CBSA Portal Delay Update 20: What a Six-Hour Outbound Lag Actually Means for Your Release Timeline
CBSA's latest processing delay notice—three to five hours inbound, six to eight outbound—looks routine until you map it to your actual filing and cargo control workflow. Here's where the lag matters and where it doesn't.
The Numbers
As of 14:00 ET on April 29, CBSA posted Update 20 to the portal delay notice that’s been running since April 25. Inbound EDI and eManifest portal messages are delayed three to five hours. Outbound acknowledgements—your PARS release notifications, your CAD transaction receipts, your ACI acceptance codes—are running six to eight hours behind.
Most of these notices are noise. This one isn’t, because the outbound lag sits right in the window where a Friday afternoon filing turns into a Monday morning release, and where a same-day release prior to payment becomes a next-day truck roll.
Where the Outbound Delay Hits
If you file a PARS release request at 10:00 on a normal day, you usually see the RNS (Release Notification System) acceptance or exam flag within twenty minutes. With a six-hour outbound delay, that same filing doesn’t generate a usable release number until 16:00. Your drayage pickup window just closed.
For CAD filings under release prior to payment, the delay doesn’t stop the goods—CBSA already cleared them at the border. But if you’re waiting on the CAD transaction number to close out your cargo control or to feed your ERP reconciliation, you’re sitting on an open file until the acknowledgement finally posts. That’s fine if your month-end close is two weeks out. It’s a problem if you’re trying to run K84 reconciliation on the 30th and half your April CADs are still showing as pending.
eManifest ACI submissions are less sensitive because the inbound acceptance happens before the truck crosses. A three-hour inbound delay means your ACI filed at 06:00 gets accepted at 09:00, and the carrier still makes the 11:00 border appointment. The outbound delay only matters if CBSA kicks back a correction request and you need to refile—now you’re waiting sixteen hours round-trip for a message that should take thirty minutes.
The Friday Afternoon Math
File a PARS release at 15:00 on Friday. Normal turnaround puts the RNS code in your inbox by 15:20. With an eight-hour outbound delay, you’re looking at 23:00. Nobody’s checking email at 23:00 on a Friday. The driver shows up Monday at 07:00, and you’re explaining why the release wasn’t printed until you saw the weekend backlog clear Sunday night.
This is why we’ve been telling clients to move Friday filings to Thursday wherever the cargo control allows it. If the container hit the terminal Wednesday and you have until Monday to pull it, file Thursday at 14:00 instead of Friday at 15:00. You absorb the delay on Thursday evening instead of losing the weekend.
What CBSA Is Actually Processing
The notice says CBSA is receiving and processing inbound data. That’s accurate. The queue isn’t rejecting your transmissions. It’s storing them, running them through the selectivity engine, writing the results to the outbound message file, and then hitting a bottleneck when it tries to send the acknowledgement back to your FIRMS code mailbox.
The delay is on the outbound messaging infrastructure, not the release decision itself. If your shipment gets selected for examination, the exam flag is already sitting in the inspector’s queue even if you haven’t seen the message yet. If it’s released, the RNS code is already written even if your software hasn’t pulled it. The lag is in the handshake, not the actual border decision.
That distinction matters because it means you can call the port and ask for a manual release confirmation if you need to dispatch a truck right now. The release exists. You just don’t have the electronic proof yet. Most brokers don’t want to run manual lookups as standard practice, but when the portal is eight hours behind and your client has a same-day cross-dock cutoff, it’s the faster path.
Adjusting the Filing Window
If you’re used to filing PARS releases the morning of pickup, you now need to file the afternoon before. If you’re filing CADs same-day after release, you’re fine—the payment and duty calculation aren’t affected by the acknowledgement lag. If you’re filing drawback claims or amendments and you need the transaction receipt to prove the original CAD posted, you’re waiting an extra business day for the paperwork to line up.
Our brokerage team moved our internal cutoff two hours earlier starting April 26. Anything that would normally file after 15:00 now files before 13:00 if the client needs same-day certainty. That absorbs most of the six-hour outbound delay and keeps the release notifications landing before end of business.
For clients running their own CARM portal filings—NRI setups, direct-release programs—the adjustment is harder because you don’t have a broker batching your queue. If you’re filing one-off as containers arrive, you’re eating the full delay every time. The workaround is the same: file earlier, or accept that your confirmation arrives the next morning.
The Drayage Knock-On
Pickup windows at the Port of Montreal are tight. If your sufferance warehouse is coordinating a release and transfer in the same day, the six-hour acknowledgement lag turns a planned pull into a detention charge because the driver can’t pick up without the RNS code in hand.
Most terminals won’t release a container on a verbal confirmation. They want the printed release or the electronic gate pass. If CBSA’s outbound message is delayed and your release code doesn’t print until after the last dispatch window, the container sits another day and you’re paying dwell. That’s not a CBSA penalty, it’s just the cost of the bottleneck.
We’ve been coordinating with FENGYE’s Montreal operation to move inbound transfer pickups to the morning slot wherever possible, so even if the release acknowledgement is delayed overnight, the container still makes the warehouse dock before noon. It’s a scheduling adjustment, not a policy fix, but it keeps the per-diem clock from running up.
When the Delay Clears
CBSA hasn’t posted an estimated resolution date. Update 20 says they’re continuing to process the backlog. That usually means the queue is clearing in real time but new messages are still entering at a rate that keeps the delay stable. Inbound processing at three to five hours is manageable. Outbound at six to eight is the edge of operational tolerance.
If the delay drops back below four hours outbound, most of the friction disappears. You’re back to same-day filings generating same-day releases. If it stretches past ten hours, you’re effectively running on a next-business-day acknowledgement cycle for everything, and the workaround becomes the standard practice.
Where This Leaves You
File earlier. Expect acknowledgements the next morning if you’re submitting after 14:00. Don’t wait until Friday afternoon unless the cargo hasn’t physically arrived yet. If you’re running your own CARM portal submissions, build the lag into your internal SLA so your operations team isn’t waiting on a message that won’t arrive until tomorrow.
The delay is real, but it’s a timing issue, not a release blockage. CBSA is still clearing goods. You’re just not hearing about it for six hours. We’ve been running our queue two hours ahead of the normal window since the notice posted, and it’s absorbed most of the client-facing impact. If your broker isn’t adjusting the filing cutoff, ask why. Come talk to us if the answer doesn’t make sense.
Source: CSCB