What Are Trump Accounts?
Posted by Amanda Ornowski
The One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB), enacted on July 4, 2025, introduced a new type of individual retirement account specifically designed for children under the age of 18.
April 30, 2026
U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) activated the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries (CAPE) functionality in the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) on April 20, 2026, marking the first operational mechanism for processing refunds of duties paid under tariffs illegally imposed pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).
CAPE represents CBP’s initial attempt to operationalize refund relief following the Supreme Court’s invalidation of IEEPA based tariffs and subsequent court orders directing CBP to remove and refund those duties (for prior coverage, see the trade alert, IEEPA Tariff Refunds: CIT Suspends Tariff Refund Order, CBP Develops New Refund Procedure, dated March 17, 2026). CAPE is planned to be deployed in phases, with more functionality added in subsequent stages. While CAPE creates an administrative pathway for recovery, eligibility is limited in Phase 1, with many entries deferred to later phases or requiring additional procedural action to preserve refund rights.
Following the Supreme Court’s decision holding that IEEPA does not authorize the imposition of tariffs, CBP was directed through subsequent orders of the U.S. Court of International Trade (CIT) to remove IEEPA duties from affected entries through the normal administrative procedures involving entry-by-entry liquidation (closing out and final assessment of duties). However, CBP objected citing a lack of resources and other factors, and the CIT instead allowed the agency to develop a new “mass claims” refund process: CAPE.
CAPE was developed within CBP’s ACE to consolidate, validate, and process refunds of the ad valorem duties imposed under IEEPA (which, in many cases, were in addition to the Normal Trade Relations duties and other trade remedy tariffs). As CBP has acknowledged, refund eligibility will be segmented based on liquidation status, timing windows, and the presence of complicating factors such as reconciliation, drawback, protests, or antidumping/countervailing duty (ADD/CVD) suspensions of liquidation.
Phase 1 of CAPE is intentionally narrow and focuses on entries where CBP has clear administrative authority to act without additional court involvement. Eligible entries generally include:
To be eligible in Phase 1, the entry must have had at least one IEEPA specific HTSUS Chapter 99 number declared, must exist electronically in ACE, and must not be subject to an exclusion category.
CBP has identified several categories that are excluded from Phase 1 processing, even though refund rights may still exist. These include:
For these entries, CAPE does not provide immediate relief, and importers must evaluate alternative or interim strategies to preserve rights while later phase mechanisms develop.
A substantial portion of potentially refundable IEEPA duties will fall outside Phase 1 and be addressed in later phases—or may require additional court action. Deferred categories include:
Importantly, deferral to later phases does not mean refund rights are lost but it does require careful planning, documentation, and deadline management.
Across all phases of CAPE, several foundational rules apply: