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Many importers only discover anti-dumping risks after the container arrives at the port.
By then, inspection fees, storage costs, and duty reassessments are already accumulating.

In reality, most anti-dumping risks can be identified before booking — if you know where to look.

Step 1: Check Whether the Product Is on a “Repeated Enforcement” List

Anti-dumping enforcement is not random.
Customs focuses repeatedly on specific product categories.

Products currently under frequent inspection pressure include:

  • Tires
  • Aluminum foil food containers
  • Mattresses
  • Golf carts
  • Solar panels and PV-related products

If your product falls into a category that appears in past anti-dumping or countervailing duty cases, treat it as high risk — even if it shipped successfully before.

Step 2: Verify the HS Code — Not Just the Product Name

One of the biggest mistakes importers make is assuming the risk is tied to the product name.

Anti-dumping applies by HS code, not marketing description.

Before booking:

  • Confirm the 6–10 digit HS code used for U.S. clearance
  • Check whether that code is linked to:
    • Existing anti-dumping (AD)
    • Countervailing duties (CVD)
    • Ongoing reviews or sunset investigations

If a supplier “suggests” an alternative HS code to lower duties, that is a major red flag, not a solution.

Step 3: Compare Declared Value Against Market Reality

Customs risk systems flag shipments when the declared value is significantly below market averages.

Ask yourself:

  • Is the unit price defensible if customs requests justification?
  • Does the price reflect raw material, labor, and logistics costs?
  • Can you explain the pricing with contracts or cost breakdowns?

Low price does not equal illegal — but unexplainable low price invites inspection.

Step 4: Assess the Supplier’s Export History

Suppliers who frequently trigger anti-dumping issues share common traits:

  • Short export history to the U.S.
  • No experience with AD/CVD documentation
  • “Guaranteed clearance” promises
  • Reluctance to provide factory or production details

An experienced supplier should be able to answer:

  • Which HS codes they ship under
  • Whether their products have faced AD reviews
  • How previous inspections were handled

If the supplier avoids these questions, the risk transfers to you.

Step 5: Identify Products That Trigger “Combination Risk”

Certain factors increase risk when combined, even if each alone seems acceptable:

  • AD product + mixed cargo container
  • AD product + very low declared value
  • AD product + new importer of record
  • AD product + third-country transshipment

The more boxes you check, the higher the probability of inspection.

Step 6: Ask the Right Question — Before Booking

Instead of asking:

“Can this product be shipped?”

Ask:

“If customs inspects this shipment, what is the worst-case cost and timeline?”

A professional freight forwarder should:

  • Flag anti-dumping exposure upfront
  • Explain inspection probability
  • Estimate detention and demurrage impact
  • Clarify who bears the risk if duties are reassessed

If no one can answer this clearly before booking, the risk is already unmanaged.

Final Advice: Anti-Dumping Risk Is a Planning Issue, Not a Clearance Issue

Anti-dumping problems rarely start at customs.
They start weeks earlier, during supplier selection, pricing discussions, and booking decisions.

Experienced importers do not avoid risk —
they identify it early, price it correctly, and decide consciously whether to proceed.

That decision should happen before the container leaves the factory, not after it reaches the port.