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U.S. Customs Confirms $20.6 Billion in Tariff Refunds Sent to Importers, With Another $64 Billion in the Pipeline

Jun 23, 2026·6 min read

NEW YORK — U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) confirmed in a court filing on Tuesday, May 26, 2026, that it has already sent $20.6 billion in tariff refunds plus interest back to American importers since launching a dedicated refund portal last month, with another roughly $64 billion in refunds still moving through the system.

The filing, submitted to the U.S. Court of International Trade in New York, marks the first detailed public accounting of how the federal government is handling what has become one of the largest tariff-refund operations in American history.

The sworn declaration was signed by Brandon Lord, Executive Director of CBP’s Trade Programs Directorate.

At the center of the case are tariffs imposed last year by President Donald Trump under a federal emergency law known as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The tariffs affected imports across a broad range of industries and products, with American importers paying the duties directly at U.S. ports.

In February 2026, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump that the administration lacked legal authority under IEEPA to impose those tariffs, forcing the government to refund the money.

The scale of the repayment is staggering.

According to CBP, the now-invalidated tariffs generated approximately $166 billion collected from more than 330,000 importers across roughly 53 million separate import entries.

The agency initially warned the court it lacked the staffing and technology needed to process refunds at that scale. CBP’s primary customs-processing platform — the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) — was not designed to unwind tariffs retroactively across millions of entries.

Officials estimated the process could require more than 4.4 million man-hours if handled manually.

To solve the problem, CBP built a separate refund system called the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) portal, which officially went live on April 20, 2026.

Tuesday’s filing shows the system is now processing refunds at significant scale.

According to the declaration, more than 15.85 million import entries have already been accepted into the CAPE system for tariff removal. Of those, more than 8.51 million entries have already been processed and reliquidated without the illegal tariffs attached.

The result so far: $20.6 billion has already been refunded to importers, including accrued interest.

CBP said the portal is currently on track to handle roughly $85 billion in total refunds, meaning more than half of the total refund obligation is already moving through the system.

The remainder is proving more difficult.

Approximately 3.48 million entries have failed automated validation checks, largely because they fall outside CBP’s normal 90-day reliquidation authority or contain technical inconsistencies requiring separate review.

Those importers may now need to file additional claims manually, potentially delaying refunds for months.

The financial impact on American businesses is enormous.

Many importers have carried these tariff payments on their balance sheets for more than a year, tying up working capital that companies normally use for inventory purchases, payroll, supplier payments and expansion.

Now that money is starting to flow back.

The companies involved span nearly every corner of the U.S. economy. Businesses that challenged the tariffs included Nintendo, Costco, FedEx and thousands of other importers ranging from electronics firms and apparel companies to automotive suppliers, toy manufacturers, building-material distributors and food importers.

Small businesses may feel the impact most sharply.

A coalition called We Pay the Tariffs, which represented smaller importers challenging the duties, argued throughout the case that many small companies lacked the financial flexibility to absorb the tariffs while waiting for litigation to conclude.

For some firms operating on thin margins, even a refund of several hundred thousand dollars could determine whether the business survives.

There is another layer developing beneath the surface: Wall Street involvement.

As the litigation unfolded, hedge funds and specialty finance firms reportedly began purchasing importers’ future refund claims at discounted rates, betting they could later collect the full refund value plus interest.

Earlier this month, Senator Ron Wyden, the top Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee, launched an inquiry into how financial firms acquired stakes in those refund rights.

The concern is that smaller businesses desperate for liquidity may have sold their refund claims far below their eventual value.

The broader legal fight over tariffs is also not fully settled.

While the Supreme Court invalidated the IEEPA tariffs, the Trump administration continues enforcing other duties imposed under separate legal authorities, including tariffs on steel, aluminum, copper, automobiles and pharmaceuticals.

Some of those measures remain tied up in separate court battles.

On May 12, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit temporarily paused another trade-court ruling that had blocked portions of additional Trump tariff programs, allowing certain duties to remain in force during appeals.

For importers, however, the message from Tuesday’s filing is increasingly clear.

If a company imported goods between February 2025 and February 2026 and paid tariffs later struck down under the IEEPA ruling, the refund is likely already being processed, waiting in the CAPE system, or may require a separate filing if technical issues exist.

For the federal government, the refund operation represents a major fiscal hit.

Economists at the Penn Wharton Budget Model and the Budget Lab at Yale University have estimated the total cost of refunds and accrued interest could eventually approach $182 billion once all claims are resolved.

That money now flows back out of federal accounts and into private-sector balance sheets, widening the federal deficit in the process.

For consumers, the effect is less straightforward.

The original tariffs increased costs on many imported goods, but refunds do not necessarily guarantee lower retail prices. Companies may use the recovered cash to rebuild margins, reduce debt, restock inventory or absorb prior losses rather than immediately cut prices.

Senior Court of International Trade Judge Richard Eaton, who is overseeing the refund process, has ordered CBP to continue filing regular progress updates as the refunds move forward.

For now, after more than a year of paying tariffs the Supreme Court said the federal government had no authority to collect, American importers are finally starting to get their money back.

New York — JBizNews Desk

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