The Importer Security Filing, commonly known as ISF or the 10+2 rule, is a US Customs and Border Protection requirement that applies to all ocean cargo destined for the United States. Introduced under the SAFE Port Act of 2006 and enforced since January 2010, the ISF requires importers to electronically submit specific data elements about their inbound shipments to CBP before the cargo is loaded onto a vessel bound for a US port. The purpose is to give CBP advance intelligence to assess security risks and target high-risk shipments for inspection before they arrive on US soil.
The ISF applies only to ocean shipments — air freight, trucking, and rail are not subject to this requirement. However, virtually every importer who receives containerized goods from overseas must comply, regardless of shipment value or commodity type. There are no de minimis exemptions for ISF: even low-value shipments under $800 that qualify for Section 321 duty-free entry still require an ISF filing.
The name '10+2' refers to the number of data elements required. The importer (or their agent) must provide 10 data elements, and the ocean carrier must provide 2 additional elements. Understanding each element is critical because inaccurate data triggers the same penalties as late filing.
The ISF must be filed no later than 24 hours before the cargo is loaded onto the vessel at the foreign port of origin. This is not 24 hours before the vessel departs or 24 hours before arrival — it is 24 hours before loading. In practice, this means you need your ISF data ready well before the vessel's cargo cutoff date. For transshipment cargo, the deadline is 24 hours before loading at the first foreign port.
Many importers confuse the ISF deadline with the cargo cutoff. The ISF must be accepted by CBP 24 hours before the container is loaded onto the vessel — which can be 48 to 72 hours before the vessel actually departs. Build in a buffer: aim to file your ISF at least 72 hours before the estimated loading date.
CBP allows amendments to ISF filings after the initial submission, which is important because some data elements may not be finalized at the time of filing. The HTS code, for example, can be updated up to 24 hours before the vessel arrives at the first US port. However, the core data elements — manufacturer, seller, buyer, ship-to — must be accurate at the time of initial filing. Filing with placeholder data or obviously inaccurate information does not satisfy the requirement.
CBP takes ISF compliance seriously, and the penalties reflect this. The statutory penalty for failing to file, filing late, or filing inaccurate ISF data is $5,000 per violation. Each shipment with a missing or deficient ISF constitutes a separate violation. For importers with multiple ocean shipments per month, penalties can accumulate rapidly.
CBP issued more than 20,000 ISF penalty notices in fiscal year 2025. Enforcement has increased steadily since 2018, and CBP now uses automated systems to flag late and missing ISF filings in real time. The days of lenient treatment for ISF non-compliance are over.
The legal responsibility for ISF filing falls on the importer of record. However, most importers delegate the actual filing to their customs broker or freight forwarder, who submits the ISF through CBP's Automated Broker Interface (ABI) system. Even when you delegate filing, you remain legally responsible for the accuracy and timeliness of the data. This means you must provide your broker with accurate, complete information well before the filing deadline.
For importers who use a Non-Vessel Operating Common Carrier (NVOCC) or freight forwarder, the filing chain can involve multiple parties. Your NVOCC may file the ISF on your behalf, or they may expect you or your customs broker to handle it. Clarify ISF filing responsibility in writing with every supply chain partner to avoid gaps — CBP does not accept 'my broker was supposed to file it' as a defense.
To file an ISF, you must have a customs bond in place. A single entry bond covers one shipment; a continuous bond covers all shipments for a 12-month period. If you already have a continuous bond for your import operations, it covers ISF filing as well. If your ISF filings consistently result in penalties, CBP may require an increase to your bond amount through a bond sufficiency review.
Manual ISF filing is error-prone and time-consuming, especially for importers with high shipment volumes. Modern trade compliance platforms integrate with your supply chain data to pre-populate ISF data elements from purchase orders, supplier databases, and previous filings. Automated ISF systems can validate data before submission, flag missing elements, and transmit the filing to CBP through ABI with minimal human intervention. Platforms like Camtom connect your supply chain data directly to the ISF workflow, reducing filing errors and ensuring you never miss a deadline.
“The ISF is not just a filing — it is the first impression your shipment makes on CBP. Getting it right sets the tone for the entire import process.”
— Camtom Team
Camtom Team
Editorial Team
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