POST-CLEARANCE AUDIT RECORDS VIETNAM IMPORTERS SHOULD KEEP

A record-keeping guide for importers who need to preserve customs declarations, valuation support, origin documents, and technical files after clearance.

Clearance is not the end of the file

After an import shipment is delivered, many companies move on to the next order and leave the document pack scattered across email, accounting folders, and broker messages. That creates risk if the company later needs to answer a customs question, support an origin claim, review duty payment, or repeat the same shipment. A post-clearance file should be organized while the details are still fresh.

The core file should include the customs declaration, commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading or airway bill, arrival notice, delivery order, duty and tax payment records, certificate of origin, inspection certificates, import license or specialized management documents if any, and broker communication. For machinery and engines, add catalog pages, specification sheets, nameplate photos, condition photos, serial numbers, and inspection notes.

Keep valuation and classification support

Customs questions often focus on value, HS code, origin, or description. The importer should keep the purchase contract, payment records, freight invoice, insurance evidence, assists or tooling charges if relevant, discount explanation, and supplier quotation. If the declared value differs from a catalog price or previous shipment, keep the reason.

For HS code support, store the review notes that explain function, material, capacity, and why the chosen code was used. For repeated products, keep a master file and add shipment-specific documents each time. This makes internal review easier and reduces dependency on one employee's memory.

Build a simple archive process

A useful archive does not need to be complicated. Create one folder per shipment using a consistent naming rule such as year, supplier, invoice number, and product. Inside the folder, keep final documents separate from drafts. Add a short summary file with shipment date, broker, HS code, duty rate, origin claim, inspection result, and open issues.

Good records help the importer answer questions quickly and improve future shipments. They also help management compare suppliers, freight routes, and total landed cost. For companies importing engines or machinery, the archive becomes a practical knowledge base for technical and customs decisions.

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