Summary
Who this is for: US importers and manufacturers who pay duties on imported goods and either re-export finished products, use imported components in manufacturing, or return rejected merchandise to suppliers. If any of those describe your business, there is a real chance you qualify for duty drawback refunds you are not currently claiming.
Key takeaways:
- Duty drawback is a federal program that refunds up to 99% of import duties paid on goods that are later exported or destroyed.
- It applies to four main scenarios: manufacturing drawback, unused merchandise drawback, rejected merchandise drawback, and substitution drawback.
- The program has existed since 1789. It is legal, established, and actively administered by CBP. This is not a gray area.
- Most qualifying importers never file because the documentation requirements are complex and the process is unfamiliar. The money stays with the government by default.
- Claims must be filed within 5 years of the original import date. Unclaimed drawback is not retroactively accessible after that window closes.
What’s inside:
- What duty drawback actually is and where the authority comes from
- The four types of drawback and which applies to your business
- How the numbers actually work (with real examples)
- Why most importers don’t claim it and what the barriers look like
- How to determine if you qualify and what to do next
Every year, US importers pay billions of dollars in customs duties on goods that are later exported, used in manufacturing exported products, or returned to overseas suppliers. And every year, most of that money stays with the federal government, not because the importers don’t qualify for a refund, but because they never file for one.
Duty drawback is a legitimate federal program that has been on the books since 1789. CBP administers it. The statute is 19 U.S.C. Section 1313. It is not a loophole or a gray area. It is money you paid that the government allows you to recover under specific circumstances, and for many importers, the annual recovery potential runs into six or seven figures.
The reason most of it goes unclaimed? The process is genuinely complex. And complexity has a way of looking like an obstacle when it’s really just a documentation exercise that requires the right expertise.
What Duty Drawback Is
Duty drawback is a CBP program that refunds up to 99% of import duties, taxes, and fees paid on goods that are subsequently exported from the United States or destroyed under CBP supervision. The underlying logic is that duties are meant to protect domestic commerce. If the imported goods leave the country and never enter US commerce, there’s no economic policy reason to keep the duties collected on them.
Congress has refined the program significantly over the years. The Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act (TFTEA) of 2016 substantially modernized drawback, expanded substitution rules, and simplified some of the filing requirements. Many companies that didn’t qualify under the old rules do qualify under TFTEA’s more flexible framework.
The 1% that isn’t refunded is a congressionally mandated floor. The maximum recovery is always 99 cents on every duty dollar.
The Four Main Types of Drawback
1. Manufacturing drawback
This is the most common and highest-value drawback scenario for importers. If you import components or raw materials and use them to manufacture a finished product that you then export, you can claim back 99% of the duties paid on those imported inputs.
Example: A trailer manufacturer imports steel tubing from overseas and pays 25% duty plus Section 301 tariff on the import. They use that steel in manufacturing trailers that are exported to Canada. Under manufacturing drawback, they can recover 99% of the duties paid on the steel that went into the exported trailers.
The matching requirement is the tricky part. You need to connect the imported inputs to specific exported finished goods. Post-TFTEA, substitution rules allow you to use domestic materials of the same kind and quality as imported materials and still claim drawback on the imported duties, which significantly expands who qualifies.
2. Unused merchandise drawback
If you import goods and export them from the United States in the same condition you imported them, without any manufacturing or processing, you can claim drawback on those duties. The merchandise must be exported within 5 years of import.
Example: You import 500 units of a product from Asia, sell 400 in the US market, and export the remaining 100 units to a Canadian distributor. You can file an unused merchandise drawback claim for 99% of the duties paid on those 100 exported units.
Substitution unused merchandise drawback extends this further: you don’t need to export the exact same units you imported, only commercially interchangeable merchandise within the same timeframe.
3. Rejected merchandise drawback
If goods you import fail to conform to the purchase order or are defective, and you return them to the foreign supplier or destroy them under CBP supervision, you can claim drawback on the duties paid. The rejection must be documented and the export or destruction must meet CBP requirements.
This one is underused because many companies don’t think to connect the quality rejection process to the customs refund process. They handle returns through their quality team and never tell their customs broker. That disconnect costs them real money.
4. Substitution manufacturing drawback
This is the provision that opens drawback to companies that don’t have a direct import-to-export chain for the same goods. Under substitution rules, if you use domestically sourced materials that are commercially interchangeable with imported materials in your manufacturing process, you can claim drawback on the imported duties even if those specific imported goods weren’t used in the exported product.
This is complicated in practice but can be enormously valuable for manufacturers who source both domestically and internationally and export finished goods. The TFTEA reforms in 2016 made substitution drawback meaningfully more accessible than it was previously.
How the Numbers Work
Drawback math is straightforward once you have the right data. Here’s a simplified example:
Scenario: You import $2,000,000 worth of components from China annually. Between regular duties averaging 5% and Section 301 tariffs at 25%, you’re paying approximately $600,000 in duties per year. You manufacture finished products using those components and export 40% of your finished goods to Canada and Mexico.
Your theoretical drawback recovery: 40% of $600,000 in duties times 99% refund rate = approximately $237,600 per year. That is a real number. That is money currently sitting unclaimed.
For larger importers with higher duty burdens or higher export percentages, the number grows proportionally. This is why some importers discover seven-figure annual recovery opportunities when they first go through a drawback analysis.
Why Most Importers Don’t Claim It
The program has been around for over 200 years and the awareness problem persists. A few reasons:
The documentation burden looks intimidating
Manufacturing drawback requires matching import entries to export records, maintaining bill of materials documentation, and filing detailed CBP claims. For a company that hasn’t done it before, the paper trail looks overwhelming. It’s not insurmountable, but it requires systematic recordkeeping and someone who knows what CBP needs to see.
It falls between departments
Import duties are paid by the logistics or customs team. Exports are handled by sales or operations. Manufacturing documentation lives in production. Drawback requires connecting all three, which often means the claim falls through the cracks because no single team owns it end to end.
The 5-year window creates false comfort
Importers know they have 5 years to file and don’t feel urgent about it. Then the 5-year window closes on a cohort of imports and that recovery opportunity disappears permanently. Procrastination is expensive in drawback. Every year you delay is a year of potential claims that eventually ages out.
No one told them they qualify
Most customs brokers process entries and move on. They don’t proactively analyze their clients’ supply chains for drawback eligibility. If your broker isn’t specifically offering drawback services, the analysis probably isn’t happening.
What the Analysis Process Looks Like
A drawback eligibility review starts with your import and export data. The key inputs:
- Import entry records for the past 5 years (what you imported, when, what duties you paid)
- Export records for the same period (what you exported, when, to where)
- Bill of materials for manufactured products, if applicable
- Your HTS classifications on both imports and exports
From that data, a licensed customs broker with drawback expertise can calculate your approximate recovery potential and determine which drawback type applies to your situation. Beyond Logix’s customs brokerage team conducts this analysis and handles the full claim filing process, documentation management, and CBP correspondence.
The analysis itself is not a major undertaking on your end. Most of the data exists in systems you already have. The expertise is in knowing how to structure the claim and what documentation CBP requires for approval.
The Integration Advantage
Companies that work with an integrated freight forwarder and customs broker have a structural advantage in drawback. Because Beyond Logix manages both the import side (ocean freight and customs clearance) and has visibility into client supply chains, we already have much of the import documentation drawback requires. For clients who also use our freight services for exports, we have the export records too. That data integration dramatically simplifies the drawback filing process and improves claim accuracy.
For clients working with separate vendors for freight and customs, the first step is consolidating that data. It’s doable but adds a step.
What to Do If You Think You Qualify
Start with a simple yes or no on each of these:
- Do you import goods from outside the US and pay customs duties on them?
- Do you manufacture goods using imported components and export any of those finished goods?
- Do you import goods and re-export any of them in the same condition?
- Do you ever reject imported goods for quality reasons and return them to your supplier?
If you answered yes to any of those questions, there is a reasonable chance you have unclaimed drawback. The specific recovery amount depends on your duty burden, export volumes, and how well your documentation supports the claims.
The right next step is a drawback analysis with a licensed customs broker who specializes in the program. Contact the Beyond Logix team to start that conversation. We’ll look at your import and export history and give you a straightforward assessment of your recovery potential before you commit to anything.
Frequently Asked Questions About Duty Drawback
What is duty drawback in simple terms?
Duty drawback is a US government program that refunds up to 99% of import duties paid on goods that are later exported from the United States or used in manufacturing exported products. It’s been part of US trade law since 1789 and is administered by US Customs and Border Protection.
Who qualifies for duty drawback?
US importers who export goods, manufacturers who use imported components in products they export, companies that return rejected imported merchandise to overseas suppliers, and companies that export commercially interchangeable merchandise under substitution rules. Qualifying depends on the specific type of drawback and your documentation.
How much can I recover through duty drawback?
Up to 99% of the import duties, taxes, and fees paid on qualifying goods. The 1% floor is mandated by statute. The dollar amount depends on how much duty you’ve paid and what percentage of your imported goods eventually gets exported or qualifies under another drawback type.
How long do I have to file a duty drawback claim?
Five years from the date of import. Once that window closes on a specific import entry, the drawback opportunity for that entry is permanently gone. This is why delaying a drawback program startup is expensive: every year you wait, a cohort of potentially recoverable duties ages out of eligibility.
What is manufacturing drawback?
Manufacturing drawback applies when you import components or raw materials, use them to manufacture a finished product, and export that finished product. You can recover 99% of the duties paid on the imported inputs that went into the exported goods. It’s the most common and typically highest-value drawback type for manufacturers and importers.
What is substitution drawback?
Substitution drawback allows you to claim drawback based on imported duties even when the exported goods used domestically sourced materials instead of the actual imported goods, as long as the materials are commercially interchangeable. Post-TFTEA, the substitution rules are more flexible than they were historically, opening drawback eligibility to a wider range of manufacturers.
What documentation do I need for a duty drawback claim?
The core requirements are import entry records (proof of duty payment), export records (proof the goods left the US), and for manufacturing drawback, bill of materials documentation connecting imports to manufactured exports. CBP has specific formatting and verification requirements. A licensed customs broker manages the documentation assembly and ensures the claim meets CBP standards.
Can I file duty drawback myself?
Technically yes, but it’s uncommon for companies to do so successfully without drawback expertise. The documentation requirements are detailed, the matching rules are specific, and errors in claim preparation cause rejections or delays. Most companies that attempt drawback without professional help abandon the effort. A licensed customs broker with drawback experience handles the full process on your behalf.
Do Section 301 tariffs qualify for duty drawback?
Yes. Section 301 tariffs paid on Chinese-origin goods are duties, and they qualify for drawback under the same rules as standard MFN duties. Given that Section 301 rates are 7.5% to 25% on top of regular duty rates, the drawback recovery potential for companies importing from China and exporting finished goods is significant.
How does Beyond Logix help with duty drawback?
Beyond Logix’s licensed customs brokers analyze your import and export history to identify drawback eligibility, calculate your recovery potential, handle the full CBP filing process, manage documentation, and respond to CBP inquiries. Because we also manage freight for many of our clients, we often already have the import and export records drawback requires. Learn more about our duty drawback services.

