ISF began pursuant to the SAFE Port Act of 2006 and the Trade Act of 2002. However, the ISF rule did not go into effect until Jan. 26, 2009. For the first year the rule was enacted, there was a flexible enforcement period that ended on Jan. 26, 2010. Failure to comply with ISF rules could result in large fines and penalties. CBP may issue liquidated damages of $5,000 per violation for inaccurate, incomplete or untimely filings.
Ultimately, according to the Code of Federal Regulations 19 CFR 149.2(a), the ISF Importer will be responsible for transmission and compliance with the CBP requirements. An ISF Importer is the party causing goods to arrive within the limits of a port in the United States by vessel. Your customs broker can handle the actual filing of the ISF. Many freight forwarders will also have in-house brokers that can clear freight for you and file ISF, provided they have a Power of Attorney (POA) on file for your company. Importers may also self-file, provided they have an account with, and software that can interface with CBP’s Automated Commercial Environment Portal (ACE).
There is no special Customs form that must be filed, but the ISF must contain the following information, subject to the timings below:
The above make up the 10 of the 10+2.
These elements are provided by the ocean carrier, not the importer:
Not all shipments will be required to file the full 10+2 data elements.
These shipments are identified as Freight Remaining on Board (FROB), Immediate Exportations (IEs) or Transportation & Exportations (T&Es). IE and T&E filings are shipments that are to be transported in-bond. An example of this would be a shipment that arrives by ocean in the Houston port, but then once unladen, it is immediately transported by truck to Mexico without entering the commerce of the U.S.
The five required elements are:
Though the ISF Importer is ultimately responsible, the information can come from various sources. Many times, U.S. importers are relying on vendors overseas to gather information for them, especially regarding the container stuffing location in the case of less-than-container load (LCL) shipments. This information will not be known until the freight forwarder or non-vessel operating common carrier (NVOCC) secures a booking with the ocean carrier and provides that information to the shipper or the importer.
Occasionally the forwarder can be a bottleneck to the process if the information is not provided in a timely manner. A typical ISF form will also include information expected to be filled out by the freight forwarder/broker, such as the vessel name, voyage number, AMS house bill of lading number and master bill of lading number.
ISF is an important step of the customs process in the life cycle of your ocean shipments, and timely filings will help make the import process painless for your organization.
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