Anyone involved in international operations, finance, or compliance should pay attention to duty drawback—here’s why.
This article is the last in a series to help businesses navigate trade strategies amidst tariff changes.
Tariffs remain a significant cost factor for US importers and exporters. Understanding and leveraging trade programs is more critical than ever. One underutilized but highly valuable strategic tool is duty drawback.
With global supply chains in flux and tariffs remaining a significant cost factor for US importers and exporters, understanding and leveraging trade programs is more critical than ever. One such underutilized but highly valuable program is duty drawback—a strategic tool that can return up to 99% of duties paid on imported goods that are later exported.
What is duty drawback?
Duty drawback is a US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) program that allows companies to claim refunds on duties, taxes, and fees paid on imported merchandise that is subsequently exported, destroyed, or used in the manufacture of exported products. This includes:
- Unused merchandise drawback: Re-exported goods
- Manufacturing drawback: Goods incorporated into exported items
- Rejected merchandise drawback: Goods returned to the seller or destroyed
Why it matters now more than ever
As tariffs remain a volatile component of trade policy, businesses paying duties on goods that eventually leave the US are leaving money on the table if they’re not filing for drawback. With the passage of the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act (TFTEA), CBP has modernized the drawback process, expanded eligibility, and simplified recordkeeping—making it more accessible for businesses of all sizes.
Key considerations
To take advantage of duty drawback, companies must:
- Maintain detailed records of import and export transactions
- Meet strict timelines (generally within five years of import)
- File through the CBP’s Automated Commercial Environment (ACE)
- Ensure that exported products can be traced to the original imports
While the potential refunds are substantial, the compliance and documentation requirements can be complex.
How our firm can help
At BerryDunn, we help clients uncover and realize significant cost savings through strategic deliveries such as duty drawback programs.
Don’t overpay on tariffs
In an environment of evolving trade regulations and escalating duty costs, duty drawback offers a rare opportunity to recover sunk costs and strengthen your competitive edge.
Let’s talk strategy
Contact us to explore how a proactive drawback strategy can benefit your business. We’ll help you connect with the experts to turn complexity into clarity—and duty into dollars.
Read the other articles in our series about tariffs.