Key Takeaways
- Airfreight-cost inflation flows directly into CBSA duty calculations when value-for-duty includes freight under the transaction-value method.
- Elevated rates compress the window between arrival and commercial invoice finalization, putting pressure on CAD filing timing and RPP bond sufficiency.
- Gulf carrier recovery is stabilizing capacity but not yet reversing rate premiums, so importers should budget duty on current freight quotes, not pre-disruption baselines.
- If your RPP bond was sized last year and you've shifted volume to air, verify monthly utilization against your K84 statements before you hit the ceiling mid-shipment.
Airfreight Costs Are Sticky, and That Flows Through to CBSA Duty Calculations
Global air cargo capacity is stabilizing after the Gulf carrier disruptions tied to US-Iran airspace volatility earlier this spring. Volumes are climbing back, routes are reopening, and fuel prices have dropped off their March peaks. But airfreight rates into Canada have not followed the same trajectory downward.
For Canadian importers filing Commercial Accounting Declarations under CBSA's CARM system, that matters more than it sounds. When you calculate value for duty using the transaction-value method under the Customs Act, the dutiable base includes the cost of goods, international transportation, and insurance to the place of direct shipment to Canada. Higher airfreight charges inflate that base, which in turn inflates the duty you owe, the GST calculated on top, and the financial security you need to post for release prior to payment.
We routinely see importers who switched volume from ocean to air in Q2 surprised when their monthly K84 statements from CBSA show bond utilization climbing faster than expected. The rate environment has changed, but many importers are still sizing their RPP bonds and duty accruals against pre-disruption freight baselines.
What Changed, and What Didn't
Gulf carriers that suspended or rerouted flights in March and April have restored most of their networks. Capacity as measured in available tonne-kilometers is back within a few percentage points of January 2024 levels, per recent Transport Canada trade data snapshots. Load factors are normalizing, and spot bookings are no longer commanding the premium surcharges we saw in late Q1.
But the rate floor has not dropped back. Spot rates from Asia-Pacific and Middle East origins into Toronto Pearson and Vancouver International remain 15 to 25 percent above the same weeks last year, and contract rates negotiated for the second half of 2024 are locking in those premiums. Fuel is cheaper, but carriers are holding pricing discipline after two quarters of volatile demand and constrained belly capacity on passenger routes that still have not fully recovered post-pandemic frequencies.
For customs purposes, this creates a mismatch. Importers who budgeted duty liability in January using last year's freight assumptions are now filing CADs with materially higher value-for-duty figures, and the delta flows straight into the duty and tax owed.
How Elevated Freight Costs Hit the CAD Filing Process
Under CBSA's CARM Client Portal workflow, you file a Commercial Accounting Declaration (CAD) for each commercial import, declaring HS classification, country of origin, applicable trade agreement (CUSMA, CETA, CPTPP), and value for duty. The value-for-duty calculation follows D-memorandum D13-3-1 guidance: for transaction value, you include the invoice price of the goods, plus freight and insurance to the first place of direct shipment in Canada.
If you ship by air, that freight component is now higher. A Shanghai-to-Toronto airfreight shipment that cost CAD 4.50 per kilogram last June might run CAD 5.60 per kilogram today. For a 2,000-kilogram shipment, that's an additional CAD 2,200 in the value-for-duty base. If the goods carry a 6.5 percent MFN duty rate and you are not claiming a preferential origin, that extra freight adds roughly CAD 143 in duty and another CAD 30 in GST calculated on the combined duty-paid value.
Multiply that across weekly airfreight volumes, and the cumulative impact on cash flow and bond utilization is real.
Release Prior to Payment and Bond Sizing Under Rate Pressure
Most mid-market importers use release prior to payment (RPP) with a continuous customs bond, allowing CBSA to release cargo before you remit duty and GST. You file the CAD within five business days of release, and you settle the account within the monthly billing cycle. CBSA posts your utilization and outstanding balance on your K84 statement each month, and you need to keep total exposure below your posted financial security ceiling.
If you shifted a portion of your ocean volume to air in Q2 to avoid Red Sea routing delays or to meet customer delivery windows, your monthly duty liability climbed even if your unit volumes stayed flat. Airfreight costs more per kilogram, so the value-for-duty base rises, and so does the amount CBSA holds against your bond until you pay down the period.
We have clients who posted CAD 100,000 continuous bonds last year and are now running close to the limit by mid-month because their freight-inclusive values are 20 percent higher than the assumptions used when they sized the bond. CBSA will not release additional shipments once you hit the bond ceiling, and your cargo sits at the carrier warehouse accruing storage until you either post additional security or pay down the open periods.
If your bond was sized before airfreight rates spiked, verify your current monthly utilization against your posted security. The math is straightforward: take your average weekly CAD filings, multiply by the all-in duty and GST per entry, and confirm you have at least four weeks of headroom before the monthly settlement clears. If you are running tight, talk to your surety or post a cash deposit to cover the gap.
CUSMA and CETA Preference Claims Do Not Erase the Freight Component
Importers sometimes assume that a CUSMA or CETA origin claim will offset the cost of higher airfreight by eliminating duty. That is only half true. A valid CUSMA certificate or CETA statement of origin zeros out the MFN duty rate, but the value-for-duty base still includes freight and insurance. You save the duty percentage, but the landed cost climbs with the freight rate.
For example, a CAD 50,000 shipment from Germany with CAD 6,000 in airfreight and a 6 percent MFN duty rate would owe CAD 3,360 in duty under MFN treatment. A valid CETA origin claim drops that to zero. But if airfreight rises to CAD 8,000, the value for duty rises to CAD 58,000, and while you still owe zero duty under CETA, your GST base is now higher by CAD 2,000, adding another CAD 100 in GST. The savings from the trade agreement are the same in percentage terms, but the absolute landed cost is higher because freight is higher.
CBSA verifies origin claims through post-release audits, and one common AMPS contravention is claiming preferential treatment without adequate documentary support. If you are relying on CUSMA or CETA to manage duty cost, make sure the origin certificates and importer certifications are on file in the CARM Client Portal before you file the CAD. A denied preference claim means you owe the full MFN duty retroactively, plus interest, and potentially an administrative monetary penalty if CBSA determines negligence.
Practical Steps When Rates Stay High
Update your duty accruals and landed-cost models. If you built your Q3 budget using January airfreight quotes, revise it using current spot or contract rates. The value-for-duty calculation is mechanical—higher freight means higher duty and GST, and your cash-flow forecast should reflect that.
Review your RPP bond sizing monthly. Pull your K84 statement from the CARM Client Portal at the start of each billing cycle. Compare your outstanding balance to your posted financial security, and confirm you have at least 25 percent headroom. If you are running close, increase your bond or shift some entries to payment-on-release until the bond is topped up.
Validate freight invoices before filing the CAD. You have 90 days from the date of accounting to correct a CAD if the final airfreight invoice comes in higher than the pro forma you used at release. But CBSA expects the declared value to reflect all costs reasonably determinable at the time of filing. If you routinely file on estimates and correct later, you risk triggering a compliance verification, and the pattern looks like systematic undervaluation even if every correction is voluntary.
Do not assume capacity recovery equals rate relief. Gulf carriers are flying again, but the rate environment is a function of demand, not just capacity. Until spot rates in the Asia-Pacific and Middle East lanes drop below contract floors, expect the premium to persist through the rest of 2024. Budget accordingly.
Our freight forwarding team works with importers who need granular freight-cost breakdowns for CBSA value-for-duty purposes, especially when consolidators or forwarders bundle charges that need to be split between dutiable international freight and non-dutiable domestic handling. If your air waybill or forwarder invoice lumps line items together, ask for an itemized breakdown before you file the CAD. CBSA will ask for it during a verification, and you want the split documented up front.
For importers managing both air and ocean inbound into Canada, FENGYE LOGISTICS handles the warehouse and drayage coordination once cargo clears CBSA, including cross-dock and short-term storage at our bonded and non-bonded facilities in Montreal and the GTA. Airfreight cargo often arrives outside standard dock hours, and having a receiving partner who can handle evening and weekend releases keeps your downstream fulfillment on schedule even when rates compress your lead time.
Watch the K84, Not Just the Rate Sheet
Airfreight-rate stability is good news for supply-chain planning, but it is not the same as airfreight-rate relief. For Canadian importers filing CADs under CARM, the cost structure today is the cost structure you owe duty on today. If your bond was sized last year and your freight cost per kilogram is up 20 percent, your monthly CBSA liability is up roughly the same proportion, and the bond ceiling you thought was comfortable is now tight.
We file hundreds of CADs every week, and the single most common mid-year surprise is bond headroom shrinking faster than expected because freight assumptions did not keep pace with rate reality. Review your K84 monthly, update your landed-cost models with current freight quotes, and make sure your surety or cash deposit covers the actual monthly duty cycle, not the forecast from six months ago.
If your CARM bond sizing or CAD value-for-duty workflow needs a second set of eyes, get in touch. We run the math on this all day.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does airfreight cost count toward Canadian customs duty?
Yes, when you use transaction value under CBSA's Customs Act Section 48, the value for duty includes cost of the goods, international transportation, and insurance to the place of direct shipment to Canada. Higher airfreight charges inflate the duty base unless the goods are duty-free or subject to a specific-rate tariff that ignores value.
What is a CARM Client Portal CAD filing?
The Commercial Accounting Declaration (CAD) replaced the B3 form under CBSA's CARM system rolled out in phases through 2024. Importers or brokers file the CAD electronically via the CARM Client Portal, declaring HS classification, origin, value for duty, and applicable trade agreement claims before release or within five business days for release-prior-to-payment shipments.
How much financial security do I need for release prior to payment on airfreight?
CBSA requires a continuous bond or surety for release prior to payment (RPP), with minimums typically starting at CAD 25,000 and scaling based on your monthly duty and GST liability. High airfreight rates push up the dutiable value, so if you shifted volume to air this quarter, review your K84 monthly statements to confirm you aren't approaching your bond ceiling.
Can I file the CAD before the final airfreight invoice arrives?
You can file a CAD using a pro forma or freight estimate, but CBSA expects the declared value for duty to reflect all costs reasonably determinable at the time of accounting. If the final air waybill invoice arrives higher, you have 90 days to file a correction via the CARM Client Portal to true up duty and avoid AMPS exposure during a verification.
What happens if my RPP bond runs out mid-month?
CBSA will suspend release prior to payment for new shipments until you post additional financial security or pay down open accounting periods. Your cargo sits at the carrier's warehouse accruing storage, and your broker cannot complete the CAD release transaction until the bond is restored or you switch to payment-on-release for those entries.
Do CUSMA or CETA origin claims lower duty enough to offset high airfreight costs?
CUSMA and CETA preferential origin eliminate or reduce MFN duty rates, but the value for duty still includes freight and insurance. A duty-free CUSMA claim saves the tariff percentage but does not erase the cost base. If your goods qualify for preference, the savings are the same regardless of mode—the higher airfreight simply means higher landed cost, not higher duty percentage.
Should I use PARS for air cargo into Canada?
PARS (Pre-Arrival Review System) is primarily used for highway and rail cargo, not air. Air cargo release typically flows through the cargo-control document process tied to the air waybill, with the CAD filed post-arrival for release prior to payment or at time of release. CBSA's eManifest rules differ by mode, so confirm with your freight forwarder or broker which release path applies.
How long does CBSA take to release an airfreight shipment after CAD filing?
Under normal conditions, CBSA processes CAD filings for release within hours if the entry is risk-assessed as low and all supporting documents are attached in the CARM Client Portal. Exam or OGD holds (CFIA, Health Canada) can extend the timeline by days. High airfreight rates do not change CBSA release timing, but they do compress the commercial urgency, making any delay more expensive.
Originally published at https://www.canflow-global.com/en/insights/high-airfreight-rates-into-canada-what-brokers-are-watching-on-duty-and-release-/.
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