Anti-dumping duties (AD) and countervailing duties (CVD) are trade remedy mechanisms that the US government uses to protect domestic industries from unfair foreign trade practices. Anti-dumping duties are imposed when a foreign manufacturer sells products in the US at prices below their normal value (typically below what they charge in their home market). Countervailing duties are imposed to offset subsidies that foreign governments provide to their exporters, giving them an unfair price advantage. Together, AD/CVD duties affect billions of dollars of US imports annually.
AD/CVD orders result from a quasi-judicial process involving two agencies: the Department of Commerce (DOC) and the International Trade Commission (ITC). The process begins when a domestic industry files a petition alleging dumping or subsidization. Commerce investigates the margin of dumping or amount of subsidy, while the ITC determines whether the domestic industry has been materially injured. Both findings are required — if either agency makes a negative determination, no duties are imposed. The entire process typically takes 12-18 months.
Certain product categories and countries appear repeatedly in AD/CVD orders. As of 2025, the products most commonly covered include:
Before importing any product, check the AD/CVD orders database on the Commerce Department's Enforcement and Compliance website. If your product is covered, you must declare this on your entry and deposit estimated duties. Failure to do so is a serious violation.
AD/CVD duty rates are specific to each foreign producer/exporter. Companies that cooperate with the investigation receive individual rates based on their actual dumping margins or subsidy levels. Companies that do not cooperate receive an 'adverse facts available' (AFA) rate that is typically much higher — often the highest rate found for any cooperating company. There is also an 'all others' rate for companies not individually investigated. These rates are recalculated annually through administrative reviews.
Unlike regular customs duties, AD/CVD duties use a deposit-and-liquidation system. At the time of entry, the importer deposits an estimated duty amount based on the applicable rate. After the annual administrative review (which can take 12-18 months), Commerce calculates the actual duty rate for that period. If the actual rate is higher than the deposit, the importer owes additional duties plus interest. If the actual rate is lower, the importer receives a refund. This uncertainty in final duty liability is one of the most challenging aspects of importing AD/CVD merchandise.
The Enforce and Protect Act (EAPA) of 2015 gave CBP new tools to investigate and combat AD/CVD evasion, particularly transshipment schemes where products are routed through third countries to avoid duties. CBP's Trade Remedy Law Enforcement Directorate (TRLED) investigates allegations of evasion and can impose interim measures within 90 days. Penalties for evasion include the full AD/CVD duty amount, additional penalties up to 4 times the duty, and potential criminal prosecution.
Importers are not powerless against AD/CVD duties. Options include: participating in administrative reviews to argue for lower rates, requesting scope rulings from Commerce to determine if your specific product is covered by an order, filing changed circumstances reviews if market conditions have shifted, and pursuing sunset reviews (every 5 years) where orders can be revoked if the underlying conditions no longer exist. Importers can also challenge AD/CVD determinations at the US Court of International Trade.
“AD/CVD duties are a fact of life for many import programs. The key is not to avoid them through evasion — that ends badly every time — but to manage them through accurate classification, proper manufacturer identification, and strategic use of the administrative review process.”
— Camtom Team
Camtom Team
Trade Compliance
Descubre por qué más de 100 agencias ya operan con nosotros.