Key Takeaways
- Expect CBSA to mirror US enforcement intensity through stepped-up verification requests and tighter CARM documentation audits over the next six months.
- Importers with cross-border programs should reconcile their US and Canadian HS classifications now before dual-jurisdiction examinations surface discrepancies.
- AMPS penalty margins have quietly climbed; even minor CAD filing errors can trigger CAD 1,000–3,500 contraventions under current Master Penalty Document schedules.
- If your RPP bond and CARM Client Portal access are held by a single NRI entity serving both countries, split governance before one jurisdiction's penalty cascades north.
Why a US Enforcement Order Matters North of the Border
The White House executive order Strengthening Customs Enforcement gave the Department of Homeland Security 180 days to revise importer eligibility regulations and raise penalty schedules. For Canadian importers and brokers, the order itself is a US domestic matter. The enforcement coordination that follows is not.
CBSA and US Customs and Border Protection share advance cargo data, entity screening lists, and priority-sector targeting through the Beyond the Border Action Plan and the Preclearance Agreement. When Washington signals a crackdown, Ottawa's enforcement priorities shift within months. We saw this pattern in 2018 with steel and aluminum tariffs, again in 2020 with personal protective equipment audits, and most recently in 2024 when CBSA verification activity spiked in parallel with US Section 301 enforcement sweeps.
If you run a cross-border import program or share an importer-of-record structure between the US and Canada, the next six months are the time to reconcile your compliance documentation and audit your CAD filing accuracy.
What Changed in the US and What CBSA Will Watch
The executive order targets three areas: importer eligibility (who may file entries and hold continuous bonds), penalty structures (higher fines for misclassification, valuation errors, and origin fraud), and broker accountability (shared liability for client errors).
CBSA already enforces similar rules through the CARM framework, the Administrative Monetary Penalty System (AMPS), and Section 32.2 of the Customs Act, which holds brokers jointly liable for knowing participation in contraventions. The US order does not create new Canadian law, but it does create operational pressure. When CBSA sees increased US enforcement activity in a sector, verification requests for Canadian imports in the same HS 6-digit codes usually follow within 60 to 90 days.
Sectors we expect to see heightened CBSA verification requests in Q2 and Q3 2025:
- Apparel and textiles — particularly goods claiming CUSMA or CETA origin with cut-and-sew operations spanning multiple countries.
- Electronics and consumer goods — Section 301 Lists 1–4 overlap with Canadian tariff lines, and declared values often diverge between ACE and CARM filings.
- Steel and aluminum products — perennial SIMA targets, and any US penalty for country-of-origin misstatement will trigger parallel CBSA scrutiny.
AMPS Penalties Are Already Climbing
Canadian importers sometimes assume AMPS is a slap-on-the-wrist system. It was never designed that way, and penalty margins have quietly increased over the past two years. Per CBSA's Master Penalty Document, a Level 1 contravention for incorrect HS classification starts at CAD 1,000 for a first offense with no prior history. Gross negligence or repeat contraventions can climb to CAD 25,000 or higher, plus interest on any unpaid duties.
If your Commercial Accounting Declaration filing process relies on importer-provided HS codes without independent broker review, that exposure sits in every shipment. Voluntary corrections filed through the CARM Client Portal within 90 days of release face reduced or waived penalties. Waiting for CBSA to catch the error guarantees the full AMPS assessment, duty interest calculated from the release date, and a contravention on your compliance record.
We routinely see importers discover HS misclassifications during their first CBSA verification. By that point, the importer has already released dozens or hundreds of entries under the wrong code, and CBSA will assess penalties retroactively for the entire period. The math is straightforward: a CAD 1,500 AMPS penalty per entry, times fifty entries, plus four years of compounded duty interest.
Cross-Border Importer-of-Record Structures Carry Dual Risk
Many mid-market importers use a single US-based non-resident importer (NRI) entity to file entries in both countries, particularly for e-commerce or drop-ship models. That structure works until one jurisdiction flags the entity for a penalty or bond suspension.
If your US importer of record is penalized for misclassification or valuation discrepancies, CBSA will cross-check your Canadian filings for the same goods. The two agencies share corporate family trees, consignee names, and advance cargo manifests through PARS (Pre-Arrival Review System) and ACE integration. If declared values, HS codes, or CUSMA origin claims diverge between the two countries, CBSA treats that inconsistency as an audit red flag.
The cleanest fix: separate your Canadian and US importer-of-record entities, maintain independent CARM Client Portal registrations, and post separate RPP bonds for each jurisdiction. Release prior to payment eligibility requires minimum financial security of CAD 25,000 in Canada, and that bond should never be commingled with US continuous bond coverage. If one country suspends your bond, you want the other to remain operational.
What to Review This Quarter
If you haven't reconciled your US and Canadian import programs in the past twelve months, start with these three items:
HS classification alignment — Pull a sample of twenty SKUs that you import into both countries and compare the declared HS codes on your US 7501 entries and your Canadian CADs. Any discrepancies need a documented technical justification or a voluntary correction filing. Use CBSA's online HS classification tool if you need a second opinion.
CUSMA and CETA origin certificates — If you're claiming preferential duty treatment, confirm that your certificates of origin, supplier affidavits, and production records support the claim in both jurisdictions. CBSA origin verifications now request the same bill-of-materials detail that US Customs demands, and vague "manufactured in Mexico" statements no longer pass.
Declared value consistency — Compare your declared customs values on both sides of the border. If your US declared value includes royalties, assists, or commissions that your Canadian CAD omits (or vice versa), CBSA will ask why. Valuation disputes are the second-most-common trigger for AMPS penalties after HS misclassification.
For importers who also operate bonded or sufferance warehouses in Canada, remember that your inbound freight coordination and your customs filing are separate compliance events. A container released prior to payment under your RPP bond still requires a compliant CAD within five business days of release, even if the goods sit in your warehouse for weeks before distribution.
Broker Liability Is Not New, But Enforcement Is Tightening
The US executive order emphasizes broker accountability for client-supplied data. Canadian brokers have carried that liability since 2001 under Section 32.2 of the Customs Act, which imposes joint and several liability when a broker "knew or ought to have known" that information on a CAD was false.
In practice, CBSA rarely pursued brokers unless fraud was obvious. That is changing. We've seen three cases in the past eighteen months where CBSA assessed AMPS penalties jointly against both the importer and the broker for HS misclassifications that the agency deemed "should have been caught during reasonable due diligence."
If you work with a customs broker, expect your broker to ask more questions about product composition, country of manufacture, and sale terms. Those questions are not bureaucratic friction. They are the documented due diligence that keeps both parties out of an AMPS proceeding.
What We're Telling Clients
The US enforcement order is a US policy document. The compliance pressure it generates is cross-border. CBSA verification requests are already up year-over-year, AMPS penalty assessments are climbing, and the window to file voluntary corrections before an audit is short.
If your import program spans both countries, treat the next 90 days as your compliance reconciliation window. Pull your CAD filing history, compare it to your US entry summary data, and fix any HS or valuation discrepancies now. The cost of a voluntary correction is a fraction of the cost of an AMPS penalty assessed after CBSA discovers the same error during a verification.
We run these reconciliation audits weekly for clients with cross-border supply chains. If your CAD filing accuracy is uncertain or your RPP bond structure is shared across jurisdictions, get in touch.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will CBSA increase audit activity after the US Customs crackdown?
Yes. CBSA and US Customs share intelligence through the Beyond the Border Action Plan framework, and enforcement priorities tend to move in parallel. We've already seen verification request volumes climb 18% year-over-year in Q1 2025 across our client base, concentrated in apparel, electronics, and steel imports subject to SIMA measures.
What is the penalty range for incorrect HS classification under AMPS?
Per CBSA's Master Penalty Document, Level 1 contraventions (first offense, no prior history) for misclassification start at CAD 1,000 for negligence and climb to CAD 25,000 for gross negligence. Repeat contraventions or deliberate misstatement can reach six figures depending on duty loss.
Do I need separate customs brokers for US and Canadian imports?
Not necessarily, but your broker should hold a CCS license in Canada and a US broker license if filing in both jurisdictions. Many mid-market importers use a single North American broker but maintain separate CARM Client Portal registrations and RPP bonds to firewall liability and audit trails between countries.
How long does CBSA retain the right to verify and re-assess a CAD?
Under the Customs Act Section 59, CBSA can re-determine origin, valuation, or classification within four years of the release date. For SIMA goods or suspected fraud, that window extends indefinitely. Keep your commercial invoices, certificates of origin, and technical specifications archived for at least four years.
What happens if my US importer of record is flagged for penalties?
If you're using a non-resident importer (NRI) structure or a US entity as consignee on Canadian shipments, a US penalty or bond suspension can trigger CBSA scrutiny of your Canadian filings. CBSA routinely cross-checks Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) and CARM data for the same corporate family, especially on CUSMA preference claims and declared values.
Should I re-classify goods proactively before an audit?
Yes, if you have any doubt about current HS 6-digit assignments. Voluntary corrections filed through the CARM Client Portal within 90 days of release face reduced or waived AMPS penalties. Waiting for CBSA to discover the error guarantees the full penalty assessment and potential interest on unpaid duties.
Originally published at https://www.canflow-global.com/en/insights/us-customs-crackdown-and-what-it-means-for-canadian-import-programs/.
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