Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 29— - UNITED STATES–MEXICO–CANADA AGREEMENT IMPLEMENTATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - CUSTOMS PROVISIONS › § 4532
Requires automakers to meet specific rules to get lower tariffs on cars and auto parts under the USMCA. Automakers must give U.S. Customs a written certification and keep backup records that show they meet the labor value content rules and the steel and aluminum purchase rules. The Treasury and Labor Departments must make rules and checks to make sure those certifications are complete and correct. The Trade Representative must set up a temporary "alternative staging" schedule within 90 days of January 29, 2020 so some producers can phase into the full rules. Producers can ask to use that temporary schedule; the Trade Representative will review requests and respond in writing within 120 days. If a producer is allowed to use the temporary schedule, it must report important changes, and the Trade Representative can deny claims for tariff breaks or require importers to pay duties if a producer breaks the rules or gives false information. Labor and Treasury officials can verify records and may protect and enforce against retaliation for people who provide information for those checks. Key terms (one line each): alternative staging regime — a temporary plan to meet the automotive rules; alternative staging regime period — the time that plan is in effect; automotive appendix — the USMCA appendix with car rules; automotive good — a covered vehicle or listed parts and materials; automotive rules of origin — the origin rules in that appendix; Commissioner — the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner; covered vehicle — a passenger vehicle, light truck, or heavy truck; interagency committee — the group of federal agencies to advise on these rules; USMCA country — the United States, Canada, or Mexico while the USMCA applies. Key dates: law effective January 29, 2020; interagency committee to be set up within 30 days of that date; Trade Representative to publish staging rules within 90 days; request decisions issued within 120 days; modification reviews within 90 days. Key reports: first Trade Representative review due within 2 years after USMCA starts, reporting ends after 10 years; International Trade Commission reports every 2 years for up to 12 years; a government coordination review is due within 4 years.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 4532
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73