An importer files an Importer Security Filing two days late on a container of furniture. Nothing is lost, nothing is smuggled, no duty goes unpaid. Weeks later a notice arrives demanding thousands of dollars in liquidated damages. The importer’s first reaction is almost always the same: damages for what? Nobody was harmed.
That reaction misunderstands what a customs bond is. CBP is not claiming it suffered a loss. It is enforcing a contract you signed — a promise, backed by a surety, to do certain things. Liquidated damages are the pre-agreed price of breaking that promise, set in advance precisely so no one has to prove actual harm. Understanding the bond is therefore the only way to understand the bill.
A Bond Is a Three-Party Contract, Not Insurance
The single most common misconception is that a customs bond protects the importer. It does not. It protects the government. The bond exists so that CBP has a guaranteed source of payment for duties, taxes, and penalties even if the importer cannot or will not pay.
The Importer
Promises to obey CBP’s rules and pay what is owed. Ultimately liable for everything, including reimbursing the surety.
The Bond Company
Guarantees payment to CBP if the importer does not pay. Has an indemnity agreement letting it recover from the importer.
CBP
The beneficiary. Collects from the importer first, and from the surety if the importer defaults.
Follow the money in a default and the structure becomes obvious. CBP demands payment from the importer. The importer cannot pay. CBP collects from the surety. The surety, under the indemnity agreement the importer signed to obtain the bond in the first place, sues the importer. The debt has not evaporated; it has simply changed hands, and the importer now has a hostile creditor and a damaged bonding relationship. Sureties that pay claims routinely demand collateral or decline to renew, which can end an importer’s ability to bring goods into the country at all.
Two Types, and How the Amount Is Set
| Single Transaction Bond | Continuous Bond | |
|---|---|---|
| Covers | One specific entry | All entries at all ports for one year, renewing automatically |
| Typical user | Occasional or first-time importer | Regular commercial importer |
| Amount | Generally the value of the merchandise plus duties, taxes, and fees; higher multiples apply where other agency requirements or restricted goods are involved | Generally 10% of the duties, taxes, and fees paid over the previous twelve months, subject to a statutory minimum |
| Economics | Cheap once, expensive if repeated | Almost always cheaper past a handful of entries per year |
The continuous bond’s 10% formula has a consequence importers rarely anticipate: the bond is sized by last year’s duty. When tariffs rise sharply or import volume grows, the duties you owe this year can outrun a bond calculated on last year’s figures. CBP then declares the bond insufficient, and entries can be held until a larger bond is in place — a cash-flow event that arrives with no warning and no grace. Importers who have grown quickly, or who moved into goods subject to Section 301 or Section 232 tariffs, should review bond sufficiency proactively rather than waiting for the notice.
The Conditions You Can Breach
The basic importation and entry bond contains a defined set of promises. Each is a distinct condition, and each has its own breach and its own consequence. This table is the practical core of the subject.
| The promise | How it gets broken | What CBP claims |
|---|---|---|
| Pay duties, taxes, and fees when due | Non-payment after liquidation; a supplemental duty bill goes unpaid | The duty owed, plus liquidated damages up to the bond amount |
| Make or complete entry properly | Failure to file entry summary timely; incomplete entry data | Liquidated damages, commonly measured against the merchandise value |
| Redeliver merchandise on demand | Goods already sold or distributed when CBP issues a redelivery notice, often for marking or admissibility | Liquidated damages, frequently up to three times the merchandise value for restricted goods |
| File complete and timely ISF (10+2) | Late, missing, or materially inaccurate ISF on ocean cargo | A fixed liquidated damages amount per violation, subject to a per-shipment cap |
| Mark goods with country of origin | Unmarked or improperly marked merchandise released into commerce | Marking duties and, where redelivery is demanded and not made, liquidated damages |
| Produce records on demand | Records unavailable or not maintained for the required period | Separate recordkeeping penalties under 19 U.S.C. 1509 |
Notice that not one of these breaches requires bad intent, and none requires that CBP lose money. A late filing by a diligent importer breaches the bond exactly as a late filing by a careless one. This is the defining feature of liquidated damages and the reason they feel so disproportionate: they are contractual, not punitive, and the amount was fixed before anyone knew what would go wrong.
Penalties and Liquidated Damages Are Not the Same Thing
| Liquidated Damages | Penalty (19 U.S.C. 1592) | |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis | Breach of a bond condition — contract | Violation of statute — false statement or omission |
| Intent required | None. Strict, by design | Yes — negligence, gross negligence, or fraud |
| Amount driven by | The bond and the applicable schedule | Culpability tier and the revenue loss or merchandise value |
| Who is liable | Principal and surety | The person who entered the merchandise |
| How to respond | Petition for relief within the window on the notice | Respond to the pre-penalty notice; contest culpability |
The distinction is not academic. Arguing about intent in a liquidated damages case wastes the one thing you have — the petition window — on a point that is legally irrelevant. The winning arguments in liquidated damages are different: that the breach did not occur, that it was outside your control, that it was a first offense, that you self-corrected, or that the amount claimed exceeds what the schedule contemplates. Our page on responding to a notice of liquidated damages covers the petition itself; if you are instead facing a culpability-based claim, see fraud and negligence penalties.
ISF: The Most Common Path to a Bond Claim
For ocean importers, the Importer Security Filing is where bond claims are actually generated. The data must reach CBP before the cargo is laden aboard the vessel at the foreign port — a deadline that sits upstream of everything the importer normally controls, in the hands of suppliers and forwarders on the other side of the world. Late filings, missing data elements, and inaccurate filings each generate a liquidated damages claim, assessed per violation with a cap per shipment.
One shipment can generate several violations
Because ISF liquidated damages are assessed per violation rather than per shipment, a single container can produce a late filing violation and an inaccurate filing violation. A per-shipment cap limits the total, but importers routinely receive claims well above what they expected from “one late filing.”
The good news: ISF claims are among the most reliably mitigated. First offenses, prompt correction, and a demonstrated compliance record all carry weight, and CBP’s mitigation guidelines contemplate substantial reductions. Our page on ISF penalty mitigation covers the arguments that work.
The structural lesson of ISF is that bond compliance often depends on parties you do not employ. The importer of record signs the bond; a forwarder in Shenzhen determines whether the filing is timely. Building the lading deadline into supplier agreements — and monitoring rather than assuming compliance — is the only durable fix.
What Happens After the Notice, and What to Do
A notice of liquidated damages is a demand with a deadline, and the deadline printed on your notice controls. Within that window you may petition for relief, explaining why the claim should be cancelled or the amount reduced. CBP’s Fines, Penalties & Forfeitures office decides. If the first petition is denied or the relief is inadequate, a supplemental petition is often available, and beyond that an offer in compromise may be considered — see offers in compromise.
Silence converts a negotiable claim into a fixed debt
Liquidated damages are frequently and substantially reduced — but only for importers who petition in time. Let the window lapse and the full claimed amount can become due and payable, collectible from you and, failing that, from your surety, who will then pursue you under the indemnity agreement.
An unresolved claim can also trigger sanctions on future entries and put your bond renewal at risk. Ignoring the notice is the single most expensive response available.
The practical arguments that move these cases are unglamorous and specific: documentation that the breach did not occur as CBP describes it; evidence the cause lay outside your control; a clean prior record; prompt self-correction; and, where relevant, the disproportion between the claim and the conduct. Building that record takes days, not weeks, which is why the petition window is tighter than it looks. If a notice has arrived, or if a bond insufficiency is looming, a customs and international trade lawyer can assess the claim, the schedule it was drawn from, and the mitigation arguments actually available to you.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a penalty and liquidated damages?
A penalty is assessed for violating a statute, such as making a false statement on an entry, and its size depends on your culpability. Liquidated damages are a pre-set contractual amount claimed for breaching a condition of your customs bond, and no intent or government loss is required. Both can be contested and reduced, but the arguments are entirely different.
Can liquidated damages be reduced?
Frequently, yes. A timely petition for relief can lower the amount substantially, particularly for a first offense, a breach outside the importer’s control, or an honest operational error that was promptly corrected. Missing the deadline on the notice, however, can leave the full claimed amount due.
Does my customs bond protect me?
No. The bond protects CBP by guaranteeing payment. If the surety pays a claim on your behalf, it will seek reimbursement from you under the indemnity agreement you signed. A bond is a guarantee to the government, not insurance for the importer.
Why did CBP say my continuous bond is insufficient?
Continuous bond amounts are generally based on the duties, taxes, and fees you paid over the prior twelve months. If your import volume grows or tariff rates rise, your current duty liability can outgrow a bond sized on last year’s figures, and CBP will require a larger bond before releasing further entries.
Got a liquidated damages claim?
These are often reducible — but only if you petition within the window on the notice. Send it over and a customs attorney will assess the claim, the deadline, and the mitigation arguments available.