One of the most common misconceptions in customs law is the belief that every shipment stopped by CBP has been seized.

In reality, that is often not true.

Importers, exporters, distributors, and business owners frequently use terms such as:

  • hold,
  • detention,
  • inspection,
  • examination,
  • refusal,
  • and seizure

interchangeably.

Federal agencies do not.

From CBP’s perspective, these actions can represent very different stages of the review process.

That distinction matters because the available options, deadlines, risks, and strategies often depend entirely on what stage the shipment has actually reached.

Many businesses contact us and say:

“Customs seized my shipment.”

After reviewing the facts, we discover that the shipment is merely:

  • on hold,
  • under examination,
  • awaiting documentation,
  • undergoing agency review,
  • or temporarily detained.

Other times, a formal seizure has already occurred and the forfeiture process is underway.

Those are very different situations.

Understanding the difference is often one of the first steps toward understanding what options may exist moving forward.

For a broader overview of customs seizure matters generally, visit:

Many Businesses Use the Terms Interchangeably. CBP Does Not.

From a business perspective, the distinction often seems unimportant.

The shipment is not moving.

The inventory is unavailable.

The customer is waiting.

The transaction has been disrupted.

As a result, many businesses naturally describe every interruption as a seizure.

Federal agencies take a more precise approach.

For example, a shipment may be:

  • placed on hold,
  • selected for examination,
  • detained pending review,
  • referred to another agency,
  • excluded,
  • refused,
  • or formally seized.

Each action carries different consequences.

A detention does not automatically mean CBP believes a violation occurred.

A seizure generally indicates a much more serious development.

This distinction often determines:

  • what rights exist,
  • what deadlines apply,
  • what documentation may be needed,
  • and what strategy makes the most sense moving forward.

One of the most important things businesses can do early in the process is accurately determine what has actually happened to the shipment.

Many companies become unnecessarily alarmed because they assume a seizure has occurred when it has not.

Others underestimate the seriousness of the situation because they believe the shipment is merely delayed when a formal seizure has already taken place.

Understanding the terminology is often the first step toward understanding the case itself.

What Is a CBP Detention?

A detention is generally a temporary action.

The shipment is stopped while federal agencies gather information, conduct inspections, review documentation, or evaluate regulatory issues.

Importantly, a detention does not automatically mean that CBP has concluded a violation occurred.

In many situations, a detention simply means the government wants additional information before making a decision.

Federal agencies may review:

  • invoices,
  • product descriptions,
  • classifications,
  • licenses,
  • certifications,
  • declarations,
  • country-of-origin information,
  • or other supporting documentation.

Many detentions arise from relatively routine issues such as:

  • documentation questions,
  • classification reviews,
  • agency referrals,
  • labeling concerns,
  • inspection requirements,
  • or requests for additional information.

This is one reason a detention should not automatically be viewed as a seizure.

The government’s review may ultimately result in:

  • release of the shipment,
  • additional requests for information,
  • agency action,
  • refusal,
  • exclusion,
  • or seizure.

At the detention stage, the outcome is often still being determined.

For many businesses, this distinction is critically important.

A detention often represents an opportunity to provide information and resolve concerns before more serious enforcement action occurs.

What Is a CBP Seizure?

A seizure is generally a much more significant event.

Unlike a detention, a seizure typically means the government has taken possession of the property and initiated the forfeiture process.

At this stage, federal agencies have generally concluded that there is a legal basis for taking the property rather than merely reviewing it.

The shipment is no longer simply being held for inspection.

Instead, the government is asserting authority over the property itself.

Formal seizures often trigger:

  • seizure notices,
  • forfeiture procedures,
  • response deadlines,
  • petition rights,
  • and other procedural requirements.

This is one reason businesses should not treat a seizure the same way they treat a detention.

The available options often become much more time-sensitive.

Once a seizure occurs, recipients frequently receive documentation explaining:

  • why the property was seized,
  • what deadlines apply,
  • what procedural options may be available,
  • and how the government intends to proceed.

The distinction is important because many businesses do not realize they have crossed from an inspection or review process into a forfeiture process.

That shift often changes the entire strategic landscape of the case.

The Difference Between a Hold, Detention, Examination, and Seizure

One of the biggest sources of confusion in customs matters is that businesses often use several very different terms to describe the same event.

A shipment stops moving.

The importer receives little information.

The shipment does not clear customs.

From the business’s perspective, it can feel like the shipment has been seized.

From CBP’s perspective, something very different may be happening.

Understanding the distinction between a hold, examination, detention, and seizure is often critical because each stage carries different consequences and different strategic considerations.

Status What It Usually Means Relative Severity
Hold Shipment temporarily paused pending review Low
Examination Physical inspection of goods or documentation Low to Moderate
Detention Shipment stopped while CBP or another agency evaluates compliance issues Moderate
Seizure Government takes possession of property and begins forfeiture process High

Hold

A hold is often the earliest stage of review.

The shipment may be paused because:

  • documentation is being reviewed,
  • an inspection is pending,
  • another agency needs to evaluate the shipment,
  • or additional information is required.

Many holds are resolved without further enforcement action.

A hold does not necessarily indicate that CBP believes a violation occurred.

Examination

An examination typically involves a physical inspection of the shipment.

Federal agencies may inspect:

  • the products themselves,
  • packaging,
  • labels,
  • documentation,
  • or other aspects of the shipment.

Examinations are relatively common.

Many examinations result in the shipment being released after review.

An examination by itself does not necessarily indicate that CBP believes the shipment should be seized.

Detention

A detention generally reflects a more significant level of concern.

The shipment is actively being stopped while federal agencies determine whether additional action is necessary.

At this stage, investigators may review:

  • invoices,
  • classifications,
  • declarations,
  • certifications,
  • licenses,
  • country-of-origin information,
  • and other compliance-related materials.

Importantly, a detention still does not automatically mean the shipment will be seized.

Many detentions ultimately result in release after the government’s concerns are addressed.

Others do not.

Seizure

A seizure is generally the most serious stage.

At this point, the government has moved beyond review and has asserted authority over the property itself.

The shipment is no longer simply awaiting inspection or additional documentation.

Instead, the government is pursuing the forfeiture process.

Formal seizure notices, deadlines, petitions, and other procedural rights often become relevant at this stage.

Why Businesses Frequently Misunderstand the Process

Part of the confusion comes from the fact that every stage can feel similar from the business’s perspective.

The shipment is unavailable.

The inventory is delayed.

Customers may be waiting.

Revenue may be affected.

As a result, businesses often describe every interruption as a seizure even when the shipment is actually:

  • on hold,
  • under examination,
  • or merely detained.

The distinction matters because the available options often depend entirely on where the shipment sits within the process.

A shipment on hold may require one strategy.

A detained shipment may require another.

A seized shipment may require a completely different approach.

That is one reason accurately identifying the procedural posture of the shipment is often one of the first and most important steps in evaluating any customs matter.

Why the Difference Matters

For many businesses, the distinction between a detention and a seizure may sound like a technical legal issue.

In practice, it can significantly affect:

  • available options,
  • response deadlines,
  • business risk,
  • compliance obligations,
  • and overall strategy.

This is one reason correctly identifying the procedural posture of a shipment is often one of the first steps in evaluating a customs matter.

A business that believes a shipment has been seized may unnecessarily assume the situation is far worse than it actually is.

Conversely, a business that assumes a shipment is merely delayed may fail to appreciate that a formal forfeiture process has already begun.

Both mistakes can create problems.

Different Stages Require Different Responses

A shipment that is merely on hold may require:

  • additional documentation,
  • clarification,
  • agency review,
  • or patience.

A detained shipment may require a more active response focused on addressing the government’s concerns.

A seized shipment often triggers entirely different considerations involving:

  • notices,
  • deadlines,
  • petitions,
  • forfeiture procedures,
  • and procedural rights.

The appropriate strategy frequently depends on understanding exactly where the shipment sits within the process.

Deadlines Become More Important as the Process Advances

One of the biggest differences between a detention and a seizure involves deadlines.

Many holds and examinations do not immediately trigger formal response obligations.

Once a seizure occurs, however, businesses often encounter:

  • response deadlines,
  • procedural elections,
  • petition deadlines,
  • and forfeiture-related requirements.

Missing those deadlines can significantly affect available options later.

This is one reason it is important not to assume that every shipment interruption is the same.

The consequences often vary substantially depending on the stage of the process.

Business Consequences Can Escalate Quickly

The practical impact of a shipment being delayed is often very different from the impact of a shipment being seized.

A detention may create:

  • temporary delays,
  • customer frustrations,
  • scheduling issues,
  • and additional compliance work.

A seizure may create:

  • inventory loss,
  • contractual disputes,
  • customer issues,
  • financial exposure,
  • regulatory concerns,
  • and broader compliance questions.

The further a matter progresses along the enforcement spectrum, the greater the potential business consequences often become.

Understanding the Stage Often Determines the Strategy

One of the most common mistakes businesses make is focusing immediately on legal arguments before fully understanding what has actually happened.

The first question is often not:

“How do we fight this?”

The first question is:

“What stage are we in?”

Only after that question is answered can businesses accurately evaluate:

  • risk,
  • documentation needs,
  • compliance issues,
  • response options,
  • and potential next steps.

That is why the distinction between a hold, examination, detention, and seizure is far more than a matter of terminology.

In many situations, it becomes one of the most important facts in the entire case.

What Happens During a Detention?

Many businesses hear the word “detention” and immediately assume enforcement action is inevitable.

In reality, detentions often function as an information-gathering stage.

Federal agencies may be attempting to determine whether concerns exist and, if so, whether those concerns can be resolved through documentation and review.

During a detention, CBP or another federal agency may request:

  • invoices,
  • product descriptions,
  • certifications,
  • licenses,
  • country-of-origin documentation,
  • laboratory reports,
  • compliance records,
  • or other supporting materials.

The government is often attempting to answer a relatively simple question:

“Can this shipment be released?”

That review process may involve:

  • customs officials,
  • FDA personnel,
  • agricultural inspectors,
  • export-control authorities,
  • or other federal agencies depending on the product involved.

Importantly, many detentions never become seizures.

That is a critical concept that businesses often overlook.

The existence of a detention does not automatically mean the government has concluded a violation occurred.

Instead, the detention frequently represents an opportunity to provide information, resolve concerns, and allow the review process to move forward.

Some detentions are resolved relatively quickly.

Others become more complicated because of:

  • missing documentation,
  • unresolved compliance questions,
  • agency concerns,
  • classification disputes,
  • licensing issues,
  • or regulatory restrictions.

The government’s focus during this stage is often on understanding the shipment and evaluating whether it satisfies applicable requirements.

For many businesses, the quality of the documentation provided during a detention becomes one of the most important factors affecting what happens nextWhat Happens After a Seizure?