Amazon Sued Over Tariff Refunds
Amazon's deep pockets are now being probed. Consumers are suing the e-commerce giant for allegedly pocketing tariff refunds they were legally entitled to.
Amazon's deep pockets are now being probed. Consumers are suing the e-commerce giant for allegedly pocketing tariff refunds they were legally entitled to.
Billions of dollars in tariff refunds are on the table. But let's not pretend this is free money for everyone; it's a bureaucratic dance with winners and losers.
A legal battle over tariff refunds for de minimis imports has hit a roadblock. The U.S. Justice Department has formally rejected a lawsuit aiming to claw back duties paid on shipments that would have qualified for de minimis treatment.
The Trump administration is finally coughing up the money. Importers who were fleeced by those ill-conceived tariffs are seeing refunds, totaling billions.
Thousands of importers hit a wall: 15% of tariff refund claims rejected outright. CBP's new portal promised automation, but errors are piling up fast.
A Supreme Court decision has unleashed a torrent of tariff refunds, but the supposed relief comes with a surprisingly narrow application. Here's who's cashing in, and who's not.
What if your biggest bill suddenly vanished, but the refund check's months away? U.S. importers are turning tariff refunds into instant cash via loans, kickstarting a supply chain revolution.
Your Amazon package or Walmart grocery run? It could cost more soon. Tariff refunds promise relief for shippers, but brewing trade fights spell higher prices ahead.