First Trump Tariff Refunds Reach Importers

Customs Portal Begins Payouts, With More Payments Scheduled to Start May 7; Several Million Entries Have Been Rejected

Containers at a port
Ship-to-shore cranes and shipping containers at the Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in Philadelphia. (Hannah Beier/Bloomberg)

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The Trump administration has begun paying out refunds for the $166 billion in global tariffs that the Supreme Court declared unlawful earlier this year.

Trade lawyers told Bloomberg News that some of their clients have received money in their bank accounts as of May 6. One attorney, Daniel Cannistra of Crowell & Moring, declined to name his client or the amount they had received, but did say that the company’s payment included interest. He said that more companies had received notice that they’re scheduled to get refund payments starting May 7.

Chicago-based trade lawyer Mollie Sitkowski, at Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath, also said that some of her importer clients have already received refunds.

RELATED: Trump Faces 2,000 Tariff Lawsuits After Supreme Court Loss



The refund payments mark a milestone in the fierce legal fight over one of the president’s signature economic policies. Hundreds of thousands of importers paid the contested tariffs while the litigation unfolded. The Supreme Court didn’t resolve the refund question when it ruled against the government in February, spurring another round of wrangling in the U.S. trade court in New York.

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U.S. Customs and Border Protection launched a new online refund portal on April 20. The agency had said in court filings that the first phase of the refund program wouldn’t be able to accept claims for more than a third of the 53 million import entries at issue, however.

Claims covering roughly 1.74 million entries had cleared the initial validation steps and were in the refund process by the end of April, according to an earlier court filing from a Customs official. Several million entries had been rejected. The government’s next update is due in court May 12.

Spokespeople for Customs and Treasury did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Customs officials haven’t specified a schedule for rolling out future phases of the refund program for imports with more complicated circumstances. The Trump administration hasn’t committed to refunding all of the tariffs it collected under the president’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, although the government did confirm it would pay interest on refunds that it did process.

 

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