Wisconsin Firm Seeks Duty-Free Computer Assembly Zone
Published Date: 6/17/2026
Notice
Summary
Dedicated Computing in Waukesha, Wisconsin wants to start making special industrial computer systems and parts inside Foreign-Trade Zone 41. This means they can bring in certain foreign materials duty-free and save money while building cool tech products. The government got their proposal on June 8, 2026, and if approved, it could speed up production and cut costs for the company.
Analyzed Economic Effects
4 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 2 costs, 1 mixed.
Make industrial computers duty-free in FTZ 41
Dedicated Computing asked to make industrial computer systems and related products inside Foreign-Trade Zone 41 in Waukesha, Wisconsin, and the proposed finished products would be admitted duty-free if authorized. The notification was received June 8, 2026 and published June 17, 2026.
Component duties range up to 6.5%
The proposed foreign-status materials/components for the facility have duty rates that range from duty-free up to 6.5% depending on the item. This affects import costs for the listed components used in the computer systems.
Aluminum extrusions from China subject to AD/CVD
Aluminum extrusion components used in computer system and rack/enclosure assemblies and aluminum extrusion cover or chassis components imported from China are subject to an anti‑dumping/countervailing duty (AD/CVD) order or investigation and must be admitted to the zone in PF status. The Board's regulations require AD/CVD‑subject merchandise to be admitted in PF status.
Some imports must enter in Privileged Foreign status
Certain materials/components are subject to duties under section 122, section 232, or section 301 and must be admitted to foreign-trade zones in Privileged Foreign (PF) status under 19 CFR 146.41. The notification explicitly states those trade measures apply depending on country of origin.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
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