Customs Bonds Go Digital: Faster Filings Ahead
Published Date: 2/13/2026
Proposed Rule
Summary
Starting soon, most bonds with U.S. Customs and Border Protection must be sent electronically, making the process faster and easier for businesses and sureties. This change helps protect U.S. revenue and keeps everyone following the rules. If you’re involved in customs bonds, get ready to switch to digital submissions by April 14, 2026!
Analyzed Economic Effects
7 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 3 costs, 3 mixed.
Most CBP Bonds Must Be Sent Electronically
CBP proposes that almost all bonds, bond amendments, and terminations must be transmitted electronically to CBP via the eBond EDI (ACE) or, where specified, by email. CBP will stop accepting paper bonds once these changes are adopted, and electronic transmission will be the normal way to file bonds.
Who Must Transmit Each Bond Type
Bonds secured by a surety must be transmitted to CBP by the surety or the surety's authorized agent. Bonds secured by cash in lieu of surety must be transmitted to CBP by the principal on the bond.
Certain Bond Types Must Be Emailed, Not EDI
CBP would require email transmission (not EDI) for specific bonds: Neutrality bonds (Activity Code 9), Intellectual Property Rights bonds (Activity Code 15), bonds with two or more sureties unless all sureties share the same ACE filer code, re‑insurance agreements, cash in lieu of surety bonds, bonds without surety or cash deposit, and any bond that cannot be transmitted via EDI.
Electronic Transmission Is Legally Binding
When a bond, bond amount adjustment, rider, or termination is transmitted to CBP by EDI or email, that transmission is a binding representation and has the same force and effect as if the document were manually executed, signed, and filed. This is consistent with 19 U.S.C. 1623(d) and the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act.
Limits, Timing, and Types of Amendments, Riders, and Terminations
CBP permits a limited set of electronic bond amendments and five bond riders (user addition, user deletion, reconciliation add/remove, and U.S. Virgin Islands rider). For term bonds and riders, sureties must choose an effective date that is no more than 60 calendar days after transmission; a user deletion rider becomes effective at least 10 business days after transmission; surety terminations must set an effective date at least 15 calendar days after electronic notice; and certain STB amount adjustments (Activity Code 1) may be transmitted within 10 business days of the date of entry.
CBP Will Review All Submitted Bonds for Sufficiency
CBP will conduct sufficiency reviews of all bonds transmitted to ensure the amount and type of bond are adequate to protect U.S. revenue and ensure legal compliance. CBP may require adjustments or take actions if a bond is insufficient.
CBP Will Centralize Bond Processing in Indianapolis
CBP proposes to centralize all bond processing, retention, and review at its Revenue Division, Office of Finance, in Indianapolis, Indiana. All electronically transmitted bonds will be handled and retained centrally in that office.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
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