While there's no requirement to set up an ACE account if you aren't doing your own AESDirect filings, you are missing an opportunity to use the ACE platform to help ensure your company is complying with U.S. export regulations.
There are lots of reasons why I think every company that exports needs to set up an ACE account, but here are the two most important:
The most important reason to have an ACE account is so you can do your own AES filings.
Yes, you can rely on a third party to file on your behalf. Yes, in a routed export transaction, the foreign principal party in interest (FPPI) usually asks the freight forwarder to do it. Yes, most exporters pay someone else to do it for them.
But as my mother always asked me, "If most of your friends jumped off of a cliff, would you do it too?" Just because most people do things one way doesn't make that the best and smartest way to do it.
As the exporter, your company is legally liable for the accuracy of the information that gets filed through AES. It doesn't matter who's filing the information, you are the one who's responsible.
My favorite export compliance quote comes from the Office of Export Enforcement (OEE): "You can outsource responsibility, but you can't outsource liability."
There's simply no better way to ensure the accuracy of your export information than doing the filing yourself. And you'll save some money in the process!
Even if I haven't convinced you to do your own AES filings, there's still a very important reason to create your own ACE account. The ACE platform makes it easy to audit your export information submitted to AES regardless of who does the filing.
On the old AESDirect legacy system, you had to submit a written request to the Census Bureau, and they would send you the last 12 months of data. To stay current with your exports, you had to make a new written request every year.
While the ACE platform requires you to request report authorization for your company's EIN number, once you do so you can create three different reports at any time and for no charge. Data for the last five years, as well as the current year, is available.
These three reports are:
I do think that U.S. Customs and Border Protection goes out of its way to make applying for report authorization more difficult than it needs to be. But once you are set up, you are good to go. Information is knowledge, and knowledge is an important part of export compliance.
Check out the blog post, Discover AESDirect Reports on ACE, for more information about these reports.
With your ACE account and reports, you can verify:
Keep in mind that even if you’re not filing yourself, you can get reports of all the filings done by a third party using your tax ID number. This is important. First, it allows you to make sure the information you provided to the AES filer was reported correctly.
Second, it allows you to see if your company's tax ID number was used for an export that was done by someone else. Yes, it happens!
A Shipping Solutions user told me that they had discovered that their freight forwarder had used their tax ID number for a bunch of shipments that went out on a single day, even though most of the exports weren't theirs!
If this exporter hadn't been running the ACE reports, they wouldn't have known what was going on and might have found themselves the subject of an audit. Even though they certainly wouldn't have been held liable for these errors, think of the time and money they would have had to invest to comply with an Office of Export Enforcement audit.
So, please, take my advice and set up an ACE account. It's not that hard. Click here to be taken to the Customs and Border Protection ACE account application.
This article was first published in July 2016 and has been updated to include current information, links and formatting.
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