Customs Attorney Guide for US Importers in 2026
Your Supply Chain Has a Legal Layer Most Businesses Ignore
Most businesses that import goods into the United States have spent serious time and money optimizing their supply chains. They've negotiated freight rates. They've qualified suppliers. They've built relationships with customs brokers and freight forwarders who move goods efficiently.
What a surprisingly small number of them have done is apply the same rigor to the legal layer of their import operations.
Customs law in the United States is not a simple set of rules you follow by being honest and keeping good records. It's a complex regulatory framework administered by CBP, enforced with civil and criminal penalties, and shaped by trade agreements, executive orders, and agency guidance that changes regularly. Operating in this environment without qualified legal counsel isn't bold — it's a liability exposure most importers don't fully understand until it's already materialized.
The Importer's Blind Spots
Assuming your broker covers the legal risk
Customs brokers are licensed professionals who play an essential role in moving goods across the border. They're good at what they do. But their function is operational, not legal. When CBP challenges a classification decision, issues a penalty, or initiates a CF-28 or CF-29 request for information, a customs broker can help you understand what's happening — but they can't provide legal advice, file legal arguments, or represent you in proceedings. That's the attorney's role.
Underestimating the complexity of HTS classification
The Harmonized Tariff Schedule runs to thousands of pages. Classification decisions require applying the General Rules of Interpretation, CBP's administrative rulings, and in many cases, prior Court of International Trade decisions. Companies that self-classify without legal review — or rely entirely on brokers without checking their work — are taking on classification risk that can be significant, particularly for goods in categories subject to elevated duties or trade remedies.
Not knowing what "prior disclosure" means
This is one of the most consequential things a customs attorney can explain to you before a problem develops. If your company discovers a pattern of errors in your import filings — underpaid duties, systematic misclassification, valuation errors — you have the option of coming forward to CBP voluntarily through a prior disclosure. Done correctly, prior disclosure can dramatically reduce or eliminate penalty exposure. But the window to take advantage of it closes the moment CBP discovers the issue independently. Most importers who would benefit from this option don't know it exists until it's too late.
How a Customs Attorney Approaches Your Business
A good customs attorney doesn't just respond to problems. They analyze your import program with the same critical eye CBP would apply during an audit — and they do it first.
Tariff classification review
For product categories with complex classification histories or significant duty implications, a formal classification analysis provides a defensible legal position. If CBP ever challenges your classification, you have documented legal reasoning behind the decision rather than a broker's best guess.
First Sale valuation and transfer pricing
Importers who buy through intermediaries — trading companies, agents, related-party distributors — often have opportunities to declare customs value based on the first sale in the commercial chain rather than the invoice price paid to the seller. This can reduce duty liability meaningfully. But the requirements for qualifying are specific, and the documentation needs to be airtight. A customs attorney can assess whether first sale applies to your transactions and help you build the documentation record to support it.
Free Trade Agreement qualification
USMCA, KORUS, the US-Japan Trade Agreement, and a growing list of other FTAs offer preferential duty rates that can significantly reduce import costs — but only if your goods genuinely qualify under the applicable rules of origin. FTA qualification is more complex than it looks, particularly for manufactured goods with components sourced from multiple countries. Getting it wrong — claiming preferential treatment on goods that don't qualify — exposes you to CBP audit risk and potential penalties.
Forced Labor Compliance
The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act created a rebuttable presumption that goods with any connection to Xinjiang, China are made with forced labor and are therefore inadmissible to the United States. The evidentiary standard for rebutting this presumption is high, and CBP's enforcement has been active. For importers with supply chains that touch China at any level, working with a customs law firm experienced in forced labor compliance is increasingly a baseline business need, not a luxury.
What the Legal Process Looks Like When Problems Arise
When CBP initiates action, the process moves through specific stages, each with its own rules and deadlines.
CF-28 and CF-29 requests
A CF-28 (Request for Information) is CBP asking questions about a specific entry. A CF-29 (Notice of Action) is CBP telling you they're going to reliquidate an entry and collect additional duties. Both require careful, considered responses. What you say in response to a CF-28 can affect your exposure on a CF-29 — and what you say in response to a CF-29 can affect your exposure in any subsequent penalty proceeding.
Penalty proceedings
As noted under 19 U.S.C. § 1592, CBP can assess penalties for negligent, grossly negligent, or fraudulent violations of customs law. The mitigation process — your opportunity to reduce the penalty — is where legal representation pays for itself many times over. Customs lawyers who regularly handle CBP penalty proceedings know how to frame a mitigation petition in the terms CBP's fines, penalties, and forfeitures officers respond to.
Protests and CIT litigation
If you disagree with CBP's final classification or valuation decision after liquidation, the formal protest process under 19 U.S.C. § 1514 is the mechanism for challenging it. If the protest is denied, the Court of International Trade is available for judicial review. Both processes require legal expertise.
Building the Right Relationship with Legal Counsel
The companies with the smoothest customs compliance programs aren't the ones who've never had issues. They're the ones who've built a systematic approach to managing legal risk — with a customs attorney as part of the team, not just an emergency contact.
Start with an import compliance assessment. Understand where your program is strong and where it's exposed. Then build from there — with proper classification procedures, FTA qualification protocols, valuation documentation practices, and a clear plan for what happens when CBP comes knocking.
The time to establish that relationship is now — before a shipment gets held, before a penalty notice arrives, before the protest window runs. Reach out to a qualified customs attorney today and take the first step toward an import program that's genuinely defensible.
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