
The $85 Billion Tariff Refund Window Is Open, But What Does It Mean for Robotics?
CBP is processing billions in tariff refunds, and robotics companies that paid extra for Chinese components might finally get some money back.
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So here's a question I've been sitting with: if you're a robotics company that spent the last few years eating tariff costs on Chinese-made components, do you even know you might be owed money?
I ask because the numbers coming out of Customs and Border Protection are kind of staggering. According to Supply Chain Dive, CBP has now accepted roughly $85 billion in tariff refund claims. As of May 22, about $20.6 billion in certified refunds (with interest) have actually been processed through their dedicated portal.
That's a lot of money moving around. And honestly, I'm not sure how many robotics companies are paying attention.
The Tariff Hangover Nobody Talks About
Let me back up. Over the past several years, tariffs on Chinese imports hit the robotics industry hard. We're talking about motors, sensors, actuators, compute boards, basically the guts of most robots. Many companies either ate the costs, passed them to customers, or scrambled to find alternative suppliers. Some did all three.
What's happening now is a kind of unwinding. The refund process exists for importers who paid tariffs that were later deemed eligible for exclusion or reduction. The catch is you have to actually file for it, and the paperwork is, from what I've heard, not trivial.
Here's what we know about the current state:
- $85 billion in refund claims have been accepted by CBP
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