Each topic page explains one import-compliance question, links to the public tools that surface the primary records, and shows how recurring work moves into review.
Section 301 monitoring links USTR notices, exclusion windows, HTS scope, China-origin exposure, and comment deadlines into one importer review path.
AD/CVD monitoring connects Commerce determinations, USITC injury decisions, exporter rates, sunset windows, subject merchandise, and country scope.
USTR hearing tracking connects notices, comment windows, testimony dates, authorities, product terms, countries, and tariff review signals before they become downstream work.
HTS monitoring uses tariff lines, origin countries, product descriptions, rulings, exclusions, and policy signals as trade file context for recurring import review.
CBP CROSS ruling monitoring and search connects classification language, origin analysis, product descriptions, HTS candidates, and compliance review terms.
Monitor China-origin tariff exposure across Section 301, AD/CVD, exclusions, HTS lines, and source-backed records.
Check U.S. import duty context by HTS code, origin, entered value, duty layers, CBP fees, exclusions, and remedy flags.
Use HTS tariff lookup as the starting point for duty checks, product monitoring, classification review, and policy exposure.
Track Federal Register trade notices that can affect tariff exposure, remedy cases, hearings, comment windows, and compliance timing.
Follow USITC injury decisions, investigations, votes, companion Commerce cases, and source-linked procedural records.
Turn public trade source records into source-backed Paid monitoring for HTS lines, origins, authorities, cases, and recurring review questions.
Monitor customs rulings, tariff changes, source records, and operational signals that affect classification, origin, duty, and documentation review.
Monitor tariff exclusion windows, status changes, HTS coverage, and related notices for products under recurring review.
Track tariff rate changes, effective dates, notices, proclamations, and source records that can affect landed-cost review.
Monitor import risk across tariff rates, trade remedies, rulings, hearings, notices, and saved product-origin scope.
Track tariff and trade source records that can affect sourcing decisions, product scope, origin strategy, and supplier review.
Track liquidation status, protest windows, reliquidation posture, and refund timing before an entry-timing issue becomes review work.
Section 232 review ties Commerce national-security actions, steel and aluminum scope, derivative inclusions, and country exemptions to one importer review path.
Section 337 review ties USITC investigations, limited and general exclusion orders, and CBP enforcement to the products and HTS lines an importer brings in.
UFLPA review ties CBP detentions, the Entity List, the rebuttable presumption, and forced-labor enforcement to the supply chains and products an importer sources.
USMCA review ties rules of origin, regional value content, the scheduled joint review, and CBP verification to the products an importer claims preference on.
Section 201 review ties USITC safeguard investigations, proclamations, tariff-rate quotas, and product exclusions to the goods an importer brings in under a safeguard.
The Supreme Court ended IEEPA tariffs, so the reciprocal and trafficking duties stopped and the open question is refunds. Track terminated entries, reliquidation, and replacements.
Section 122 lets the President set a surcharge up to 15 percent for 150 days. The current 10 percent rate expires July 24, 2026 and is under appeal, so duty turns on a deadline.
Duty drawback refunds most duties and fees on imported goods later exported or destroyed. Track eligibility, substitution rules, time limits, and supporting records.
HTSUS Chapter 98 gives duty relief for US goods returned, goods assembled abroad from US parts, and repairs. Track the heading, the US-content evidence, and the documentation.
A foreign trade zone can defer, reduce, or eliminate duty depending on status election and how goods exit. Track admissions, privileged status, and measures that apply on entry.
The first sale rule can assess duty on the earlier sale in a multi-tier transaction, not what the importer pays. Track eligibility, the document chain, and affected duty layers.