For U.S. importers searching for sustainable, long-term duty savings, two strategies dominate the conversation: The First Sale Rule and the De Minimis exemption (Section 321). Both can significantly reduce landed costs, but they work in completely different ways, come with unique compliance obligations, and offer savings in different supply-chain scenarios.
This guide breaks down how each strategy works, when it applies, and when one may be more advantageous than the other—so importers can build a resilient, post–De Minimis duty-savings plan.
1. Understanding the First Sale Rule
What It Is
The First Sale Rule (FSR) allows importers to declare the price paid at the first sale in a multi-tiered transaction—typically the manufacturer-to-middleman sale—rather than the final sale to the U.S. importer.
In other words:
FSR lets you pay duties based on the lowest transaction value in the supply chain.
What’s Required
FSR is not a loophole; CBP strictly enforces documentation and transaction transparency. To use it, importers must prove:
- A bona fide sale occurred between the manufacturer and the middleman
- The goods were clearly destined for the U.S. at the time of the first sale
- Complete, auditable documentation exists, including:
- Production records
- Proof of payment
- Purchase orders
- Contracts
- Bills of materials
- Proof of packing and shipping
- Production records
- All related parties (if applicable) meet arm’s-length pricing tests
Who Benefits Most
FSR is ideal for:
- Importers with high-value goods
- Complex multi-tiered supply chains
- Large shipment volumes
- Importers looking for consistent, long-term duty savings
- Goods with higher duty rates (4–30%)
Limitations
- Documentation heavy
- Works only when multiple sales exist
- Requires supply-chain cooperation
- Not suitable when duties are already low or shipments are low value
2. Understanding De Minimis (Section 321)
What It Is
Section 321 allows low-value shipments—valued at $800 USD or less—to enter the U.S. duty-free and tax-free, with minimal paperwork.
This is the foundation for many direct-to-consumer (D2C) strategies.
Why It’s Popular
- No duties
- No taxes
- No formal entry
- Fast processing
- Lower brokerage fees
- Attractive for high-volume e-commerce
Who Benefits Most
De Minimis is ideal for:
- E-commerce brands shipping direct to U.S. consumers
- Importers with fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG)
- Products with high margins and low unit values
- Businesses operating from nearshore fulfillment hubs (Canada/Mexico)
Limitations
- $800 per shipment threshold
- Increasing CBP scrutiny on “De Minimis abuse”
- Risk of rule tightening in coming years
- Not suitable for:
- B2B shipments
- High-value goods
- Bulk imports
- B2B shipments
- Requires very tight compliance around:
- Accurate valuations
- Manifest data
- Shipment frequency
- Country-of-origin documentation
- Accurate valuations
3. Key Differences at a Glance
| Feature | First Sale Rule | De Minimis (Section 321) |
| Duty Savings Mechanism | Lower declared value | Duty-free entry |
| Shipment Value | Any value | ≤ $800 |
| Ideal For | High-value, B2B | Low-value, D2C |
| Documentation | Heavy, transaction-based | Light but must be accurate |
| Best For | Long-term duty reduction | Fast e-commerce fulfillment |
| Risk | Audit-heavy | Potential regulatory tightening |
| Supply Chain | Multi-tiered | Direct fulfillment |
4. When the First Sale Rule Makes More Sense
Use FSR when:
✔ You ship higher-value products
Furniture, electronics, machinery, industrial parts, apparel, etc.
✔ Your products face higher tariff rates
FSR savings multiply when duties are 8–30%.
✔ You have multiple entities in your supply chain
Manufacturer → Trading Company → Importer
FSR converts these multi-tiered transactions into savings.
✔ You want predictable, long-term duty reduction
FSR remains stable even if the De Minimis rules tighten.
5. When De Minimis Makes More Sense
Use De Minimis when:
✔ You ship low-value goods directly to consumers
Fashion accessories, low-cost electronics, supplements, cosmetics.
✔ You operate with high volume
Section 321 allows brands to scale rapidly.
✔ You want low friction, low paperwork
No formal entry means reduced broker costs and faster deliveries.
✔ You rely on nearshore distribution
Mexico/Canada fulfillment centers often optimize De Minimis routing.
6. Cases Where Both Strategies Can Work Together
Forward-thinking importers often combine both:
Scenario 1: Dual-Channel Retail (D2C + Wholesale)
- Use De Minimis for consumer orders.
- Use FSR for bulk shipments to U.S. warehouses or retailers.
Scenario 2: Mixed-Value Product Lines
- Low-value SKUs flow through Section 321
- High-value SKUs use First Sale Rule optimization
Scenario 3: Testing New Markets
Importers test product demand using:
- Beta shipments under De Minimis, and
- FSR for bulk restocking once demand stabilizes
7. Which Strategy Saves the Most Money?
It depends on the business model:
De Minimis
- Best per-unit savings for low-value consumer shipments
- Near-zero landed costs
- Extremely attractive for large e-commerce brands
First Sale Rule
- Best percentage savings on high-duty goods
- Often reduces dutiable value by 8–25%
- Ideal for B2B and bulk imports
8. The Future of Both Strategies
De Minimis is under pressure.
CBP, lawmakers, and major U.S. retailers have called for tightening the rule. Possible future changes may include:
- Lowering the $800 threshold
- More restrictions for certain countries
- Higher data transparency requirements
- Limits on daily shipment volumes
The First Sale Rule remains steady.
It is well-established, audit-tested, and baked into trade compliance law.
Smart importers are already building plans that rely less on De Minimis and more on sustainable strategies like FSR.
Conclusion
Both the First Sale Rule and De Minimis offer meaningful duty savings—but they apply to totally different shipping models.
Use De Minimis when:
- Unit value is low
- Shipments are direct to consumers
- You need fast, low-cost fulfillment
Use the First Sale Rule when:
- Your goods have higher values
- You operate multi-tier supply chains
- You need reliable, long-term duty savings
- You want to future-proof your compliance strategy
Most importers discover that the best results come from using both methods, each applied strategically to different parts of their supply chain.