What Customs Brokerage Actually Covers in Canada (and What It Costs)
Customs brokerage handles CBSA entry filing, classification, duty calculation, and release for Canadian importers—here's what you're paying for and why.
Most importers come to us after their first shipment sits at the border for three days because nobody filed the paperwork correctly. Customs brokerage is the service that stands between your supplier’s loading dock and your warehouse door, handling the mandatory steps to clear goods through the Canada Border Services Agency. If you’re importing commercial goods into Canada and your shipment is worth more than $3,300 CAD, you legally need a customs broker or you need to be licensed yourself.
What Customs Brokerage Includes (and What It Doesn’t)
A broker’s core job is preparing and submitting the CBSA Form B3, the Canada Customs Coding Form that declares your goods, their classification, origin, and value. We determine the correct Harmonized System (HS) code—usually an eight- or ten-digit tariff classification—calculate applicable duties and GST, claim any tariff relief under trade agreements like CUSMA or CPTPP, and transmit everything electronically through the CBSA Assessment and Revenue Management system.
We also handle release, which is separate from accounting. Release means CBSA gives permission for the carrier to deliver your goods. Accounting means final duty and tax calculations are submitted and payment is arranged, usually within five business days of release. Both steps are mandatory under Section 32 of the Customs Act.
What brokerage does not typically include: freight movement, warehousing, or compliance audits. Those are separate services. We work with the shipment once it arrives at the border or first point of entry, not before.
How the Process Works from Your Perspective
Your supplier ships goods. The carrier (truck, air, ocean line) notifies us, usually via electronic manifest. We receive commercial documents from you or your supplier—commercial invoice, packing list, any certificates of origin, permits, or lab reports depending on what you’re bringing in. We review for completeness, classify the goods using the HS system, determine origin, and calculate duties.
For a straightforward shipment—say, a pallet of industrial fasteners from the U.S.—this takes 30 to 90 minutes from document receipt to B3 transmission. For controlled goods (food, pharmaceuticals, electronics subject to certification), add a day or two if permits or prior approvals are missing.
CBSA reviews the entry. Most shipments clear immediately under the Release Prior to Payment (RPP) program if the importer has a clean compliance record. Roughly 5 to 8 percent get selected for examination, which adds one to three days depending on whether it’s documentary or physical. Once released, the carrier delivers and we submit final accounting. You pay us; we remit duties and taxes to CBSA on your behalf.
What You Pay and Why Pricing Varies
Brokerage fees in Canada typically range from $65 to $175 per entry for routine shipments, depending on commodity complexity, shipment value, and whether any preferential tariff claims or permits are involved. Volume importers often negotiate monthly retainers or per-entry discounts.
You also pay disbursements: the actual duties, GST, and any applicable excise taxes. If your shipment requires a CFIA import permit or ISED certification, expect separate government fees (usually $10 to $50 per permit).
Why the range? A B3 for a $5,000 shipment of U.S.-origin hand tools under CUSMA—zero duty, straightforward classification—is simpler than a $50,000 mixed-commodity shipment from China with 15 line items, certificate of origin issues, and antidumping considerations. The latter requires more research, potentially a binding advance ruling request, and careful documentation under D-Memoranda like D11-4-16 (CUSMA verification). We quote based on effort, not just shipment value.
Common Problems and How Brokers Prevent Them
Misclassification is the most frequent error we see when importers self-file or use inexperienced brokers. A single digit wrong in your HS code can mean the difference between 0 percent duty under a free trade agreement and 6.5 percent MFN rate, or worse, trigger safeguard measures or antidumping duties. We maintain classification tools and regularly consult CBSA rulings to get it right the first time.
Origin documentation is another minefield. CUSMA requires specific certifications and record-keeping. If CBSA audits you three years later and you cannot prove U.S. origin, you pay back duties plus interest, sometimes penalties. Our compliance service helps importers build audit-proof records, but basic origin validation happens at every entry.
Valuation disputes arise when declared customs value doesn’t match CBSA’s interpretation of transaction value under Valuation for Duty Regulations. Related-party transactions, royalties, assists, and freight allocation all affect dutiable value. We flag these during the entry process, not after an audit notice arrives.
When You Need a Broker Versus When You Don’t
Legally, you can apply for your own Business Number with a RM (importer) account suffix and file your own entries. The threshold question is volume and complexity. If you’re importing 50 shipments a year across multiple tariff headings, with varying origins and trade agreement claims, the cost of mistakes and staff time usually exceeds broker fees.
We work with clients importing two containers a month and clients importing two shipments a year. The common thread is they want reliable brokerage service without the overhead of hiring a dedicated trade compliance person. For many mid-market importers, that tipping point is around 15 to 20 shipments annually.
If you also need help moving the freight or claiming duty drawback on re-exported or destroyed goods, bundling services with one provider simplifies coordination. Our freight service integrates with brokerage so document handoff is automatic and you have one point of contact from origin to release.
Working with CanFlow
We’re a licensed customs broker operating under CBSA oversight, bonded and insured. Our team handles everything from the initial HS classification review to post-clearance amendments if something needs correction. You get direct access to the broker who works your file, not a ticket queue.
If you’re evaluating brokers or wondering whether your current provider is doing the job properly, we’re happy to review a few recent entries and talk through what you should expect. Get in touch and we’ll walk you through how it works for your specific products and supply chain.