TariffsGPT
Supreme Court ruling · Feb 20, 2026

You may be owed a refund on the tariffs you paid in 2025.

In Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump, the Supreme Court invalidated the IEEPA tariffs — and the Court of International Trade ordered $165 billion in refunds. TariffsGPT shows you what your business may be owed before you ever pick up the phone.

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$166B+Duties collectedunder IEEPA, 2025–26
330,000+Importers affectednationwide
53M+Entriespotentially correctable
$165BOrdered in refundsCourt of Int'l Trade

What makes us different

Everyone else makes you schedule a call to find out anything.

We show you a number on the spot — grounded in the official U.S. tariff schedule, not a sales pitch. Run the estimator, ask the assistant about any 9903 code, and see where your business stands before a single conversation.

Manufacturing

Components & raw inputs

Apparel & Retail

Finished consumer goods

Consumer Electronics

HTS Chapter 85

Automotive

Parts & assemblies

How recovery works

Three steps, no upfront cost.

01

See your exposure

Answer a few questions and get a working estimate of the IEEPA duties you may be owed — on screen, before you talk to anyone.

02

We verify the record

A licensed customs broker reviews your CBP entry summaries (Form 7501) and identifies the refundable IEEPA line items.

03

Recover what's yours

A Post Summary Correction is filed against your unliquidated entries. You only engage if there's money to recover.

Questions

What importers ask first.

Additional ad valorem duties imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act between roughly February 2025 and February 2026. On Feb 20, 2026, the Supreme Court ruled in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump that these particular tariffs exceeded the law's authority.

Yes. The decision invalidated the IEEPA tariffs, and the same-day Executive Order 14389 ended their collection going forward. The Court of International Trade ordered refunds of approximately $165 billion.

It depends on what you imported, from where, and when. Our estimator gives you a working range in about 90 seconds; the precise figure comes from your actual entry records. We never promise an outcome — only a licensed review can confirm it.

Generally no. Only the IEEPA overlays were struck down. Section 301 and 232 duties were not part of the ruling and typically still apply. If you imported from China, only the IEEPA portion of your duties is likely recoverable.

Yes — and it matters. A Post Summary Correction can be filed on an unliquidated entry within 300 days of the entry date, or up to 15 days before scheduled liquidation. Acting early protects the most entries.

Find out what you’re owed.

The window to file is open now. See your estimated recovery in about 90 seconds.

Check your eligibility