Tariff Refund Calculator

IEEPA tariff calculator

IEEPA tariff calculatorGuide

IEEPA tariff refund calculator for customs CSV files

Upload the entry-level customs CSV you already have. The calculator isolates visible IEEPA duty amounts, rolls up by importer, and keeps weak data visible instead of inflating the estimate.

Key takeaways

  • Treat the IEEPA tariff line as a distinct amount, separate from Section 301, Section 232, MPF, HMF, and standard duty.
  • Use importer rollups to prioritize the largest IEEPA exposure before claim-prep work.
  • Surface duplicates, missing amounts, and weak field matches so the total is defensible.
Direct answer
What does an IEEPA tariff refund calculator estimate?
It totals the IEEPA duty exposure visible in the source file and flags where the CSV is too thin to trust. It does not estimate Section 301, Section 232, AD/CVD, or drawback refunds.
Direct answer
Which tariff lines count as IEEPA for this estimate?
IEEPA-related Chapter 99 lines (9903.01.xx and 9903.02.xx) tied to executive orders and Federal Register citations are the primary IEEPA signals. The calculator relies on the source file's amount fields and does not recompute rates.
Direct answer
What does this page not do?
It does not file with CBP, submit a CAPE Declaration, recalculate duty rates, or act as a customs broker or law firm. It is estimate and preparation software only.
Guide details

What to decide next

Use the source file to decide whether to estimate, request better data, or move into declaration-pack prep.

Why IEEPA needs its own calculator view
IEEPA tariff amounts usually sit alongside other duty types in the same broker or ACE export, so a general 'total duty' figure overstates refundable exposure.
  • Broker exports frequently combine IEEPA, Section 301, and base duty into a single duty column
  • IEEPA-specific Chapter 99 codes are the strongest isolation signal
  • An IEEPA-specific view keeps Section 301, Section 232, and AD/CVD exposure out of the refundable total
  • Source-file amount fields drive the estimate; rate fields are not counted as dollars
What makes the IEEPA estimate defensible
A defensible IEEPA estimate uses only the amount fields the CSV clearly supports and keeps unclear rows out of the total.
  • Isolated IEEPA amount column or reliable Chapter 99 signal
  • Entry number, entry date, and importer name present
  • Liquidation date or status available when phase routing matters
  • Duplicate and missing-amount warnings reviewed before the total is used
When to escalate past the free estimate
The free calculator is for first-pass triage. Paid claim-prep work starts once the file is clean enough to validate and hand off.
  • The IEEPA amount is isolated and reconciles to the broker's reported duty
  • Importer names roll up cleanly for the IOR of record
  • Status, liquidation, protest, drawback, and reconciliation flags have been reviewed
  • The team is ready to prepare a validation report and a CAPE-ready entry schedule

IEEPA-specific estimation workflow

  1. 1

    Upload the customs CSV

    Use a broker export, ACE ES-003-style report, or entry-level customs file — the CSV stays in the browser.

  2. 2

    Confirm the IEEPA mapping

    Check that the calculator isolated the IEEPA amount column (or Chapter 99 lines) rather than mixing in other duty types.

  3. 3

    Roll up by importer

    Group exposure by IOR so the largest IEEPA liabilities get prioritized for review.

  4. 4

    Route to the next step

    Request better data, open a broker follow-up, escalate to counsel, or move to paid Declaration Pack prep when the file supports it.

FAQ

Common questions about ieepa tariff calculator

No. It is scoped to IEEPA exposure. Section 301, Section 232, AD/CVD, and drawback refunds sit in different regimes and are not counted in this total.

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