
| We continue to assist companies nationwide in converting IEEPA tariff refund claims into immediate cash, even after the launch of U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s(“CBP”) CAPE refund portal and the latest April 28th update from the U.S. Court of International Trade (“CIT”). CIT’s April 28th status review confirmed that the lead IEEPA refund litigation has largely moved from the legal entitlement phase into the implementation and payment phase. In simple terms, the question is no longer primarily whether many importers are entitled to refunds, the issue is when those refunds will actually be paid. While CBP officially launched CAPE on April 20th to process refunds, there was no new court order requiring immediate payment of all claims. Instead, the CIT is supervising execution, while Customs works through claim submissions, liquidation status, eligibility reviews, and administrative processing. This distinction matters. CBP has indicated that certain accepted claims may be paid within approximately 45–60 days plus statutory interest. However, “acceptance” is not the same as submission. Importers must first complete filing requirements, resolve broker authority issues, verify liquidation status, satisfy procedural review, and clear compliance review before the payment clock truly begins. For many importers, especially those with older entries, previously liquidated claims, multiple brokers, documentation issues, or claims that may fall outside CAPE Phase 1, the actual recovery timeline could extend for many months or significantly longer. As a result, our buyers remain highly active in purchasing IEEPA tariff refund claims, with transactions from $250,000 to $7 million purchased at a Buy Rate of 85%, while claims exceeding $7 million have a Buy Rate of 90%. Why Importers are still Selling Tariff Refund Claims after CAPE Opened Judge Eaton of CIT did not order immediate universal payment of all claims. CBP’s estimated payment window begins only after formal claim acceptance, not submission. Many claims do not clearly qualify for CAPE Phase 1 and may require later phases. Finally liquidated entries remain one of the largest unresolved issues. Previously liquidated entries may still require protests, reliquidation, or additional litigation. The right to a refund is clearer—but the timing of payment remains uncertain. CSV upload issues, ACE access problems, and broker mismatches can delay acceptance. Documentation gaps and reconciliation issues remain common. Customs audit and compliance review may delay payment even after filing. Trump Administration appeal deadlines and future legal developments could delay the timing of refund payments. Processing millions of entries may create substantial administrative backlogs. Port-by-port inconsistencies may slow recovery for certain importers. Working capital needs often cannot wait for government processing timelines/. Importers Are Choosing To Monetize Now Immediate working capital for inventory, payroll, and vendor obligations. Reduced lender pressure and improved borrowing base flexibility. Elimination of refund timing risk and litigation uncertainty. Improved balance sheet certainty. Faster access to liquidity without waiting for government disbursement. Stronger buyer pricing now that CAPE implementation is underway as Buy Rates increased from 45% in February to 85% today For many businesses, immediate liquidity today is worth more than waiting for a larger payment later. Many importers are no longer asking. “Will I get paid?”, They are asking, “Is waiting worth the delay, uncertainty, and operational risk?”. For many companies, the answer is no. We work with importers with claims starting at $250,000, with no maximum limit across industries including food, seasonal goods, apparel, and home products. Most transactions can be completed in approximately 10 business days, assuming proper documentation and credit quality. |
To learn more about IEEPA Tariff Claim Refunds, Contact Factoring Specialist Chris Lehnes