For U.S. importers, a narrow regulatory window has opened. We perform a free, proprietary analysis of your historical import data — at the Harmonized Tariff Code level — and tell you within 1–3 business days what the U.S. Government likely owes you. Zero upfront cost. Fees only on funds recovered.
A recent Supreme Court ruling determined that certain tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) were not properly authorized. The result: a narrow regulatory window in which U.S. importers may review past tariff payments and recover overpaid funds.
Most companies manage tariffs operationally — through customs brokers and accounting teams. But they've never had their data analyzed specifically for recovery. That's the gap we close.
Filing windows close on a strict 90-day clock. Companies that move first capture the recovery; companies that wait often forfeit it entirely.
If you're unsure whether you qualify, the free analysis will tell you definitively — at no cost and no obligation.
Many firms recommend filing a lawsuit and charge a retainer to pursue a CBP Form 19 protest. Our proprietary software analyzes your data at the Harmonized Tariff Code level — surfacing recovery without that costly approach.
Your customs broker handles compliance and classification — they're not analyzing historical data for recovery opportunities. We specialize exclusively in identifying overpaid tariffs.
No upfront cost. No obligation. Results in 1–3 business days, delivered as a written report.
Confidential. Encrypted. NDA available on request.
Free proprietary analysis. No upfront cost. Fees only on funds recovered.
The clock is regulatory — not marketing.