IEEPA Tariff Refund Recovery
Texas is the largest U.S. state by total trade volume. If you imported goods through Houston, Laredo, or DFW during 2025–2026, your refund potential is substantial.
Texas leads all U.S. states in total international trade volume, driven by the Port of Houston (the largest U.S. port by tonnage), the Laredo land border crossing (the busiest U.S.-Mexico border crossing), and Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport. Texas importers across energy, manufacturing, chemicals, and consumer goods sectors paid significant IEEPA tariff duties during 2025–2026.
Petrochemicals, industrial equipment, steel products, and consumer goods. High-value entries with significant IEEPA duty exposure.
Manufacturing components and finished goods from Mexico crossing under DDP terms — complex importer-of-record scenarios requiring careful analysis.
High-value electronics, medical devices, and time-sensitive goods. Often highest per-unit duty values among Texas entry points.
Texas energy sector importers — equipment, specialized steel, precision instruments — faced IEEPA duties on components sourced from multiple affected origins. The intersect of Section 232 and IEEPA duties in the energy sector creates complex but recoverable claims that our TariffIQ™ platform handles with precision. Use our assessment tool to identify your specific recovery potential.
U.S. importers paid billions in IEEPA tariffs that a federal court has ordered refunded. Time-sensitive — act before CBP processing windows close.
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