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The IEEPA tariff refund portal tops 26,000 registrations as the CBP races to pay back $166 billion

The Customs and Border Protection is in for a few busy months.

Over the past weeks, the CBP’s new online system for refunding tariffs paid under the IEEPA has drawn 26,664 registrations as of March 26, as officials race to return an estimated $166 billion to importers after the Supreme Court ruled the collection of those tariffs illegal in February.

Even though registered importers are now confirmed to be eligible for refunds, CBP is not yet ready to roll them out. According to a new CBP court filing on Tuesday, Brandon Lord, a senior CBP official, said that the main tariff refunds claim portal is now 85% finished and is undergoing “critical testing required before deployment,” while other parts of the system are between 60% to 80% complete.

Based on the filing, Lord said the initial rollout of the portal will cover roughly 63% of the 53 million import entries tied to the Supreme Court ruling, but the remaining claims will take longer.

About one-third of the claims have already undergone a customs process called liquidation, which occurs within a year of an import’s entry and usually makes the associated tariffs permanent. Lord said that these liquidated entries will be handled in later refund phases when more capabilities will come online.

Phase one of the refunds, according to the filing, will be rolled out on time by mid-April, but it remains unclear when liquidated funds will be returned.

The refund effort follows a Supreme Court decision in February that struck down tariffs imposed by the Trump administration nearly a year ago. The ruling prompted the Court of International Trade to order the CBP to begin recalculating duties and issuing refunds. Judge Richard Eaton, who is overseeing the litigation, expanded his ruling on March 27 to clarify that liquidated tariffs are also eligible for reimbursement, following concerns raised by companies.

According to Eaton’s previous ruling, the CBP is also responsible for paying interest on the tariffs it holds, and it estimated the amount at $700 million a month, or $23 million per day, for every day the refunds are delayed.




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Shopping carts are seen at the Costco store ahead of Black Friday in Arlington

Costco sues Trump’s tariff in bid to secure refund before Supreme Court ruling


Benoit Tessier/REUTERS

  • Costco filed a lawsuit to recover tariff payments imposed by the Trump administration.
  • The retailer challenged tariffs enacted under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
  • Costco is seeking a full refund of duties paid.

Costco is suing the government to recover tariff money.

The wholesale retailer has filed a lawsuit against the United States, the US Customs and Border Protection agency, and Rodney S. Scott, the Commissioner of US Customs and Border Protection.

The suit asks the US Court of International Trade to strike down tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump by executive order under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

In a complaint submitted Friday, November 28, the retailer said it is seeking a “full refund” of duties it paid after Trump used the emergency-powers law to levy what he described as “reciprocal” tariffs.

The complaint cited a previous lawsuit, VOS Selections, Inc. vs. Trump, filed against the Trump administration, for which the US Supreme Court heard arguments in early November.

“This separate action is necessary, however, because even if the IEEPA duties and underlying executive orders are held unlawful by the Supreme Court, importers that have paid IEEPA duties, including Plaintiff, are not guaranteed a refund for those unlawfully collected tariffs in the absence of their own judgment and judicial relief,” the complaint reads.

Costco, the White House, and the US Customs and Border Protection agency did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.




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