IEEPA Refund Eligibility: How to Claim After the SCOTUS Ruling
Importers who paid IEEPA reciprocal tariffs between April 2025 and the February 2026 SCOTUS ruling can claim refunds via protest, PSC, or reconciliation. Here is the eligibility window, the entry-type rules, and the filing workflow.
Try the calculator
Run a real calculation for this lane in under a minute. Free, no card.
Open calculatorIEEPA Refund Eligibility: How to Claim After the SCOTUS Ruling
The February 14 2026 Supreme Court ruling in V.O.S. Selections v. United States invalidated the use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) as the authority for the April 2025 reciprocal tariffs. CBP issued implementation guidance February 28 2026 in CSMS 60-XXX establishing the refund framework. Importers who paid IEEPA-based reciprocal duty on entries between April 5 2025 and February 14 2026 are eligible for refunds via three filing paths.
This guide covers the eligibility window, the entry-type-specific filing paths (protest, post-summary correction, reconciliation), what counts toward the refund versus what stays owed under Section 122 as the replacement authority, and the documentation CBP wants.
What the ruling did
The April 5 2025 executive order imposed country-specific reciprocal tariffs under the claimed authority of IEEPA. The rates ranged from a 10 percent base for most trading partners to higher country-specific rates: 25 percent on Mexico and Canada for fentanyl-related non-trade enforcement (separate basis, not affected), 32 percent on China, 49 percent on Cambodia, 46 percent on Vietnam, 26 percent on India, and a long list of partner-specific rates.
The Supreme Court held that IEEPA does not authorize the President to impose ad valorem tariffs on imports as a foreign policy or trade-balance instrument. The reciprocal program was statutorily invalid from inception. Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 was identified as the proper authority for reciprocal tariff action and was activated by separate proclamation effective February 24 2026 at a flat 15 percent ad valorem rate (the statutory ceiling).
The practical result: every entry that paid IEEPA-based reciprocal duty between April 5 2025 and February 14 2026 was charged under invalid authority. CBP must refund the duty, less any portion the importer now owes under Section 122 for the same entries.
Eligibility window
| Entry filed | IEEPA paid | Refund eligible? |
|---|---|---|
| Before April 5 2025 | No | N/A |
| April 5 2025 to February 14 2026 | Yes | Yes, full IEEPA amount |
| February 15 2026 onward | No (Section 122 replaced) | N/A |
Within the eligible window the entry must also satisfy a timing rule for the refund channel:
- Not yet liquidated: file a post-summary correction (PSC).
- Liquidated within the past 180 days: file a protest under 19 USC 1514.
- Liquidated more than 180 days ago: generally time-barred, but reconciliation-program entries have their own clock.
- Filed under reconciliation: the recon entry timeline applies, often longer.
The three refund paths
Path A: Protest (19 USC 1514, CBP 19)
For entries that have liquidated within the last 180 days. Filed in ACE under the protest framework. The protest must identify the entry number, the line item, the duty type being protested (IEEPA reciprocal), the legal basis (SCOTUS ruling V.O.S. Selections), and the requested refund amount.
CBP CSMS 60-XXX gives blanket protest treatment to IEEPA refund requests, meaning a single protest can cover all line items on an entry without requiring separate protests per line. Multi-entry protests are also allowed for the same importer.
Decision timeline: CBP must rule on a protest within two years. Refund interest accrues from the date of overpayment.
Path B: Post-Summary Correction (PSC)
For entries that have not yet liquidated. PSC is filed in ACE up to 270 days from entry summary date or 15 days before scheduled liquidation, whichever is earlier. The PSC adjusts the duty owed on the entry to the correct (non-IEEPA) amount.
CSMS 60-XXX confirms that PSC is the appropriate channel for unliquidated entries and instructs CBP officers to process IEEPA PSCs as a non-substantive correction.
Path C: Reconciliation
For importers in the reconciliation program (mostly large mid-market and above with active recon entries). The recon entry itself is the vehicle for the refund. Filing happens via the recon final summary up to 21 months from the original entry date.
Worked example: $200,000 entry from Vietnam
You imported $200,000 of HTS 9401 furniture from Vietnam on July 15 2025. The reciprocal rate on Vietnam under IEEPA was 46 percent. The entry liquidated on April 20 2026.
| Charge at entry | Rate | Base | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MFN duty (chair, qualifying for GSP at time) | 0 percent | 200,000 | 0 |
| IEEPA reciprocal (Vietnam) | 46 percent | 200,000 | 92,000 |
| MPF | 0.3464 percent | 200,000 | 614.35 (capped) |
| HMF | 0.125 percent | 200,000 | 250 |
| Total paid | 92,864.35 |
After the SCOTUS ruling and the Section 122 activation, the rate is a flat 15 percent across all non-exempt origins, including Vietnam (lower than the prior IEEPA 46 percent on this lane).
Net refund computation:
| Item | Amount (USD) |
|---|---|
| IEEPA paid | 92,000 |
| Section 122 owed for the same entry | (15 percent x 200,000) = 30,000 |
| Net refund | 62,000 |
Plus interest from the date of overpayment to the date of refund, currently around 7 percent annualized per CBP's published interest tables.
The entry liquidated April 20 2026. Today is June 18 2026. You are within the 180-day protest window (deadline October 17 2026). File the protest via ACE before then.
Documentation CBP wants
- Entry summary (CBP 7501) showing the IEEPA line item.
- Commercial invoice and packing list.
- Proof of payment (statement of payment or ACE entry payment record).
- Brief legal basis statement (one paragraph citing V.O.S. Selections).
- Section 122 calculation worksheet showing the net refund amount (CBP no longer requires importers to estimate Section 122 on their own; CBP will compute and net it, but providing it speeds review).
- Importer of record number and bond information.
Most of this comes out of the ACE entry record automatically. The legal basis statement is the only narrative item.
What is NOT refundable
- Section 232 steel and aluminum duties paid on the same entry. The 232 layer was based on separate statutory authority and was not invalidated.
- Section 301 China duties. Separate authority, not affected.
- Section 122 owed under the replacement framework. Refund is net of Section 122.
- Mexico and Canada fentanyl-enforcement duties under the separate IEEPA emergency basis. The SCOTUS ruling carved out the narrow non-trade emergency uses.
- MPF and HMF. Continue to apply.
Timing realities
CBP has historically processed protests over 12 to 18 months. CSMS 60-XXX directs prioritization of IEEPA refund protests but also acknowledges volume risk. Expect actual refund disbursement 6 to 12 months from filing for entries with no other complications.
Interest continues to accrue throughout the wait. Calculate the total expected refund as principal plus accrued interest at the published CBP rate, compounded as specified in 19 CFR 24.
Run your refund estimate now
The LandedFees IEEPA refund estimator takes your entry list and produces the per-entry refund amount, the Section 122 offset, the net refund, and an estimated interest accrual to a specified disbursement date. Useful for cash-flow planning and for prioritizing which entries to protest first.
Section 122 status as of June 20 2026
The May 7 2026 Court of International Trade ruling in Oregon v. United States (consolidated with Burlap and Barrel v. United States) struck down the Section 122 proclamation. The Federal Circuit issued an administrative stay on May 12 2026, so CBP is still collecting the duty pending appeal. Importers paying now should preserve protest rights and refund claims in case the government loses on the merits. The underlying Section 122 authority sunsets July 24 2026 under the statutory 150-day ceiling, regardless of the appeal outcome, unless Congress extends or a fresh proclamation restarts the clock.
Citations
- V.O.S. Selections v. United States (SCOTUS February 14 2026): See SCOTUS docket
- CBP CSMS 60-XXX (IEEPA refund implementation, February 28 2026): https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/USDHSCBP
- Section 122 Trade Act of 1974 proclamation February 2026 (effective February 24 2026): Federal Register
- 19 USC 1514 protest authority: https://www.cbp.gov/trade/programs-administration/protests
- 19 CFR 24 (interest on overpayments): https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-19/chapter-I/part-24
Frequently asked questions
Am I eligible for an IEEPA refund?
If you paid IEEPA-based reciprocal tariffs on entries filed between April 5 2025 and February 14 2026, and the entry has not yet liquidated or was liquidated within the past 180 days, yes. The CBP guidance issued February 28 2026 sets the eligibility framework and the protest window.
How much is at stake?
The IEEPA reciprocal rate ranged from 10 percent (base) to 49 percent (Cambodia) ad valorem. A typical $200,000 shipment from a country at the 32 percent rate would have paid $64,000 in IEEPA duty. That is the refund amount, less any portion now collected under Section 122 as the replacement reciprocal authority.
Do I need a customs broker?
Not technically. The protest can be filed by the importer of record via ACE. In practice most importers use a broker or a customs attorney for entries with more than $25,000 at stake. The protest form is CBP 19.
What is the deadline?
180 days from liquidation for a protest. If the entry has not liquidated, you can file a post-summary correction (PSC) up to 270 days from entry. If the entry was filed under the reconciliation program, the recon entry has its own timeline. Calculate from the earliest applicable date.
Will Section 122 still apply on the refunded amount?
Yes on most lanes. Section 122 was activated by proclamation in February 2026 as the statutory replacement reciprocal authority. The rate is a flat 15 percent ad valorem across all non-exempt origins (USMCA-qualifying goods exempt, Annex II carve-outs apply). Net refund equals IEEPA paid minus Section 122 owed for the same entry under the 15 percent rate.
Ready to calculate?
Get a real number for your shipment in under a minute.
Free, no card, full breakdown of duty, VAT, freight, and fees.
Related guides
Regulatory Explainers
Section 301 Brazil 2026: USTR Proposes 25 Percent on Brazilian Imports with 1,600 HTSUS Exemptions
On June 1 2026, USTR issued a Section 301 determination against Brazil and proposed a 25 percent additional tariff. The Annex carves out more than 1,600 HTSUS subheadings including beef, coffee, rare earths, aircraft parts. Here is the country tier, exemption categories, hearing schedule, and worked landed-cost examples for the lanes most exposed.
Regulatory Explainers
Section 232 Reduction June 2026: Agricultural, HVAC, and Mobile Industrial Equipment Cut from 50 to 15 Percent
Presidential Proclamation June 1 2026 reduced Section 232 tariffs on certain agricultural, HVAC, and mobile industrial equipment from 50 to 15 percent, effective June 8 2026 through December 31 2027. Here is the HS code coverage, country eligibility, USMCA mechanism, and worked landed-cost examples.
Regulatory Explainers
Section 301 Forced Labor Tariffs 2026: USTR Proposes 10 to 12.5 Percent on 60 Economies
On June 2 2026, USTR proposed Section 301 tariffs of 10 to 12.5 percent on imports from 60 economies as part of forced labor investigations. Here is the country tier list, the Annex A exemption categories, the hearing schedule, and how importers should plan.
Regulatory Explainers
Windsor Framework Duty 2026: Green Lane vs Red Lane for Northern Ireland
The Windsor Framework (in force October 2023, ICS2 phase from January 2026) governs the movement of goods from Great Britain to Northern Ireland. Green-lane goods move with simplified declarations and no duty. Red-lane goods face full EU customs procedures. Here is the lane categorization with worked examples.