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The Foreign Trade Zone (FTZ) Savings Calculator estimates the customs duty savings achievable by operating within a U.S. Foreign Trade Zone, which is a designated area within or adjacent to a port of entry where goods may be imported, stored, assembled, manufactured, and re-exported with deferred, reduced, or eliminated customs duties. The United States currently has over 190 FTZ projects encompassing approximately 320 active zones and subzones, handling over $800 billion in merchandise annually and saving businesses approximately $3 billion in annual duty payments. The FTZ program was established by the Foreign-Trade Zones Act of 1934 during the Great Depression to stimulate international trade, encourage domestic manufacturing, and create jobs. The act was modeled on free port concepts dating back centuries, including the Hanseatic free cities and the British free ports of Singapore and Hong Kong. The program is administered by the Foreign-Trade Zones Board, a federal interagency body chaired by the Secretary of Commerce, with day-to-day oversight by CBP at the operational level. FTZs provide four primary duty savings mechanisms: duty deferral (no duty is paid until goods leave the zone and enter U.S. commerce, improving cash flow), duty elimination (no duty on goods that are re-exported, destroyed, or consumed as waste), inverted tariff benefits (when components have higher duty rates than the finished product, manufacturers can elect to pay the lower finished goods rate), and reduced Merchandise Processing Fees (a single weekly entry can cover all zone admissions during the week, reducing the per-entry MPF to a fraction of what individual entries would cost). Major FTZ users include automobile manufacturers (BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, and Toyota all operate FTZ subzones at their U.S. assembly plants), oil refineries (which account for approximately 60% of all FTZ merchandise by value), pharmaceutical companies, and electronics manufacturers. The FTZ at the Port of Houston is the largest by merchandise value, processing over $50 billion annually, primarily petroleum products. The savings can be substantial: a single automobile assembly plant using FTZ status typically saves $10-30 million annually in duty deferral and inverted tariff benefits.
Total FTZ Savings = Inverted Tariff Savings + Duty Deferral Value + Re-Export Duty Elimination + MPF Reduction. Inverted Tariff Savings = Annual Import Value x (Component Duty Rate - Finished Good Duty Rate). Duty Deferral Value = Average Duty Amount x Days Deferred x (Cost of Capital / 365). Example: $50M in components at 6% duty, finished goods rate 2%, $20M re-exported: Inverted savings = $50M x (6% - 2%) = $2,000,000; Duty deferral on $3M duty x 90 days x 8% = $59,178; Re-export savings = $20M x 2% = $400,000; MPF savings = $50,000. Total = $2,509,178/year.
- 1Evaluate your operations to determine whether FTZ benefits justify the application and operational costs. The primary candidates for FTZ savings are: manufacturers who import components at higher duty rates than their finished products (inverted tariff opportunity), companies that import goods for storage and distribution with significant inventory dwell time (duty deferral value), exporters who import materials that are substantially transformed and re-exported (duty elimination), and high-volume importers who can reduce MPF costs through weekly entry consolidation. Companies with minimal duty exposure or short domestic dwell times may not generate sufficient savings to offset FTZ operational costs.
- 2Apply for FTZ status through the Foreign-Trade Zones Board. There are two types of FTZ authorization: general-purpose zones (operated by a grantee, typically a port authority or economic development organization, with multiple users) and subzones (single-operator sites approved for specific manufacturing or processing activities). The application process involves filing with the FTZ Board, public comment periods, and review that typically takes 6-12 months. Application costs range from $10,000-$50,000 for subzones and are often handled by specialized FTZ consultants. Many companies opt to locate within an existing general-purpose zone rather than applying for a subzone, which is faster and less expensive.
- 3Implement the required CBP compliance procedures within the FTZ. These include: maintaining an FTZ operator bond, installing and operating an approved inventory control and recordkeeping system (ICRS), admitting goods through CBP-approved procedures (CF-214 or electronic equivalent), tracking all merchandise from admission through manipulation, manufacturing, destruction, or withdrawal, and filing weekly or periodic entries for goods entering U.S. commerce. CBP conducts periodic compliance reviews and can revoke FTZ privileges for inadequate recordkeeping. FTZ compliance software and consulting costs range from $50,000-$200,000 for initial setup and $30,000-$100,000 annually for ongoing operations.
- 4Optimize the inverted tariff benefit by electing privileged foreign status or zone-restricted status for imported components. When a manufacturer admits components to the FTZ, they can choose whether the goods will be classified under the component HTS code (privileged foreign status) or the finished product HTS code (zone-restricted status) when they eventually enter U.S. commerce. If the finished product has a lower duty rate than the components, electing zone-restricted status and paying the finished product rate produces the inverted tariff savings. This election is made at the time of admission and cannot be changed afterward.
- 5Calculate duty deferral savings based on the time goods remain in the FTZ before entering U.S. commerce. In a standard (non-FTZ) import, duty is payable within 10 working days of entry. In an FTZ, no duty is paid until the goods are withdrawn for domestic consumption, which may be weeks, months, or years later. The cash flow benefit equals the duty amount times the time deferred times the company cost of capital. For a company with $10 million in annual duty obligations and an average deferral of 90 days at 8% cost of capital, the annual deferral value is approximately $197,260. This is pure cash flow benefit with no additional cost beyond maintaining FTZ status.
- 6Maximize re-export duty elimination by routing goods destined for foreign markets through the FTZ. Goods that enter the FTZ and are subsequently exported never enter U.S. commerce, so no duty is assessed. This is particularly valuable for distribution operations that serve both domestic and international customers. A company that imports $100 million of goods and re-exports 30% saves the duty on $30 million ($900,000 at a 3% average rate, $7.5 million at a 25% Section 301 rate). Even waste and scrap generated in FTZ manufacturing operations can be destroyed duty-free rather than paying duty on the materials consumed.
- 7Track and report FTZ savings through an annual benefit analysis that quantifies each savings category (inverted tariff, deferral, elimination, MPF reduction) and compares total savings against FTZ operational costs (compliance staff, software, bond, CBP fees, consultant fees). This analysis supports the annual zone report required by the FTZ Board and provides management with a clear ROI picture. Most companies find that FTZ savings exceed operational costs by a factor of 3-10x once the program is mature, though the first year may have a lower return due to setup costs.
Auto assembly plants are among the largest FTZ beneficiaries because they import thousands of components at various duty rates (some as high as 8-10%) but the finished vehicle rate is only 2.5%. The inverted tariff benefit alone exceeds $10 million annually for a major assembly operation. Vehicles exported to other countries generate additional savings by avoiding all U.S. duty.
For an electronics distributor importing Chinese goods subject to 25% Section 301 tariffs, the FTZ re-export benefit is enormous. By admitting goods to the FTZ and exporting 40% to non-U.S. destinations, the company saves $8 million in Section 301 tariffs on goods that never enter U.S. commerce. This is often the single most compelling FTZ benefit for distribution operations handling tariff-affected goods.
Pharmaceutical companies benefit from inverted tariffs because many finished pharmaceutical products enter duty-free while the active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) imported from India or China carry 6.5% rates. The FTZ allows election of the finished drug classification at 0%, eliminating the 6.5% on all API imports. Additionally, manufacturing waste and quality reject batches are destroyed duty-free rather than generating a duty obligation on the raw materials consumed.
Automobile manufacturers operate some of the most valuable FTZ subzones in the country. BMW Manufacturing in Spartanburg, SC (Subzone 38A) imports thousands of components from global suppliers at various duty rates, assembles X-model SUVs, and exports approximately 60% of production to over 120 countries. The FTZ allows BMW to pay the 2.5% finished vehicle rate instead of higher component rates on domestically sold vehicles and to pay zero duty on the 60% that is exported. Estimated annual savings exceed $20 million. Similarly, Mercedes-Benz in Tuscaloosa, Volvo in Ridgeville, and Toyota in Georgetown all operate FTZ subzones.
Petroleum refineries account for approximately 60% of all merchandise handled in FTZs by value. Crude oil imports into FTZ refineries can be processed and the refined products (gasoline, diesel, jet fuel) exported without ever paying U.S. duty. For the portion sold domestically, the inverted tariff applies: crude oil duty rates (ranging from $0.0525 to $0.105 per barrel) can exceed the duty on certain refined products. The Port of Houston FTZ alone processes over $50 billion in petroleum products annually.
Distribution companies that serve both domestic and international markets use FTZs as regional distribution hubs. By admitting imported inventory to the FTZ, they defer duty on all merchandise until it is allocated to a domestic customer order. Goods allocated to international customers are shipped directly from the FTZ without ever incurring U.S. duty. This is particularly valuable for electronics and technology distributors handling Chinese-origin goods subject to 25% Section 301 tariffs, where the duty savings on re-exported merchandise can reach millions of dollars annually.
Pharmaceutical and medical device manufacturers leverage FTZ inverted tariffs extensively. Many active pharmaceutical ingredients and medical device components carry duty rates of 3-8%, while the finished pharmaceutical product or medical device may enter at a lower rate or duty-free. The FTZ also provides value by allowing duty-free destruction of manufacturing waste, quality rejects, and expired inventory, which in the pharmaceutical industry can represent 5-15% of input materials. A major pharmaceutical FTZ operation can save $2-10 million annually through the combination of inverted tariffs, waste elimination, and duty deferral.
Oil refineries represent a unique FTZ use case because of the complex tariff structure of petroleum products.
Crude oil imports face tariffs of $0.0525-$0.105 per barrel depending on API gravity, while many refined products have lower or zero duty rates. When crude oil is refined in an FTZ, the refiner can elect to pay the finished product duty rate on domestically consumed fuels and pay zero duty on exported fuels. Given that a single refinery may process 200,000-500,000 barrels per day, even small per-barrel savings translate to millions annually. However, certain petroleum products (notably gasoline) carry excise taxes that apply regardless of FTZ status.
FTZ-to-FTZ transfers allow merchandise to move between zones without entering U.S.
commerce and without triggering duty obligations. This is valuable for companies with multi-stage manufacturing processes at different locations: raw materials can be admitted to FTZ A, partially processed, transferred to FTZ B for final manufacturing, and then either exported (duty-free) or entered into U.S. commerce (at the finished product rate). Each transfer must be properly documented and both zones must maintain accurate inventory records tracking the movement.
E-commerce fulfillment operations are an emerging FTZ use case, though regulatory and practical challenges remain.
An e-commerce company could theoretically admit large shipments of imported goods to an FTZ warehouse, hold inventory duty-free until individual customer orders are received, and then withdraw only the sold items for domestic delivery. This provides duty deferral benefits and eliminates duty on returned merchandise or goods allocated to international orders. However, the high transaction volume and small individual withdrawals of e-commerce create compliance complexity that most FTZ operators find challenging to manage cost-effectively.
| Zone | Location | Primary Use | Annual Merchandise (est.) | Key Products |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FTZ 199 | Houston, TX | Petroleum refining | $50+ billion | Crude oil, refined fuels |
| FTZ 38 | Spartanburg, SC | Auto manufacturing | $10+ billion | BMW vehicles and parts |
| FTZ 281 | Miami, FL | Distribution | $8+ billion | Electronics, consumer goods |
| FTZ 7 | Mayaguez, PR | Pharmaceutical mfg | $5+ billion | Pharmaceuticals, medical devices |
| FTZ 49 | Newark, NJ | Distribution | $5+ billion | Various consumer goods |
| FTZ 84 | Houston, TX | Petrochemical | $4+ billion | Chemicals, plastics |
What is the difference between a general-purpose zone and a subzone?
General-purpose zones are established within or adjacent to a port of entry and are operated by a zone grantee (typically a port authority or economic development agency) for use by multiple companies. Companies can activate space within an existing zone relatively quickly. Subzones are special-purpose sites approved for a specific company's operations, typically at a manufacturing facility that cannot relocate to the general-purpose zone. Subzone applications require FTZ Board approval and take 6-12 months.
How long does it take to set up an FTZ operation?
Activating within an existing general-purpose zone takes approximately 3-6 months, including CBP approval of the activation, implementation of the inventory control system, and operator training. Applying for a new subzone takes 6-12 months for FTZ Board approval plus 3-6 months for CBP activation. Total setup costs range from $150,000-$500,000 for the first year, including application fees, consulting, software, physical modifications, and training.
Can FTZ status help with Section 301 tariffs on Chinese goods?
Yes, significantly. FTZs provide two key benefits for Section 301 tariff mitigation. First, goods imported into the FTZ and re-exported are never subject to Section 301 tariffs because they do not enter U.S. commerce. For distribution operations with significant re-export volumes, this can save millions. Second, manufacturers in FTZs who transform Chinese components into finished products can elect the finished product classification, which may not be on a Section 301 list, potentially reducing or eliminating the Section 301 tariff on the components.
What are the ongoing compliance requirements for FTZ operators?
FTZ operators must maintain an approved inventory control and recordkeeping system (ICRS), file weekly or periodic entries for goods entering U.S. commerce, maintain an FTZ operator bond, submit an annual zone report to the FTZ Board, comply with CBP regulations in 19 CFR Part 146, and pass periodic CBP compliance reviews. Record retention requirements are 5 years. Non-compliance can result in zone activation being revoked, penalties, and loss of all FTZ benefits.
Is an FTZ the same as a bonded warehouse?
No. While both allow duty deferral, FTZs offer several advantages over bonded warehouses. FTZ merchandise can be stored indefinitely (bonded warehouses have a 5-year limit). FTZ allows manufacturing and processing (bonded warehouses generally do not, though there are limited manipulation allowances). FTZ provides inverted tariff benefits and duty-free destruction of waste. FTZ weekly entries reduce MPF costs. However, bonded warehouses are simpler to establish and operate, making them suitable for pure storage and distribution operations without manufacturing.
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Before investing in an FTZ application, conduct a thorough savings analysis using at least 12 months of actual import data. Map every HTS code, duty rate, country of origin, and re-export flow. Many companies discover that 80% of potential savings come from a handful of product lines, and the analysis may reveal that a simpler mechanism (like duty drawback or FTA utilization) provides comparable savings at lower operational cost. The FTZ is most compelling when inverted tariff savings or re-export duty elimination alone exceed $500,000 annually.
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The very first Foreign Trade Zone in the United States was FTZ No. 1, established at the Stapleton Terminal on Staten Island, New York in 1937, just three years after the Foreign-Trade Zones Act was signed into law by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Today, Staten Island still hosts active FTZ operations, though the program has expanded to encompass every U.S. state, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands, with combined annual merchandise value exceeding $800 billion.