Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 4— - TARIFF ACT OF 1930 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IV— - COUNTERVAILING AND ANTIDUMPING DUTIES › Part Part II— - Imposition of Antidumping Duties › § 1673e
Within 7 days after the Commission announces a positive finding, the agency in charge must publish an antidumping duty order. The order tells Customs to charge a duty equal to how much higher the home-market price (normal value) is than the U.S. price (export price or constructed export price). The agency must do the duty assessment within 6 months after it gets the needed information, but in any case no later than 12 months after the end of the exporter’s or manufacturer’s annual accounting period in which the goods were entered (or, if the goods were not sold before import, 12 months after the accounting period in which they were first sold in the U.S.). The order describes the goods in detail and requires importers to deposit estimated antidumping duties at the same time they pay estimated normal customs duties. If the Commission finds material injury that would have been found but for a suspension of liquidation, then entries whose liquidation was suspended must have duties imposed. If the Commission finds a threat of injury or a material delay in starting a U.S. industry, then goods entered or withdrawn on or after the date the Commission’s positive finding is published will be subject to duties; the agency must release bonds or refund deposits for entries made before that date. For up to 90 days after the order is published, the agency may allow a bond instead of a cash deposit if certain conditions are met (for example, the case is not unusually complex, the final decision is not delayed, the agency can calculate margins within 90 days for that exporter, and the exporter provides credible, sufficient sales data). If a bond is allowed, the agency will publish notice, may hold a hearing if asked, and will use its later margin calculations to set duties and future deposits. In regional industry cases, duties should be assessed only on the exporters or producers who actually sold the goods in the region during the investigation; if a new exporter appears later, duties may be applied to them too.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 1673e
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73