
What Is Import Export Procedure? The Complete 2026 Guide for US Businesses Entering International Trade
Every international trade transaction follows a structured set of steps from start to finish. Skip a step or get one wrong and the shipment stalls, the duty assessment changes, or the legal exposure grows. This complete guide explains exactly what import export procedure means for US businesses in 2026 — from the broad framework all the way down to the specific filings, documents, and timelines that decide whether your goods clear smoothly or sit at the port. Most articles on this topic are India-focused or written for academic settings. This one is built around how trade actually works for businesses operating in or selling into the United States.
- What import export procedure actually means
- Why following the procedure matters
- The 10-step US import procedure
- The 10-step US export procedure
- Side-by-side: how the two procedures differ
- Documents required for each procedure
- US federal agencies involved
- Real 2026 cost examples for both directions
- How long each procedure takes
- Mistakes that derail import export procedures
- How to start your first international transaction
- Frequently asked questions
What import export procedure actually means
Import export procedure is the structured sequence of steps a business follows to legally move goods across international borders. It covers everything from the moment a business decides to buy from abroad or sell to a foreign buyer, through documentation, customs filings, shipping, payment, and final record retention.
The word "procedure" matters. Cross-border trade is not a single transaction — it is a chain of dependent steps where each one builds on the previous one and creates the conditions for the next. Skipping a step does not just delay the shipment; it often invalidates work that came before and forces a restart. Treating import and export as procedures rather than as individual tasks is the single most important mindset shift for businesses new to international trade.
The procedure also has a regulatory dimension. The US government requires specific filings, specific documents, and specific timing for both directions of trade. Customs and Border Protection, the Bureau of Industry and Security, the FDA, the USDA, and the Census Bureau all play roles depending on what you are moving and where it is going. Understanding which agency cares about which step is part of running the procedure correctly.
This guide focuses on US import export procedure specifically. Most articles you will find searching this question are written for the Indian market — they reference Importer Exporter Code, DGFT, India's Customs Act of 1962, and Indian Foreign Trade Policy. Useful for Indian businesses, but not relevant to a US-based importer or exporter. The US system uses different identifiers (EIN), different platforms (ACE for imports, AES for exports), and different regulatory frameworks. The principles look similar at the highest level, but the specifics matter when you are actually filing paperwork.
Why following the procedure matters
The cost of skipping or mishandling steps in import export procedure runs in several directions, and most of them hurt more than people expect when they first start trading internationally.
Shipments get held or refused
Missing documentation, late filings, or wrong classification can cause CBP or partner agencies to hold the shipment at the port. Holds can last days to weeks. During that time, storage and demurrage fees accrue at $150 to $300 per day, eating margin even before the goods reach your warehouse.
Penalties accumulate fast
Many filings carry penalties that can dwarf the duty owed on the shipment. Late ISF filings on imports can cost up to $5,000 per violation. Late AES filings on exports carry similar penalties. Misclassification can produce back-duty assessments going back years, plus interest and penalties. Customs fraud — even unintentional through repeated errors — exposes the importer or exporter to significant civil and criminal liability.
Business reputation suffers
Importers and exporters who run sloppy procedures get flagged by CBP for additional scrutiny on every subsequent shipment. Once you are on the agency's radar for repeated errors, your cargo gets examined more often, your filings are scrutinized more closely, and your operations slow down across the board. The discipline of doing the procedure correctly the first time pays compounding returns.
Capital gets locked up
Goods held at the port are inventory you have paid for that you cannot sell. For small importers, having one container held for two weeks can mean missing payroll or missing a critical retailer launch date. The cost of delay is rarely just the storage fees — it is the opportunity cost of capital tied up in undeliverable cargo.
For a deeper explanation of how the two procedures differ at the fundamental level, our companion piece on the difference between import and export walks through twelve dimensions of comparison — from the lead party to the regulatory focus to the cost structure — that shape every decision you make on each side.
The 10-step US import procedure
Every US import follows the same fundamental sequence. Smaller shipments use simpler versions of some steps, but the core workflow stays consistent.
IRS Employer Identification Number for commercial imports.
Verify the foreign seller, audit capacity, check references.
Price, Incoterms, payment method, delivery schedule.
Get the 10-digit HTSUS code; determines duty.
Customs broker engagement, customs bond, POA.
Importer Security Filing 24 hours before vessel loading.
Ocean, air, or land transport; cargo insurance.
Customs entry through Automated Commercial Environment.
Settle duties, MPF, HMF; receive CBP release.
Receive cargo; retain entry records for 5 years.
The single biggest lever you control in the import procedure is step 4 — HTS classification. The 10-digit Harmonized Tariff Schedule code determines the duty rate, whether Section 301 tariffs apply, whether USMCA preferences are available, and which partner agencies care about the shipment. Get classification right before the supplier ships anything, and most of the rest of the procedure flows smoothly. Get it wrong and you either overpay duty for years or face back-duty assessments when CBP catches the error.
For a comprehensive walkthrough of how the import procedure plays out at the largest US port complex, our companion guide on Los Angeles import customs clearance covers the specific operational realities at the Port of LA and Long Beach, where roughly 40 percent of all US containerized imports arrive.
The 10-step US export procedure
The export procedure is structurally similar to the import procedure but with different priorities. Where import procedure focuses on classification, valuation, and duty assessment, export procedure focuses on control — making sure the right goods go to the right people in the right countries.
Research market; identify foreign buyers and verify legitimacy.
Check buyer, end user, intermediaries against restricted lists.
Schedule B / HTS code plus ECCN for controlled items.
Determine if EAR, ITAR, or OFAC restrictions apply.
Incoterms, payment method (LC, T/T), shipping schedule.
Commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin, SLI.
Electronic Export Information; receive ITN.
Book freight, tender cargo, receive bill of lading.
Collect payment per agreed terms; finalize banking.
Keep all export documentation for at least 5 years.
Steps 2 and 4 of the export procedure carry no real equivalent on the import side, and they are the steps where most penalties live. Restricted party screening protects you from exporting to sanctioned individuals or entities. License determination protects you from shipping controlled items without authorization. Both are unforgiving — penalties for violations can reach hundreds of thousands of dollars per incident, and willful violations carry criminal exposure.
For deeper coverage of how the export procedure flows from documentation to final clearance, our companion piece on exporting goods walks through each step in detail with US-specific examples and real costs.
Get a structured procedure plan before your first transaction
Tell us about your products, your suppliers or buyers, and your target markets. Our consultants will help you build out the import or export procedure that fits — at no charge, no obligation.
Side-by-side: how the two procedures differ
The import and export procedures share a similar shape but differ in nearly every specific. Knowing the differences helps you understand where to focus your attention on each side.
| Dimension | Import procedure | Export procedure |
|---|---|---|
| Lead filing platform | ACE (Automated Commercial Environment) | AES (Automated Export System) |
| Primary filing | Customs entry (CBP Form 7501) | Electronic Export Information (EEI) |
| Government focus | Duty assessment, classification, valuation | Control, end use, restricted parties |
| Lead party | Importer of Record (IOR) | US Principal Party in Interest (USPPI) |
| Pre-arrival filing | ISF (24 hr before vessel loading) | EEI (before vessel loading or air departure) |
| Main cost | Duties, tariffs, MPF, HMF | Documentation, handling, freight (no US export duty) |
| Compliance risk | Misclassification, undervaluation, IP issues | Export control violations, sanctioned parties |
| Typical timeline | 1 to 3 days clearance after arrival | Hours to 1 day clearance after AES filing |
| Payment flow | US buyer pays foreign seller | Foreign buyer pays US seller |
| Record retention | 5 years from entry date | 5 years from export date |
The patterns are clear when you look across rows. Import procedure is mostly about money — making sure the right duty is paid on the right classification of the right value. Export procedure is mostly about control — making sure the right goods are not going to the wrong destination. Each side has its own platform, its own filing, its own responsible party, and its own penalty regime.
Documents required for each procedure
Both procedures generate paperwork, but the documents differ. Here is what each side actually requires.
For US imports
- Commercial invoice
- Packing list
- Bill of lading or air waybill
- Customs bond (continuous or single)
- Importer Security Filing (ISF / 10+2)
- Customs entry (Form 7501)
- Power of attorney for broker
- Certificate of origin (for FTA preferences)
- Partner agency forms (FDA, USDA, FCC, EPA as applicable)
For US exports
- Commercial invoice
- Packing list
- Bill of lading or air waybill
- Electronic Export Information (EEI) with ITN
- Shipper's Letter of Instruction (SLI)
- Certificate of origin (issued for buyer)
- Export license (if controlled goods)
- Dangerous goods declaration (if applicable)
- Destination-country-specific certificates
Three documents appear on both sides: commercial invoice, packing list, and bill of lading. These travel with the goods regardless of direction. The rest are direction-specific. The commercial invoice is the most important document on both sides — it describes the transaction, the goods, the value, and the terms. Inconsistencies between the commercial invoice and other documents are the most common cause of preventable delays on either procedure.
US federal agencies involved
Different agencies care about different parts of international trade. Knowing who is watching what helps you plan and avoid surprises.
Agencies that touch the import side
- US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) — the gatekeeper at every port, assesses duties, releases or holds cargo
- Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — food, drugs, cosmetics, medical devices, dietary supplements
- US Department of Agriculture (USDA) — meat, poultry, produce, plant products
- Federal Communications Commission (FCC) — radio-frequency electronics
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — engines, pesticides, certain chemicals
- Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) — children's products, consumer goods
Agencies that touch the export side
- US Census Bureau — collects export trade data through AES
- Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) — enforces EAR for dual-use commercial goods
- State Department (DDTC) — enforces ITAR for defense articles
- Treasury Department OFAC — enforces economic sanctions
- Customs and Border Protection (CBP) — coordinates with export agencies, occasional outbound exams
CBP is the only agency that participates on both sides. Beyond that, the cast is almost entirely different. This is one reason why companies that do both imports and exports typically run them as separate compliance programs rather than trying to manage both under one team.
Real 2026 cost examples for both directions
Numbers make the abstract concrete. Here are simplified 2026 cost examples for a typical commercial transaction on each side.
Import example: 20ft container from Vietnam to USA
Apparel shipment, declared value $35,000 FOB Ho Chi Minh City, through Port of Long Beach in 2026.
| Cost line | Amount (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Product cost | $35,000 | FOB Vietnam supplier price |
| Ocean freight (20ft, Vietnam → LB) | $2,900 | ~16-day transit |
| Cargo insurance | $280 | 0.8% of value |
| Base import duty (apparel, ~16%) | $5,600 | HTS rate varies by category |
| Merchandise Processing Fee | $121 | 0.3464% of value |
| Harbor Maintenance Fee | $44 | 0.125% on ocean imports |
| Customs broker fee | $245 | Single entry |
| Customs bond (prorated) | $110 | Continuous bond annual |
| ISF filing | $45 | Filed by broker |
| Terminal handling & drayage | $1,180 | Port to LA warehouse |
| Total landed cost | $45,525 | +30% over FOB |
Export example: 20ft container from USA to Germany
Industrial equipment shipment, declared value $50,000 FOB Newark, in 2026.
| Cost line | Amount (USD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Product cost (declared value) | $50,000 | FOB origin pricing |
| Freight forwarder service | $220 | Coordination & docs |
| EEI / AES filing | $55 | If outsourced; free if self-filed |
| Restricted party screening | $35 | Per-transaction screen |
| Certificate of origin | $60 | Chamber of commerce |
| Inland US transport | $420 | Warehouse to Newark |
| Terminal handling (origin) | $295 | Loading at port |
| Ocean freight (Newark → Hamburg) | $2,850 | ~12-day transit |
| Cargo insurance | $300 | 0.6% of value |
| US export duty | $0 | Constitution prohibits |
| Total US-side export cost | $54,235 | +8.5% over product value |
The contrast is striking. The import side adds 30 percent to the cost, dominated by duties. The export side adds only 8.5 percent, driven by logistics rather than tariffs. This is why importers obsess over classification (because it controls duty), while exporters obsess over compliance (because the financial risk is on the penalty side rather than the duty side).
How long each procedure takes
End-to-end timing for international trade is heavily dependent on shipping method and destination. Here are realistic expectations for both directions.
| Stage | Import timeline | Export timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Supplier production / buyer acquisition | 7 to 30 days | 3 to 30 days |
| Documentation preparation | 2 to 5 days | 2 to 5 days |
| Pre-shipment filings (ISF / EEI) | 1 to 3 days | 1 to 3 days |
| Ocean transit | 14 to 35 days | 10 to 30 days |
| Customs clearance | 1 to 3 days (clean entry) | Hours to 1 day |
| Last-mile delivery | 3 to 7 days | Varies by destination |
| Total typical timeline | 30 to 75 days | 20 to 60 days |
Air freight cuts transit time dramatically on both sides — typically 5 to 10 days for ocean replacement — but at three to five times the cost per unit. Air freight is reserved for high-value, time-sensitive, or perishable goods. Most commercial trade runs on ocean freight where the procedure has time to absorb minor delays without breaking deadlines.
Get expert help with both import and export procedures
Our trade consulting team helps US businesses build repeatable procedures on both sides of the border — supplier qualification, classification, ACE entries, AES filings, restricted party screening, and total landed cost optimization.
Mistakes that derail import export procedures
Most procedural failures trace back to the same handful of avoidable mistakes. Avoid these and you operate well ahead of most businesses new to international trade.
- Wrong product classification. The single most expensive mistake. HTS or Schedule B errors create duty disputes, exams, and back-duty assessments.
- Filing ISF or EEI late. Both carry penalties of up to $5,000 per violation. File before, not after, the deadline.
- Inconsistent documents. Commercial invoice, packing list, and bill of lading must match exactly on value, weight, and description.
- Skipping restricted party screening. On exports, this is non-negotiable. Screen every party in the transaction, every time.
- Undervaluing imported goods. Customs fraud, not a cost-saving strategy. Penalties dwarf any duty saved.
- Wrong importer of record or USPPI. The responsible party on each filing carries the legal liability. Get the naming right at the start.
- Choosing the wrong Incoterms. EXW on US exports is particularly problematic because it shifts US clearance responsibility to a foreign buyer.
- Poor record retention. Five-year retention is required on both sides. Missing records turn a routine audit into a major problem.
- Ignoring partner agency requirements. Food, electronics, agricultural, and controlled goods all have specific agency filings on top of CBP entry.
- Treating both directions as one procedure. Import and export are parallel disciplines, not the same workflow run in reverse.
"The businesses that scale internationally treat import export procedure as a system designed before the first shipment. The ones that improvise each transaction keep paying for the same lessons over and over."
How to start your first international transaction
If you are new to international trade, the procedure can feel overwhelming on first encounter. The honest answer is that it gets dramatically easier after the first few transactions. The system has logic, the agencies have predictable expectations, and most of the procedural work follows the same pattern every time once you have done it once.
Starting on the import side
Most US businesses entering international trade start with imports because they already have a domestic sales channel. You source a product abroad, ship it to a US warehouse, and sell through existing retail or e-commerce. Begin with a small test shipment from a reputable supplier in a relatively low-tariff origin — Mexico under USMCA, Korea under KORUS, or a Vietnam supplier for product categories without heavy duties. Use a customs broker from day one rather than trying to file entries yourself. The broker fee is cheap insurance against the expensive mistakes a new importer would otherwise make.
Starting on the export side
Exporters often start by responding to inbound inquiries from foreign buyers rather than actively prospecting. A foreign customer reaches out, the relationship begins commercially, and the export procedure builds around that first transaction. For your first export, use a freight forwarder to handle EEI filing, choose conservative Incoterms (FCA or FOB rather than EXW or DDP), and require advance payment or a confirmed letter of credit. Save the more complex terms for after you have built a reliable history with the buyer.
Common starting points
For US importers sourcing from Asia, the most common entry point is China. Our companion guide on how to import from China to USA walks through the supplier vetting, tariff strategy, and operational realities of the most common US import path. For exporters expanding into specific markets, our destination-focused guides — including exporting to Germany — cover the foreign-country requirements that pair with the US export procedure.
🌐Frequently asked questions
Read more on importing, exporting, and global trade
If this guide was useful, here are related resources from our blog that go deeper on specific parts of the procedure.
Get expert support across both sides of the border
Whether you are sourcing from abroad, selling to foreign buyers, or building both flows at once, our consultants help US businesses turn import export procedure from a source of risk into a competitive advantage. Start with a no-cost conversation about your situation.
Procedure is the foundation, not the obstacle
What is import export procedure, really? It is the discipline that turns international trade from a source of expensive surprises into a repeatable business operation. Learn the 10 steps on each side. Build documentation that satisfies CBP, the partner agencies, and the export-control framework. Treat classification as the most important step in either direction. Retain your records for five years. Do those things and the procedure stops being something you have to fight your way through — it becomes the system that lets your trade business scale.
Emma Smith
With more than 8 years of experience working within the import-export ecosystem, Emma Smith brings practical industry knowledge to her writing at Trade Globe Consultants. Her articles focus on simplifying complex topics such as compliance requirements, trade procedures, and cross-border operations, making them accessible for businesses looking to grow internationally.
Emma Smith
With more than 8 years of experience working within the import-export ecosystem, Emma Smith brings practical industry knowledge to her writing at Trade Globe Consultants. Her articles focus on simplifying complex topics such as compliance requirements, trade procedures, and cross-border operations, making them accessible for businesses looking to grow internationally.
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