance team must immediately run an ACE audit to isolate unfiled Type 09 reconciliation entries and format them precisely before the June 29 rollout to avoid immediate validation failure.
The rollout of the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) framework has reached its most contentious stage. While Phases 1 and 2 provided open administrative pathways for recent imports, CAPE Phase 3 is targeted for launch in late July 2026.
This phase is specifically designed to handle “finally liquidated” entries—those that aged out of standard administrative modification windows. However, unlike previous rollouts, Phase 3 introduces severe legal restrictions and a strict mandate for active litigation. This guide breaks down the high-stakes rules, specific eligibility hurdles, and protective measures required to secure your legacy customs duties refund.
A: CAPE Phase 3 is the cleanup mechanism for finally liquidated entries—meaning any eligible import that was liquidated more than 80 days ago and sits outside standard administrative adjustment windows (such as the 90-day voluntary reliquidation window under 19 U.S.C. § 1501). This includes the vast majority of historical IEEPA “fentanyl” and “reciprocal” tariffs paid throughout 2025.
A: No. This is the most critical distinction of the Phase 3 framework. The Department of Justice (DOJ) and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) have established a strict dual-track system for legacy entries.
The automated processing logic inside the ACE portal for Phase 3 will be restricted exclusively to importers who have filed individual lawsuits (protests/summons) before the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT). If your business is a non-litigant, the system will flag your Importer of Record (IOR) number and automatically block your Phase 3 file upload.
A: Although the Supreme Court ruled in Learning Resources v. United States that the underlying IEEPA tariffs were unlawful, the current dispute is entirely procedural. The DOJ is actively appealing the nationwide scope of universal administrative refunds. By restricting Phase 3 to active litigants, the government aims to cap its financial exposure while the federal appellate courts determine whether non-plaintiffs have a statutory right to automated legacy recoveries.
To safely navigate Phase 3, your trade compliance and legal teams must understand where your historical entries sit on the regulatory timeline:
| Entry Status | Time Elapsed Since Liquidation | Primary Remedy / Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Active Protest Window | 1 to 180 Days | File a Formal Administrative Protest. This keeps the entry legally "open" and prevents final liquidation status. |
| Expired Protest Window | 181+ Days | File a Protective Section 1581(i) Action at the CIT. This is the only way to force your IOR onto the master plaintiff list required to unlock Phase 3. |
| No Legal Action Taken | Any legacy timeline | Blocked. The entry will fail automated Phase 3 validation, and your right to a refund may be permanently forfeited. |
Because Phase 3 requires coordinating data across your customs broker, internal compliance team, and external trade counsel, you must execute this sequence immediately to ensure your firm is on the master approval list:
Data Identification
Run a comprehensive historical entry report in the ACE portal. Filter specifically for IEEPA Chapter 99 provisions (9903.01.xx and 9903.02.xx) where the formal liquidation date exceeds 80 days from the current date.
Legal Review
Cross-reference your list of legacy entries against your active legal files. Identify which entries are currently protected by a timely filed 180-day protest or an active CIT summons.
Litigation Bridge
For any high-value entries where the 180-day protest window has completely expired, engage specialized trade counsel to draft and file a protective lawsuit under 28 U.S.C. § 1581(i).
System Sync
Ensure the exact legal entity name and corporate IOR number used on your court filings match your ACE account precisely. Any discrepancy between court dockets and ACE profiles will result in a Phase 3 validation rejection.
Electronic Readiness
Verify that your ACH refund enrollment remains active inside ACE. Legacy payouts under Phase 3 will undergo rigorous manual audit queues before electronic disbursement, making pre-validated banking details mandatory.
A: Absolutely not. PSCs are strictly prohibited once an entry has liquidated. For legacy entries, the PSC window closed months ago. CAPE Phase 3 paired with an active court order is the exclusive vehicle to trigger these legacy adjustments.
A: If an entry fails Phase 3 validation, it is typically because the automated system could not find a matching court docket or active protest linked to that specific entry number. Because you cannot edit a CAPE submission after filing, a rejection means your recovery must be fought out manually through the CIT litigation track rather than the automated ACE portal.
Critical Warning: Many legacy entries contain missing or incorrectly reported Chapter 99 data due to rapid regulatory shifts in 2025. If your original filing lacked perfect HTSUS alignment, an automated Phase 3 file will fail. Your trade counsel must explicitly include these data discrepancies within your CIT complaint to preserve your right to manual amendment.
A: No. Phase 3 is strictly limited to the invalidated IEEPA emergency tariffs. The temporary 10% global import surcharge imposed under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 is subject to a completely separate, ongoing legal battle at the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC).
While CBP is actively collecting the Section 122 surcharge right now, those payments cannot be mixed into your CAPE Phase 3 CSV uploads. They must be tracked independently by your compliance team as a secondary wave of potential future exposure.
A: The risk is absolute forfeiture. If the CAFC or Supreme Court ultimately rules in favor of the government’s narrow interpretation of administrative remedies, CBP will have no legal authority to issue refunds to non-plaintiffs for finally liquidated entries. Failing to establish an active court presence before Phase 3 launches means permanently walking away from your share of the billions in recoverable legacy duties.
Phase 3 transitions legacy tariff recovery from an automated administrative process into a high-stakes litigation track. Because CBP will restrict access strictly to active litigants, your firm must coordinate with trade counsel to file protective CIT actions before late July, or risk permanently forfeiting your right to millions in historical 2025 refunds.
A successful partnership requires more than just translating trade regulations; it requires translating complex customs data into aggressive capital recovery strategies.
Jin Lim is a CPA who serves as the direct link between your operations and Brady Ware’s intensive tariff refund resource engine. As importers face the complex data requirements of the newly deployed CAPE portal, Jin brings a rare combination to the table: deep technical accounting experience and a firsthand mastery of data-driven import reconciliation.
Jin leads Brady Ware’s International Tax – Tariff team. Working with Jin means your executive team or family office benefits from direct, precise guidance through the complex filing requirements of Phase 1, Phase 2, and Phase 3 recoveries—ensuring no eligible entry summaries are missed and your ACH electronic refund enrollment is flawlessly executed. With Jin as your day-to-day champion, you gain full access to Brady Ware’s specialized tax, audit, and tariff recovery resources, giving your business the support of a leading firm to aggressively reclaim your corporate capital.