For U.S. Importers of Record

Check your exposure.
Free. 2 minutes.

The Supreme Court ruled IEEPA tariffs unlawful. If your business paid them, you're owed a refund — but it won't come automatically. Deadlines are running. Protect your position today.

Zero Risk

No upfront fees. We only get paid when you recover your money.

Full Coverage

We handle the administrative pathways (PSC and CBP protest) end-to-end, and refer you to independent CIT-admitted trade counsel if litigation is warranted.

Confidential

Your data is protected. All information shared is held in strict confidence.

What happens after you submit

Specialist review · Exposure estimate · No obligation

A recovery specialist pulls your entries from ACE, estimates exposure across the administrative pathways (PSC and CBP protest), and sends a written assessment within 2 business days. If a matter would require CIT litigation, we note it and refer you to independent CIT-admitted trade counsel under a separate engagement. If we can't recover, we say so — no filing, no charge.

Step 1 of 3

~2 min

Your exposureContactBook time

First — quick exposure check

Three questions. No contact info yet.

Estimated IEEPA duties paid (2022–2024)

Are you the Importer of Record?

Status of your entries

No contact info collected at this step.

What happens if you wait

“I'll just wait for the automatic refund” is the most expensive decision you'll make this year.

1

The government is appealing

Treasury filed notice of appeal. Automatic refunds are not on the table while the appeal is pending.

2

CAPE only covers some entries

CBP’s refund portal covers specific unliquidated entries. Liquidated entries are excluded and require formal protests.

3

Liquidated entries have a 180-day clock

Miss the statutory protest window and the refund is forfeit — permanently. No appeal, no exception.

4

PSC windows close at 300 days per entry

Each entry has its own deadline. Every day that passes, more of your entries cross the PSC cutoff and fall into the harder protest track.

What Clients Say

“They handled the administrative side end-to-end — entries identified, PSCs and protests prepared and filed through our broker — and made a clean introduction to trade counsel when we needed a CIT view. We kept running the business.”

— VP Finance, Mid-market Industrial Importer(Identity withheld for commercial confidentiality)

Keep More of What You Recover

How you pursue an unlawful IEEPA payment determines what's left after the dust settles.

Wait & See
Nothing

Forfeit Claim

Deadlines lapse

Cash Buyers
Fraction

Instant Loss

They take the upside

TariffAuditLabs
Majority

Aligned Incentives

$0 if we don't recover

Common Questions Before You Book

The objections we hear most — answered in 30 seconds each.

Most importers wait because they think someone else is already handling it, or that the refund will be automatic. Neither is true. Here's what actually applies.

Isn't my customs broker already handling this?

Brokers file entries. They don't pull ACE history, model exposure across PSC / protest / CIT windows, or assess CIT eligibility for referral to admitted counsel. We sit alongside your broker — no switch, no conflict — and PSC/protest filings are lodged through your broker.

Will filing hurt my CBP relationship?

No. PSCs and protests are routine statutory procedures CBP expects. Nothing in this process flags you as adversarial or triggers additional scrutiny on future entries.

What if most of my entries aren't liquidated yet?

Those are the highest-priority ones. Unliquidated entries are eligible for PSC — the fastest, cheapest administrative pathway. Miss the PSC window (earlier of 300 days from entry or 15 days before scheduled liquidation) and you're forced into a § 1514 protest.

What's the risk if I'm wrong about eligibility?

Zero to you. We do the eligibility review before any filing. If there's nothing to recover, we don't file — and you owe nothing. We only get paid from dollars actually recovered.