IEEPA Tariff Recovery

Your Business Paid IEEPA Tariffs in 2025. You May Be Eligible To Pursue A Refund.

A federal ruling may allow qualifying businesses to recover certain import duties paid between February 2025 and February 2026. The government filed an appeal on June 2, 2026. Importers who have not taken legal action to protect their claim may be at risk.

Review your eligibility at no cost.

Potential recovery may include duties paid in addition to statutory interest on qualifying claims.

Find out where you stand with a no-cost Tariff Refund Review.

$11B+
Recovered by Watts Law Firm
330K+
Importers who paid IEEPA duties
6-3
Federal court ruling, Feb 2026
Jun 2
Government files appeal of refund order

Past results are not a guarantee of future results. Each matter depends on its own facts, applicable law, deadlines, documentation, and court rulings.

Start Your Free Review

Takes less than 2 minutes. No commitment required.

Step 1 of 2 — Tell us about your business.
Are you the importer of record on your customs entries?
Did your business pay import duties to U.S. Customs between February 2025 and February 2026?
Approximately how much did your business pay in import duties during that period?
Are you currently represented by an attorney for tariff recovery?

We Need a Little More Information

Based on your answers, we'd like to speak with you directly to better understand your situation. Please call us at 646-859-7011 and a member of our team will be happy to assist you.

Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship. An attorney-client relationship is formed only after a written agreement is signed.

By submitting this form you agree to our Privacy Policy.

You are all set.

A member of our team will call you within minutes during business hours. Outside business hours, we will call you first thing the next morning. Be prepared to discuss your import activity and the duties your business paid.

Prefer to speak directly? Call 646-859-7011

About Watts Law Firm

Watts Law Firm Has Recovered Over $11 Billion for American Businesses and Individuals. Now We Are Filing Tariff Refund Cases Nationwide.

Watts Law Firm LLP is one of the most successful plaintiff-side litigation firms in the country.

Attorney Advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Mikal C. Watts is the attorney responsible for this advertisement.

4,000+
Importers have filed CIT lawsuits to protect their refund rights as of early June 2026
$11B+
Recovered for clients by Watts Law Firm nationwide
200K+
Clients represented across mass tort and commercial litigation

Past results are not a guarantee of future results. Each matter depends on its own facts, applicable law, deadlines, documentation, and court rulings.

We work on contingency. You pay no legal fees unless money is recovered. We cover all upfront litigation costs. You owe nothing to find out where you stand.

Mikal Watts

Mikal Watts

Trial Attorney  |  Founder, Watts Law Firm LLP

Mikal Watts founded Watts Law Firm LLP and has spent his career representing individuals and businesses against some of the largest institutions in the country. The firm has recovered over $11 billion for clients nationwide. If you submit this form, Mikal or a member of his team will call you within minutes.

The Opportunity

You Took a Financial Hit in 2025. Most Businesses Haven't Yet Looked at Whether It Can Be Recovered.

Your business did not just "pay tariffs." You absorbed a real financial hit. For many importers, that meant:

  • raising prices and losing competitiveness
  • absorbing costs and compressing margins
  • delaying hiring or expansion
  • tightening cash flow

Most businesses moved on. What many have not done is evaluate whether that cost can be recovered.

Starting February 4, 2025, the federal government imposed emergency import duties on goods from nearly every U.S. trading partner under a law called IEEPA, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.

On February 20, 2026, a federal court ruled in a 6-3 decision that these tariffs exceeded the authority granted by IEEPA. The ruling opened a recovery path for businesses that paid those duties as the importer of record.

This is not a consumer refund program. It is a formal legal recovery process for businesses that were the importer of record on U.S. Customs entry summaries during the eligible period.

Every Day, More Entries Approach Their Deadline.
Feb 4, 2025
IEEPA tariffs begin
Feb 20, 2026
Court rules 6-3 against tariffs
Apr 20, 2026
CAPE portal launches
Jun 2, 2026
Government files appeal of universal refund order
Ongoing
Phase 1 entries liquidating
● You are here — 2026
The Government Filed Its Appeal on June 2, 2026. The appeal challenges the court's authority to order refunds for importers who have not filed their own lawsuit. If the Federal Circuit grants a stay or the government prevails, importers without their own legal filing could lose their pathway to refunds on liquidated entries. The window is narrowing. Importers who have not taken steps to protect their claim are now in a materially more vulnerable position than they were before June 2, 2026. The Tariff Refund Review will tell you exactly where your entries stand and what needs to happen to protect them.

Do You Qualify?

Screen yourself in 10 seconds.

You likely qualify if…
  • Your business is the importer of record on CBP Form 7501 entry summaries
  • Your business paid customs duties directly to U.S. Customs between February 2025 and February 2026
  • Your business paid a material amount in import duties that had a noticeable impact on your costs or margins. For many businesses, this ranged from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars.
  • You import physical goods in retail, manufacturing, consumer goods, electronics, furniture, apparel, auto parts, or food and beverage
You likely do not qualify if…
  • FedEx, UPS, DHL, or a freight forwarder is listed as the importer of record. Direct CAPE filing may not be available, but a recovery path may still exist. Submit the form and we will assess.
  • Your business is a dropshipper and products ship directly from overseas via a carrier. This blocks direct CAPE filing. However, a recovery path may still exist. Submit the form and we will assess.
  • You have already filed a case in the Court of International Trade
  • The tariffs your business paid were Section 301 China tariffs or Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs, not IEEPA tariffs
  • You are a consumer who paid higher prices because of tariffs, not a business that paid duties directly to CBP

Not sure? The review will confirm your status. It costs nothing to find out.

What You Receive from the Tariff Refund Review

  • 01A determination of whether your imports fall within the eligible IEEPA tariff period
  • 02An assessment of approximately how much your business may be eligible to recover, including the duties paid and any statutory interest on qualifying claims
  • 03A status assessment of where your entries stand relative to CAPE Phase 1 and the protest window
  • 04A clear recommendation on whether you need to act now, act soon, or monitor
No cost  —  No commitment  —  No paperwork  —  No preparation required

How It Works

01
Answer a few questionson the form below
02
We reviewyour situation
03
You find outwhere you stand and what to do next

No documents to gather. No trade law expertise required. No obligation. You do not need to understand tariff law, filing procedures, or entry status to complete this review. We handle that for you.

Start My Free Review
Submit Your Information

Find Out Where Your Business Stands. Free. No Obligation. We Call You Within Minutes.

During business hours, we call within minutes of receiving your form. Outside business hours, we call first thing the next morning.

Assume your business paid $200,000 in unlawful import tariffs. Here is what happens to that money depending on what you do next.

Doing nothing is still a decision. The numbers below show the difference.

Do Nothing Sell Your Claim Work With Us
Claim Value $200,000 $200,000 $200,000
Upfront Cost None None None
Risk Level High Medium Managed
Certainty Level None Low Structured
What Happens Rights expire. Money stays with the government. Hedge funds buy at 40–50 cents on the dollar. You give up the right to the rest. We pursue your full recovery at no upfront cost. We get paid only if you do.

Claim value shown is illustrative. Statutory interest on qualifying claims may increase the total recovery amount. Your actual recovery depends on your specific entries and circumstances.

Get My Free Tariff Refund Review

Takes less than 2 minutes. No commitment required.

Step 1 of 2 — Tell us about your business.
Are you the importer of record on your customs entries?
Did your business pay import duties to U.S. Customs between February 2025 and February 2026?
Approximately how much did your business pay in import duties during that period?
Are you currently represented by an attorney for tariff recovery?

We Need a Little More Information

Based on your answers, we'd like to speak with you directly to better understand your situation. Please call us at 646-859-7011 and a member of our team will be happy to assist you.

Submitting this form does not create an attorney-client relationship. An attorney-client relationship is formed only after a written agreement is signed.

By submitting this form you agree to our Privacy Policy.

Prefer to speak directly? Call 646-859-7011

The Filing Risk

The Refund Process Has No Second Chances. One Error May Cost You the Entire Claim.

This is not a situation where you either file or do not file. Many importers will file. The real risk is filing incorrectly and believing your claim is protected when it is not.

  • Once accepted, filings cannot be amended
  • One mistake may permanently affect recovery
  • CBP may review entries for additional duties
  • Timing is tied to entry status, not just submission date

A lawyer in this process is not there to help you get a refund that you could not get on your own. The refund path exists without legal representation. The lawyer is there to make sure the refund does not get permanently lost in a process that offers no second chances.

The risk most importers are not thinking about is not that they miss the window entirely. It is that they file and think they are protected, but the filing has an error they cannot correct. CAPE does not allow amendments after acceptance. That mistake is permanent.

— Mikal Watts, Watts Law Firm LLP

The Government Just Filed Its Appeal. Find Out Where Your Entries Stand Before It Is Too Late.

The Tariff Refund Review is free. No commitment. No paperwork. No preparation required. You find out whether you qualify, approximately how much may be recoverable, and whether you need to act now, act soon, or monitor.

Get My Free Tariff Refund Review
FAQ

Questions About the Tariff Refund Process. Answered in Plain English.

Do I Qualify? How It Works Filing Risk My Situation
Group 1: Do I Qualify?
How do I quickly check if I am the importer of record? +
Check your CBP Form 7501. Your business name must appear as the importer of record. If a courier or freight company is listed as the importer of record instead of your business, you cannot file directly through the CAPE portal. However, a recovery path may still exist depending on your contractual arrangement with that courier or freight company. This is a more complex situation that requires a legal assessment. Submit the form and we will evaluate your specific circumstances.
What exactly is IEEPA and how does it relate to the tariffs my business paid? +
IEEPA stands for the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. It is the law President Trump used to impose emergency tariffs on goods from nearly all U.S. trading partners starting February 4, 2025. A federal court ruled those tariffs exceeded the authority granted by IEEPA. Businesses that paid those duties may be entitled to recover them.
Which countries are covered by the IEEPA tariffs that were ruled unlawful? +
IEEPA tariffs applied to goods from nearly all U.S. trading partners, including China, the European Union, Vietnam, Mexico, Canada, Japan, India, South Korea, and dozens of others. These were broad emergency tariffs, not country-specific measures. The Tariff Refund Review will confirm whether your specific imports from your specific countries are covered.
Do China tariffs qualify, or only certain tariff types? +
This is the most important distinction to understand. Section 301 tariffs on China, which have been in place since the first Trump term, are not covered by this ruling. Only tariffs imposed specifically under IEEPA authority between February 2025 and February 2026 qualify. Many importers from China paid both Section 301 and IEEPA tariffs during that period. Only the IEEPA portion is potentially recoverable. The Tariff Refund Review will identify which duties on your entries qualify.
How do I find out which tariff type my business actually paid? +
Your customs entry summaries (CBP Form 7501) list the tariff codes and duty amounts for each shipment. Your customs broker can pull this from the ACE portal. Look for Chapter 99 HTS codes associated with the 2025 emergency tariff orders. If you are not sure, the Tariff Refund Review will determine this as part of the assessment.
What is the difference between IEEPA tariffs and Section 301 or Section 232 tariffs? +
Section 301 tariffs target China specifically and have been in place since 2018. Section 232 tariffs cover steel, aluminum, and autos based on national security grounds. IEEPA tariffs were the broad emergency tariffs imposed starting February 2025 on goods from nearly all countries. The court ruling that opened the refund opportunity applies only to IEEPA tariffs. The other tariff types remain in effect and are not covered.
How much did the IEEPA tariffs add to my import costs? +
IEEPA tariff rates varied by country and product category but ranged from 10 percent to significantly higher for certain goods and trading partners. For most importers, the added duty cost ran from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars during the eligible period. The Tariff Refund Review will calculate the approximate recoverable amount based on your specific entries.
I do not have my CBP Form 7501. Where do I get it? +
Your customs broker has access to all your entry summaries through the ACE portal and can pull them for you. If you do not have a broker, you can request your entry records directly from CBP through the ACE portal if your business has an account, or submit a FOIA request to CBP. The Tariff Refund Review team can guide you on the fastest path to get this information.
What exactly do I ask my customs broker for? +
Ask for your entry summaries from February 2025 through February 2026 showing the HTS codes, duty amounts, and tariff classifications for each shipment. Specifically ask them to identify any entries where Chapter 99 HTS codes were applied. Those codes were used to assess the IEEPA emergency tariffs and are the key to identifying which of your duties are potentially recoverable.
What if I used multiple brokers or suppliers? +
That is common and it does not disqualify you. Each broker files entries separately but all entries where your business is listed as the importer of record are potentially eligible regardless of which broker handled them. The Tariff Refund Review will assess your full entry profile across all brokers and suppliers.
Group 2: How Does the Recovery Process Work?
Does my business qualify if we imported goods in 2025? +
You likely qualify if your business was the importer of record and paid IEEPA tariffs between February 2025 and February 2026. The Tariff Refund Review will confirm your specific situation.
How much could my business recover? +
It depends on how much IEEPA duty your business paid and the current status of your entries. Businesses across the country paid anywhere from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of dollars in IEEPA duties during the eligible period. The Tariff Refund Review will assess your specific situation and give you an estimated recoverable range.
What is the Tariff Refund Review and what do I actually get from it? +
The Tariff Refund Review is a free assessment of your specific situation. After completing it you receive four things: a determination of whether your imports fall within the eligible IEEPA tariff period, an assessment of approximately how much your business may be eligible to recover, a status assessment of where your entries stand relative to CAPE Phase 1 and the protest window, and a clear recommendation on whether you need to act now, act soon, or monitor. No commitment required. No paperwork. No preparation.
Is there any cost to find out if I have a claim? +
The review is completely free. We work on contingency. No fee unless we recover money for your business. We cover all upfront litigation costs. You owe nothing unless a recovery is made.
Does the recovery include interest on the duties paid? +
Yes. Eligible importers may recover the full amount of IEEPA tariffs paid, plus statutory interest on qualifying claims. Interest accrues from the date the duties were paid, which means the longer the recovery process takes, the more interest accumulates. The exact amount depends on the duties paid, the payment dates, and the specifics of your entries. The Tariff Refund Review will assess both the recoverable duty amount and the statutory interest applicable to your specific situation.
How long does the process take? +
The Tariff Refund Review itself is completed following a brief call with the team. The legal recovery process takes time and depends on how the litigation progresses. What matters now is that your entries are identified and protected before filing windows close. Acting later does not speed up the recovery. It only risks losing the right to recover at all.
What is the CAPE portal and do I need to file through it? +
CAPE is CBP's electronic refund processing portal that launched April 20, 2026. It handles certain entries, but not all claims fit the administrative process. Some require legal action to protect refund rights. The review determines which path applies to your specific entries.
What happens if my entries are already liquidated? +
Some liquidated entries may still be recoverable through a protest filing or Court of International Trade action depending on timing. The review will assess your specific entry status and identify which recovery path applies to your situation.
What is a liquidated entry and how do I find out the status of mine? +
Liquidation is CBP's process of finalizing the duty amount owed on an import entry. Once an entry liquidates, a clock starts on how long you have to challenge it. Unliquidated entries are still open and may have more recovery options. Your customs broker can tell you the liquidation status of your entries, or the Tariff Refund Review will assess this as part of the process.
Does it matter what HTS codes my goods were classified under? +
Yes. The specific HTS codes on your entry summaries determine which tariff authority applied to your goods. IEEPA tariffs were applied through Chapter 99 HTS codes added to standard product codes. Your broker can identify which entries carried IEEPA-specific duty codes. The Tariff Refund Review will assess this as part of the entry analysis.
Can I file this myself or through my customs broker? +
Yes, but CAPE accepts no amendments once a filing is accepted. One error cannot be corrected after submission. CBP also reviews for other duties owed during the process. A legal review before filing protects against permanent errors that could reduce or eliminate your recovery.
Group 3: What Are the Risks of Filing Without Legal Review?
What happens if I file incorrectly? +
Once CAPE accepts a declaration it cannot be amended. An error on that filing may permanently affect that entry's refund. This is why a legal review before submission matters. There is no correction window and no second chance on an accepted entry.
What does Watts Law Firm actually do for my business? +
We review your entry status, identify which entries qualify for which recovery path, handle all filing and legal action, and represent your business if the government disputes the claim. We only get paid if we recover money for your business.
Which tariffs qualify? Does this cover all tariffs my business paid? +
Only tariffs imposed under IEEPA authority between February 2025 and February 2026 are covered by this ruling. Section 301 China tariffs, Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs, and other tariff types are not affected. The Tariff Refund Review confirms which of your specific duties qualify.
The government filed its appeal. What does that mean for my claim? +
The government filed its appeal on June 2, 2026. The appeal challenges the court's authority to order refunds for importers who have not filed their own lawsuit. If the Federal Circuit grants a stay or the government prevails on appeal, importers who have not filed their own case could lose their pathway to refunds on liquidated entries. As of early June 2026, roughly 4,000 importers have filed lawsuits in the Court of International Trade. More than 330,000 paid duties. If you are in the majority that has not filed, your refund rights may now depend on taking legal action. Legal representation ensures your claim is filed, protected, and defended regardless of how the appeal proceeds.
Group 4: My Specific Situation
FedEx or my freight forwarder handled my customs clearance. Does that mean they are the importer of record, not my business? +
If FedEx, UPS, DHL, or any freight forwarder is listed as the importer of record on your CBP Form 7501 entry summaries, then they paid the duties to CBP directly, not your business. This means you cannot file through the CAPE portal yourself. However, a recovery path may still exist depending on your contractual arrangement with that courier or freight company. This is a more complex situation that requires a legal assessment. Submit the form and we will evaluate your specific circumstances.
My business is a dropshipper. Products ship directly from overseas to my customers. Do I qualify? +
Dropshippers face a specific situation. If your business model involves goods shipping directly from an overseas supplier to your U.S. customers via a carrier, the carrier is typically the importer of record, not your business. The carrier paid the IEEPA duties to CBP and likely passed that cost through to you. This means you cannot file directly through CAPE yourself. However a recovery path may still exist depending on your contractual arrangement with the carrier. This is a more complex situation that requires a legal assessment. Submit the form and we will evaluate your specific circumstances.
Is this a class action lawsuit? +
No. This is not a class action. Each business files its own individual claim in the Court of International Trade. As of early June 2026, roughly 4,000 importers have filed separate cases in the Court of International Trade. Your claim is specific to your business, your entries, and the duties your business paid. That is why accurate, complete filing matters: your specific entries need to be identified, documented, and filed correctly.
Someone approached me about buying my tariff refund claim. Should I sell it to them? +
Sell with caution. Hedge funds and investment firms have been approaching importers with offers to purchase tariff refund claims at a discount. Because this litigation is still in early stages and the government is actively resisting payment, buyers offer a significant discount to account for risk and timeline. You may receive 30 to 50 cents on the dollar or less. If you sell, you permanently transfer your right to the full recovery. Legal representation on contingency means you pay nothing unless money is recovered, and you keep the full amount minus the legal fee. For most businesses, that is a better outcome than a discounted buyout.
My business went under because of the tariffs. Can I still file a claim? +
We are actively investigating whether businesses that closed or went bankrupt because of IEEPA tariffs can bring claims. This is not yet resolved legally. If your business is still operating, the path is clearer. If your business closed, contact us through the Tariff Refund Review and we will assess whether a claim is possible for your specific situation.
What is the difference between an IEEPA tariff refund and a duty drawback? +
These are two separate mechanisms. Duty drawback is a process where importers can recover duties paid on goods that are later exported or used in manufacturing exported goods. IEEPA tariff refunds are a recovery of duties ruled unlawful by a federal court. If you have exported goods and previously filed for duty drawback, that process is separate and unaffected by this ruling. The Tariff Refund Review focuses specifically on IEEPA duties paid between February 2025 and February 2026.
Does it matter if my goods came in under de minimis thresholds? +
Goods that entered the United States under de minimis thresholds entered duty-free, so no IEEPA tariffs were assessed on those shipments. Those entries would not be part of a refund claim. However, if your business also had regular commercial shipments above the de minimis threshold that did incur IEEPA duties, those entries still qualify and should be reviewed.
Final Step

Get a Clear Answer on Eligibility, Recovery, and What to Do Next.

The Tariff Refund Review gives you a clear answer on eligibility, what may be recoverable including statutory interest on qualifying claims, and what your next step should be. No cost. No obligation. No fee unless money is recovered. The government filed its appeal on June 2, 2026. You find out where you stand and what needs to happen to protect your claim before the appeal changes the landscape.

Get My Free Tariff Refund Review No cost  —  No obligation  —  No fee unless money is recovered