A CBP (customs) bond is a financial guarantee between the importer, a licensed surety, and U.S. Customs and Border Protection that ensures duties, taxes, and regulatory obligations are met. CBP requires bonds not only for most commercial imports over $2,500, but also for regulated goods and ongoing activities such as bonded warehouses, FTZs, in‑bond movements, and TIBs.

Choosing between a single‑entry bond and a continuous bond—and sizing it correctly—is a strategic decision that directly affects cargo flow and cash planning.

CBP evaluates bond sufficiency on a rolling 12‑month basis, and rising tariffs or volume spikes can quickly lead to bond saturation, insufficiency notices, and cargo delays. Because insufficient bonds must be terminated and replaced—not amended—waiting for CBP to intervene often means disruption has already occurred.

Our role as a CPA firm is to help importers forecast duty exposure, align bond levels with forward‑looking activity, and coordinate proactively with brokers and sureties.