Tariff Refund for Retailers: Can You Get Money Back If You Weren’t the Importer?
When the Supreme Court invalidated the IEEPA tariffs, the news focused on the billions of dollars the government collected from importers. But for every dollar paid directly to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) by an importer, another dollar was passed down the supply chain to wholesalers, distributors, and ultimately, small retail businesses.
If you own a retail store or distribution business, you likely paid inflated prices for your inventory because of these tariffs. But because you were not the official Importer of Record (IOR), you cannot file a claim directly with CBP. Does that mean you have to absorb the cost while your suppliers get a windfall refund? Not necessarily.
The Difference Between Direct Importers and Downstream Buyers
To understand your options, you first have to understand the legal relationship between the government and the supply chain.
When goods enter the United States, the entity listed as the Importer of Record pays the tariff directly to CBP. In the eyes of the government, the IOR is the only party that suffered the direct financial injury of the unlawful tax. Therefore, CBP will only issue refunds to the IOR.
As a downstream buyer (a retailer or distributor), your relationship is not with the government—it is with your supplier. If your supplier passed the tariff costs on to you, your path to recovering that money lies in contract law and commercial agreements, not customs law.
How Retailers Can Recover Tariff Costs
If your supplier receives a massive refund from CBP for tariffs they forced you to pay, they may be legally obligated to share that refund with you. The strength of your claim depends on how the price increases were documented and the specific terms of your supply agreements.
Here are the most common ways downstream buyers can pursue recovery:
- Itemized Tariff Surcharges: Did your supplier add a specific line item on your invoices labeled “Tariff Surcharge” or “Section 301/IEEPA Fee”? This is the strongest evidence you have. It clearly documents that the price increase was a direct pass-through of the tariff cost, and if that tariff is refunded, the surcharge should logically be returned.
- Written Notices of Price Increases: Did your supplier send you a letter or email explicitly stating that prices were going up specifically because of the new tariffs? This written documentation establishes a causal link between the government tax and your higher costs.
- Cost-Plus Pricing Contracts: If your supply agreement is structured so that you pay the supplier’s actual costs plus a set markup, and those costs included the tariffs, a refund retroactively reduces their cost basis. Under a cost-plus model, they owe you an adjustment.
- Duty Drawback Sharing Clauses: Some sophisticated supply contracts include clauses that explicitly require the supplier to share any customs refunds, drawbacks, or remissions with the buyer. If you have one of these, your path is clear.
The Importance of Acting Now
Your supplier is not going to proactively write you a check. They are currently focused on filing their own claims with CBP. If you want to recover your share of the tariff costs, you need to review your purchasing history and supply contracts now.
Identify the suppliers who passed the costs on to you, gather your invoices and correspondence, and consult with legal counsel to determine the strength of your claim. The Dayes Law Firm tariff refund attorneys can help you evaluate your commercial agreements and pursue recovery from suppliers who benefited from the IEEPA refunds at your expense.
Call us today at (866) 609-9774 to discuss your options as a downstream buyer.