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23 Feb 2026
CBP to halt collections of IEEPA tariffs after Supreme Court ruling

Washington, United States. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it will halt collections of tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act at 12:01 a.m. EST on Tuesday, more than three days after the U.S. Supreme Court declared the duties illegal.


Tariff code changes and timing

CBP said in a message to shippers on its Cargo Systems Messaging Service that it will de-activate all tariff codes associated with President Donald Trump’s prior IEEPA-related orders as of Tuesday. The collection halt coincides with Trump’s imposition of a new 15% global tariff under a different legal authority to replace the ones struck down by the Supreme Court on Friday.

Refund questions and agency guidance

CBP gave no reason why it was continuing to collect the tariffs at ports of entry days after the Supreme Court’s ruling, and its message offered no information about possible refunds for importers. “CBP will provide additional guidance to the trade community through CSMS messages as appropriate,” the agency said.

Other tariffs unaffected

The message noted that the collection halt does not affect any other tariffs imposed by Trump, including those under the Section 232 national security statute and the Section 301 unfair trade practices statute.

Revenue estimates and potential refunds

Reuters reported on Friday that the Supreme Court decision made more than $175 billion in U.S. Treasury revenue generated by the IEEPA tariffs subject to potential refunds, based on an estimate by Penn-Wharton Budget Model economists. Their estimate from a ground-up forecasting model showed that IEEPA-based tariffs were generating more than $500 million per day in gross revenue.


How could the CBP tariff collection halt affect your imports or shipping plans?

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