What a Customs Broker Service Actually Does for Canadian Importers
A customs broker service files CBSA entries, clears shipments, manages compliance, and posts security on your behalf when importing into Canada.
Most Canadian importers hire a customs broker service after their first shipment sits at the border for three days. By then, demurrage is mounting, the sales team is calling, and someone at the warehouse is asking for a CAD they’ve never heard of. We see it often: companies that assumed customs clearance was automatic, or that their freight forwarder handled it by default. Neither is true. Here’s what a customs broker service actually does, why you’re required to use one in most cases, and what to expect when you do.
Why CBSA Requires a Customs Broker Service for Most Importers
Under Section 32 of the Customs Act, every commercial shipment entering Canada must be reported and released through the Canada Border Services Agency. You can technically clear your own goods if you hold a business number and register as a self-filer with CBSA, but that requires bonding, software integration with the CBSA Assessment and Revenue Management system (CARM), and staff who know tariff classification and valuation rules. For shipments above the de minimis threshold of CAD $150 retail value, or any controlled goods regardless of value, mistakes trigger penalties starting at $250 per infraction and can result in seizure. Most mid-market importers bring in 10 to 200 shipments per year. At that volume, maintaining internal expertise and systems costs more than outsourcing to a licensed broker.
What We File: CAD Entry, Release, and Accounting
When your shipment arrives at a Canadian port or border crossing, the customs broker service completes three stages on your behalf. First is cargo reporting, usually handled by the carrier, but we monitor it to confirm CBSA has the advance commercial information. Second is release: we file a Form CAD (Canada Customs Coding Form) electronically, declaring the goods, their tariff classification under the Harmonized System, their customs value, the country of origin, and any trade agreement claims such as CUSMA. CBSA reviews the entry in real time and either releases the shipment immediately or refers it for examination. Across our client base, examination rates run between 2 and 8 percent depending on commodity and importer compliance history.
Third is accounting, which happens within five business days of release. We confirm duties and taxes owed, post payment through your CARM account, and transmit final documentation. If you’re claiming a preferential tariff under CUSMA or CETA, we verify you hold valid certificates of origin and flag any missing paperwork before CBSA does. Post-clearance audits can go back four years, and missing origin documents routinely cost importers 5 to 18 percent of shipment value in retroactive duties.
Compliance Work Beyond the CAD
A customs broker service also manages the regulatory layers that sit on top of tariff and tax filing. If you import food, you need a Safe Food for Canadians license and possibly an SFC license number on every entry. If you bring in electronics, we confirm IC or FCC equivalency. Textiles require country-of-origin labels that meet the Textile Labelling Act. We track these requirements in our client profiles and update them when regulations change, which happens two or three times per year for most sectors.
We also handle admissibility issues. CBSA can refuse entry for goods that don’t meet Canadian standards, lack proper marking, or arrive without the correct permits. A single missed CFIA import reference number can delay a perishable food shipment for 72 hours. We pre-clear these requirements during the documentation review phase, before the truck leaves the U.S. or the container is unloaded. Our compliance team maintains a library of over 400 import programs and cross-references them against your commodity codes and supplier countries.
What a Customs Broker Service Costs
Most Canadian brokers charge per entry, not by shipment value. Standard CAD filings for straightforward commercial goods run between $45 and $85 per entry at our brokerage, depending on mode and complexity. If the shipment requires a permit review, origin certificate validation, or manual tariff research, expect another $30 to $60. Examination attendance, if CBSA requests physical inspection, adds $120 to $200 depending on location and duration. We also hold a continuous security bond on your behalf, which CBSA requires under CARM. Bond premiums typically cost $400 to $900 annually for importers bringing in $250,000 to $2 million in duties and taxes per year.
Some brokers bundle services under monthly retainers, which makes sense if you clear more than 40 entries per month or need dedicated account management and trade advisory support. Retainers in the mid-market range from $1,200 to $3,500 per month and usually include access to our compliance team and HS classification tools at no additional charge.
How to Choose and Onboard a Broker
Look for a broker licensed with CBSA, which you can verify through the List of Licensed Brokers published on the CBSA website. Ask how they handle CARM client accounts, because as of May 2024 all financial security and payment runs through the importer’s CARM account, not the broker’s. We need delegated authority to file and pay on your behalf, which you grant through the CARM Client Portal. Onboarding takes about one business day once we receive your business number, proof of CARM registration, and a signed letter of authority.
You’ll also need to provide commercial invoices, packing lists, and any certificates of origin or permits for each shipment. We accept documents by email, portal upload, or EDI if your ERP supports it. Turnaround for routine entries is same-day if we receive complete documentation before 2 p.m. Eastern. Rushed clearances for time-sensitive freight can usually be completed within two hours if the shipment is already reported to CBSA and no exam is triggered.
When to Add Freight and Duty Recovery Services
Many of our brokerage clients eventually ask us to coordinate freight as well, because customs delays often stem from carrier issues like incorrect cargo manifests or late arrival notices. When we manage both the logistics and the clearance, we control timing end-to-end and can often release shipments the same day they cross the border. You can learn more about combined services on our freight forwarding page.
If you’re paying duties on goods that are later exported, destroyed, or used in manufacturing for export, you may be eligible for duty drawback or duty deferral programs. We file these claims under Section 113 of the Customs Act and typically recover 85 to 99 percent of duties paid, depending on the program. Details are on our duty relief page. For companies importing regularly, a compliance audit every 12 to 18 months catches classification errors, missed trade agreement opportunities, and valuation issues before CBSA does. We offer those reviews as part of our compliance services.
Get Started
If you’re importing into Canada and need a licensed customs broker service that speaks plainly and bills transparently, we’re happy to walk through your supply chain and show you exactly what we’d file and what it costs. Reach out through our contact page and we’ll typically have a quote and onboarding checklist back to you within one business day.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I clear my own commercial imports into Canada without hiring a customs broker?
Yes, under Section 32 of the Customs Act you can self-file if you hold a business number and register with CBSA. However, you'll need to integrate with CARM, post your own security bond, and handle tariff classification yourself. Errors trigger penalties starting at $250 per infraction, so most importers bringing in 10+ shipments annually find outsourcing more cost-effective.
What is the de minimis threshold for commercial imports into Canada?
The de minimis threshold is CAD $150 retail value. Shipments above this amount require formal customs clearance with full duty and tax accounting. Controlled goods—regardless of value—always require a Commercial Accounting Declaration and cannot use simplified processes.
How long does CBSA keep the right to audit my import entries?
CBSA can conduct post-clearance audits going back four years from the date of import. Missing certificates of origin or incorrect tariff classification discovered during audit routinely result in retroactive duty assessments of 5 to 18 percent of shipment value, plus interest and potential penalties.
What percentage of shipments does CBSA physically examine at the border?
Examination rates typically range from 2 to 8 percent depending on your commodity, country of origin, and compliance history. CBSA uses risk-scoring to select shipments for physical inspection. Clean compliance records and consistent documentation lower your examination probability over time.
How much does a customs broker charge per entry in Canada?
Standard CAD filings for straightforward commercial goods cost $45 to $85 per entry, depending on mode and complexity. Permit reviews or origin certificate validation add $30 to $60. CBSA examination attendance costs $120 to $200. High-volume importers often negotiate monthly retainers ranging from $1,200 to $3,500.
How long does customs clearance take for a routine commercial shipment in Canada?
Routine entries clear same-day if the broker receives complete documentation before 2 p.m. Eastern. Rushed clearances for time-sensitive freight can be completed within two hours if the shipment is already reported to CBSA and not selected for examination. Accounting must be finalized within five business days of release.
Do I need my own CARM account if I use a customs broker?
Yes. As of May 2024, all financial security and duty payment flows through the importer's own CARM Client Portal account, not the broker's. You grant your broker delegated authority to file and pay on your behalf through the portal. The broker cannot clear shipments without this delegation in place.
What documents does a customs broker need to clear my shipment?
You must provide a commercial invoice, packing list, and any applicable certificates of origin or import permits for each shipment. If claiming preferential tariff treatment under CUSMA or CETA, valid origin certificates are mandatory. Missing or incomplete documentation delays release and can trigger retroactive duty assessments during future audits.