CUSMA is the most-claimed and least-defended trade agreement in Canada. Every importer wants the zero-rate preference. Almost none of them keep records that survive a CBSA verification.
How verification actually works
CBSA does not check CUSMA claims at the border. They check them later — sometimes two or three years after the entry — by sending a verification letter to the importer of record. You have 30 days to produce the supporting documentation that justifies every preference claim during the period under review.
If you cannot produce it, CBSA reassesses every entry at the MFN rate, charges interest from the original entry date, and applies a penalty under the Administrative Monetary Penalty System (AMPS). For a mid-market importer claiming preference on $5M of US-origin inputs at a typical 6.5% MFN rate, the bill arrives at roughly $325,000 — plus interest, plus AMPS.
The records you actually need
Most importers think the CUSMA Certification of Origin is the record. It is not. The certification is the claim. The records that defend the claim are upstream:
- Bill of materials showing where every component originated
- Supplier declarations confirming origin status of each input
- Production records proving the regional value content (RVC) calculation
- Transactional evidence that the goods shipped directly from a CUSMA party
For tariff shift rules, you need documentation that the non-originating inputs underwent the required tariff classification change. For RVC rules, you need actual costed BOMs at the time of production — not reconstructed years later. Building this discipline into your import program is core to our duty strategy and trade compliance work.
The five-record discipline
We give every CUSMA-claiming client a simple monthly discipline:
- Refresh supplier declarations annually, before the calendar year starts
- Lock the BOM version that supports each preference claim, by SKU
- Archive the certification alongside the entry, not in a separate folder
- Run a sample audit of 10 random entries every quarter
- Document the origin determination logic in writing — not in someone's head
The cost of this discipline is a few hours a month. The cost of skipping it is the AMPS penalty plus reassessment plus the legal fees to fight what is, by then, indefensible.
What to do if a verification letter arrives
If you are holding a CBSA verification letter right now, the first 72 hours matter most. Do not respond with a partial answer. Do not improvise records. Contact us — we have walked importers through the 30-day window dozens of times, and the difference between a clean defense and a six-figure reassessment is almost always in the first response.
Originally published at https://www.canflow-global.com/en/insights/cusma-origin-verification-trap/.
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