Executive Order 14411: What nonresident importers need to know
An executive order could make foreign importer of record structures unworkable for nonresident importers that sell into the United States without meaningful assets, operations or personnel in the country.
Executive Order 14411, “Strengthening Customs Enforcement,” issued June 3, 2026, directs U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to distinguish more sharply between U.S. and foreign IORs.
Affected businesses may have to change how they reach the U.S. market because of:
- Tighter eligibility standards
- A ban on informal entries by foreign IORs
- Continuous bond limits and Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism (CTPAT) requirements
- A "good standing" gate
- Higher domestic asset expectations
- Stiffer penalties
Companies using delivered duty paid (DDP), direct-to-consumer, marketplace or related-party structures should reexamine their arrangements while there is time to preserve clearance timelines, protect margin and avoid last-minute restructuring.
How Executive Order 14411 changes the rules for foreign importers of record
Under U.S. customs law, the IOR is legally responsible for the accuracy of entry filings, payment of duties and compliance with import requirements.
A U.S. IOR under the order is an entity organized under U.S. law with its principal place of business, physical presence and sufficient tangible assets in the United States, and with controlling beneficial owners who are U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents. A foreign IOR fails one or more of those tests.
Executive Order 14411 changes that model on several fronts:
- Tighter eligibility standards: All IORs will face minimum tangible U.S. asset or bonding requirements and higher minimum bond coverage. They also will face broader disclosures, including anticipated import volumes, ownership and beneficial ownership, business affiliations and domestic assets.
- Informal entry closed to foreign IORs: Foreign IORs will be barred from filing informal entries commonly used for low-value imports.
- Continuous bond limits and a CTPAT requirement: For formal entries, foreign IORs may not use a continuous bond unless CBP is satisfied that revenue is protected and compliance assured. If eligible, foreign IORs must also either have been validated as part of CBP's CTPAT program, or file entries through a CTPAT-validated licensed customs broker.
- A “good standing” gate: Every IOR must maintain good standing with CBP by complying with regulations and paying duties. Those that fail to do so—or those that have a history of importing illicit substances, such as fentanyl—are banned from importing or designating a broker to import on their behalf.
Cost and compliance impact on nonresident importers
For a company that has relied on a foreign IOR to preserve flexibility, support DDP sales or manage direct-to-consumer shipments, that model may no longer deliver reliable access to the U.S. market. Expect downstream effects across clearance timelines, working capital, customer commitments and landed cost.
Higher bonding or domestic asset requirements will also change the economics of selling into the United States. Some foreign importers may need to:
- Tie up more capital domestically
- Absorb higher bond costs
- Secure CTPAT-validated broker relationships
- Shift the IOR role to a U.S. distributor or related entity
Those choices affect pricing, margin, contract terms and duty exposure.
How nonresident importers should prepare for CBP's new rules
Testing the current IOR model against the order's tougher standards may help nonresident importers surface structural weaknesses before they translate into clearance delays or penalty exposure.
The threshold questions: Would the party acting as IOR qualify as a U.S. IOR under the order's definitions, and does it have the financial substance, governance and records to support the role?
Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) import data can help support a compliance analysis. Patterns in classification, valuation, country of origin or duty payments often warrant attention before CBP scrutiny picks up and before risk-based tiering takes effect.
Near-term priorities include: