Reminder: CBSA RPP Financial Security Requirements Due January 15

2026-02-15T14:21:26+00:00January 14th, 2026|International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance, U.S. Customs|

Importers in Canada’s Release Prior to Payment (RPP) program must meet updated financial security requirements by January 15. Ensure posted security matches recalculated amounts, review updates in the Client Compliance Portal, and address system notifications promptly. Pending adjustment requests will be considered before enforcement actions.

CBP Publishes 2026 Periodic Monthly Statement Due Dates for 2026

2026-02-15T14:21:36+00:00January 14th, 2026|International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance, U.S. Customs, U.S. Tariffs, United States Imports|

CBP has released the 2026 Periodic Monthly Statement (PMS) dates for ACE-approved filers. PMS allows importers to pay prior-month duties, taxes, and fees in a single statement. Both 11th and 15th workday payment options are provided each month, helping importers plan cash flow and ensure timely compliance with CBP requirements.

CBSA Publishes January 2026 Trade Compliance Verification Priorities

2026-02-15T14:21:45+00:00January 8th, 2026|Canada Customs, International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance|

CBSA released its 2026 trade compliance priorities, focusing on supply-managed goods, surtaxes, taxes, and trade agreement compliance. Using CARM and other tools, the agency targets suspected or known non-compliance while adjusting priorities based on risk, revenue exposure, and verification outcomes throughout the year.

Canada Releases List of Steel Derivative Products Subject to 25% Tariff (Updated)

2026-02-15T14:23:38+00:00January 5th, 2026|Canada Customs, Canada Imports, Canada Surtax, International Trade Issues, Risk Management, Trade Compliance|

Canada will impose a 25% surtax on steel derivative products starting December 26, 2025. The list includes structural components, wires, fencing, chains, fasteners, springs, furniture, lighting, and prefabricated buildings. The CBSA confirmed the surtax applies to all goods under these tariff codes, even without steel, with exemptions and remission considered case by case.

U.S. Extends Duty-Free Access for Israeli Agricultural Products Through 2026

2026-02-15T14:22:29+00:00January 2nd, 2026|International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance, U.S. Customs, U.S. Tariffs, United States Imports|

The U.S. extends duty-free access for Israeli agricultural products through December 31, 2026. Updated HTSUS Chapter 99 quotas and technical corrections ensure continued compliance under the U.S.–Israel Free Trade Area while permanent revisions to the 2004 agricultural agreement are implemented.

CBSA Extends Administrative Review for Chinese Mattresses (MAT 2025 UP2)

2025-12-26T07:01:28+00:00December 26th, 2025|Canada Customs, Canada Imports, International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance|

CBSA has extended its administrative review of certain Chinese mattresses under MAT 2025 UP2. The revised schedule updates deadlines for record closure, case arguments, and reply submissions. The review now concludes on February 24, 2026, affecting key exporters including Sinohome, Dormeo, and Sinomax.

Canada FOP Nutrition Labelling Mandatory for Most Prepackaged Foods From Jan. 1, 2026

2025-12-26T06:55:57+00:00December 26th, 2025|Canada Customs, Canada Imports, International Trade Issues, Trade Compliance|

Canada will require front-of-package nutrition symbols on most prepackaged foods high in saturated fat, sugars, or sodium starting January 1, 2026. The rules define nutrient thresholds, exemptions, and symbol presentation, helping manufacturers and importers ensure compliance and avoid border or in-market issues.

CBP Provides Unstacking Tariff Chart

2025-12-18T23:16:34+00:00December 18th, 2025|International Trade Issues, U.S. Customs|

CBP has released the Unstacking Certain Tariffs Chart to help importers identify which Presidential Proclamations and Executive Orders may apply to their products and whether multiple tariffs could “stack.” The chart is informational only, and importers must review the official legal authorities and exercise reasonable care in declaring applicable HTSUS classifications.

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