Tariff Tactics
Posts from April 2026.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) has launched its long-awaited Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (“CAPE”) portal, beginning Phase 1 of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (“IEEPA”) tariff refund process. With CAPE now live, the focus shifts from litigation to an administrative claims process.
For importers, the practical question is simple: What do importers need to do? In short, to claim IEEPA tariff refunds, importers must submit eligible entries through CBP’s CAPE portal using Automated Commercial Environment ...
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Recent Posts
- CAPE Is Live: How Importers Can Claim IEEPA Tariff Refunds Now
- CIT Signals “Be Aware”: Preserving IEEPA Refund Rights Amid Atmus Filtration Stay and Ongoing Liquidation
- After Atmus Filtration: What Importers Should Know About IEEPA Liquidation, Protests, and New Section 301 Tariffs
- Atmus Filtration: What a Liquidation-Based IEEPA Refund Process Means for Importers
- IEEPA Tariffs Invalidated — Refund Questions Likely Move to the Lower Courts
- What Importers Can Do if the Supreme Court Invalidates IEEPA Tariffs
- Decision Day Approaches on IEEPA: A Final Resolution or a New Chapter?
- Protecting IEEPA Tariff Refund Rights Pending Supreme Court Review: What Importers Should Do
- Liquidation Without Injunction: What the CIT’s AGS Ruling Means for IEEPA Tariff Refunds
- Costco Sues Over IEEPA Tariffs — What This Means for Importers Seeking Refunds
