We file your CBP entry and entry summary through ACE, pick the correct entry type, and tell you plainly whether your shipment needs a bond. Cleared cargo, not surprises.
Every commercial shipment entering the United States has to be declared to CBP as an entry. The line that decides how it gets filed is value and regulation. Goods valued over $2,500, or any goods that are regulated, subject to quota, or covered by certain textile and trade-remedy rules, require a formal entry. Shipments under $2,500 that are not otherwise restricted can usually move as an informal entry, which is a lighter filing with duties collected at the time of release.
The difference is not just paperwork. A formal entry requires a customs bond and a filed entry summary on CBP Form 7501, and it opens a longer window for CBP to review value, classification, and duty. Pick the wrong entry type or misjudge the value threshold and you can face a rejected entry, delayed release at Otay Mesa, or a liquidated duty bill months later. We make that call correctly the first time.
Commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading or air waybill, and any mill certs or PGA paperwork. We review value, origin, and commodity to determine formal versus informal and the correct entry type.
We assign the HTS numbers, calculate duty, taxes, and fees, confirm the bond position, and flag any FDA, USDA, or other agency requirement before we transmit anything to CBP.
We transmit the entry and entry summary in ACE, respond to any CBP query or exam request, and arrange duty payment through ACH so nothing stalls the release.
You get release confirmation and the filed 7501. We retain the entry records for the required five years and stay available if CBP follows up at liquidation.
Entry filing, HTS, ISF and duties. →
Clear cargo south into Mexico, too. →
ISF, bonds, PGA holds and audits. →
Defer duties until goods are released. →
On-time Importer Security Filing. →
Crossing logistics at San Diego and Otay Mesa. →
A formal entry is required when the shipment value is over $2,500, or when the goods are regulated, quota-controlled, or subject to certain textile and trade-remedy rules regardless of value. Below $2,500 and otherwise unrestricted, most shipments can move as an informal entry. We confirm the threshold against your actual entered value, which includes the goods, and check for any rule that overrides it.
Usually no. Informal entries generally do not require a customs bond because duty is collected at the time of entry. Formal entries do require a bond, either a single-transaction bond for a one-off shipment or a continuous bond if you import regularly. There are exceptions, such as goods held by a partner government agency, where a bond can still be required, so we confirm your bond position before filing.
ACE is the Automated Commercial Environment, CBP’s electronic system for filing and processing import entries. Every formal and informal entry, along with the entry summary on Form 7501, is transmitted to CBP through ACE. As your broker we file directly in ACE under our filer code, which is how your cargo gets cleared and released.
No. Deliberately breaking one shipment into smaller consignments to stay under the informal threshold is treated by CBP as a valuation violation and can lead to penalties. If your shipment genuinely qualifies for informal entry we file it that way. If it does not, the right move is a properly filed formal entry, not a workaround.
The entry type tells CBP how to process your goods. Type 01 is a standard consumption entry, 11 is informal, 03 covers antidumping and countervailing duty merchandise, 06 is for foreign trade zone withdrawals, and 23 is a temporary import bond. The wrong type can misstate your duty liability or trigger a rejected entry, so we select it based on the commodity, its origin, and how the goods will be used.
Send your shipment details and a bilingual broker responds fast, usually within one business day.