Denied Party Screening: An Essential Protocol for Exporters

November 6, 2025
 By Jacob Lee
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Denied Party Screening: An Essential Protocol for Exporters
Last Modified: November 6, 2025
Screening parties prior to exporting is a difficult process. The slightest mistake can lead to severe penalties. Keep yourself out of trouble by learning how to screen each party carefully.

US exporters must approach their transactions carefully. There are entities the US government has deemed as a threat to the country’s national security. If you conduct business with one of these groups, you could find yourself facing steep penalties. At Cargo Export USA, our export consultants have helped numerous customers with denied party screening. We’ll use this experience to provide you with the information you’ll need to maintain compliance.

Key takeaways: 

  • Denied parties are organizations, companies, or individuals with whom exporters are forbidden to conduct business. 
  • When you perform denied parties screening, you’ll need to assess each individual you interact with in an international transaction on a frequent basis. 
  • There are numerous denied parties lists you need to check can all be found in the Consolidated Screening List (CSL). 
  • Shipping exports to a denied party can result in fines and imprisonment.

Now that we have the basics out of the way, let’s go over the specifics of denied parties screening. 

What Are Denied Parties?

Denied parties are individuals and entities that are denied export privileges. This means exporters are forbidden from conducting business with denied parties. Individuals and entities become denied parties due to the activities they engage in. 

This includes:

  • Terrorism
  • Illicit weapons proliferation
  • Drug trafficking
  • Financial crimes
  • Human rights abuses

Due to the nature of these activities, it’s essential that exporters carefully screen the parties they work with in their transactions. We’ll show you who to screen and when in the following sections.

Who To Screen

All entities you conduct business with as an exporter could qualify as a denied person, which means you’ll have to screen each one carefully.

This includes:

  • Customers
  • Freight forwarders
  • End users
  • Customs brokers
  • Service providers

Thoroughly screening each member in the supply chain ensures logistical reliability and compliance with government export regulations

When To Screen

All the partners you conduct business with during an international transaction should be screened at the first point of contact and prior to all future transactions. 

Denied party lists are frequently updated. Partners you’ve exported with or customers you’ve sold to for years could be flagged at a moment’s notice. You could end up missing vital updates if you’re not performing routine checks of each party. 

Screening on an ongoing basis ensures your partners are cleared with the government. 

Denied Party Lists You Should Check

Denied parties can be found in various lists that are maintained by different government and international agencies. Fortunately, you can access all of them in the Consolidated Screening List (CSL). We’ll explain how this list works in the following section. 

Consolidated Screening List

The Consolidated Screening List (CSL) aggregates 13 export screening lists from the Departments of Commerce, State, and Treasury.  

This includes:

  • Denied Persons
  • Unverified List
  • Entity
  • Military End User (MEU)
  • Nonproliferation Sanctions
  • AECA Debarred
  • Specially Designated Nationals
  • Foreign Sanctions Evaders
  • Sectoral Sanctions Identifications (SSI)
  • Correspondent Account or Payable-Through Account Sanctions (CAPTA)
  • Non-SDN Menu-Based Sanctions (NS-MBS)
  • Non-SDN Chinese Military-Industrial Complex Companies (CMIC)
  • Palestinian Legislative List

While you can check each of these lists separately, the CSL allows you to access them with a single search. There are also a variety of tools that will make screening much easier for you. 

This includes:

  • CSL Search Engine
  • CSL Downloadable Files
  • CSL Application Programming Interface (API)

All CSL tools are updated every day at 5:00 AM EST/EDT. Updates to the aggregated lists are pulled from the federal agencies responsible for their maintenance.

Therefore, it’s the responsibility of the Departments of Commerce, State, and Treasury to update their files to ensure the CSL provides accurate information. 

How To Respond to a Denied Party Screening Match

If you get a denied party match during the screening process, you’ll need to take corrective measures. 

Here’s what you’ll need to do:

  1. Pause Shipment
  2. Perform Due Diligence
  3. Make a Formal Decision
  4. Maintain Records

You should immediately halt your export when you get a denied party match. Otherwise, you can get yourself into some serious trouble with the US government. 

There’s always the possibility that you could end up with a false positive. To ensure your entity is actually a denied party, you should conduct a thorough investigation into their identity.

If it’s a company that got flagged, determine who owns or controls it. Check the end-use and end-user if you received a match for your customers. 

It’s a good idea to address government authorities that oversee the denied party regulations during your investigation. They have plenty of useful information that will be useful. Cargo Export USA also has consultants that can provide their assistance. 

After your research, you’ll need to make a decision. If your investigation leads you to conclude that your match is a denied party, you’ll need to cancel the transaction immediately and make other arrangements. 

In the case of false positives, you can proceed with the exporting process. Make sure to document every denied party screening run you perform. This includes the results of each test and the decisions you made based on them. 

Penalties for Noncompliance with Denied Parties Screening

Exporting goods with or to a denied party can result in criminal and civil penalties. The type of punishment can vary based on the regulation broken by the exporter. There are three specific regulations that dictate the repercussions of exporting to denied parties. 

We’ve provided a graphic that shows the parent agency and sub agency that oversee each regulation.

The graphic shows the parent agency, sub agency and the export regulations they oversee. For the first row, the parent agency is the US Department of Commerce, the sub agency is the Bureau of Industry and Security, and the export regulation they over see is the Export Administration Regulations. For the second row, the parent agency is the  US Department of State, the sub agency is the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, and the export regulation they oversee is the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). For the third row, the parent agency is the Department of Treasury, the sub agency is the Office of Foreign Assets Control, and the export regulation they oversee is the OFAC Sanction Rules.

Now that we have that covered, we’ve provided a graphic that shows the criminal and civil penalties under each regulation for exporting to a denied party. 

The graphic shows the criminal and civil penalties for violating EAR, ITAR, and OFAC Sanction Rules. The criminal penalties for EAR are imprisonment for up to 20 years and a fine up to $1 million per violation. The civil penalty for violating EAR is a fine up to $373,474 or a fine twice the value of the transaction, which ever is greater. The criminal penalty for violating ITAR is imprisonment of up to 20 years and a fine up to $1 million per violation. The civil penalty for violating ITAR is a fine up to $1 million per violation. The criminal penalties for violating OFAC Sanction rules is imprisonment up to 20 years and a fine up to $1 million per violation. The civil penalty for violating OFAC sanction rules is a fine up to $250,000 per violation.

Provided by BIS, DDTC, and OFAC

In addition to criminal and civil penalties, violating these regulations can result in the denial of your export privileges and the revocation of licenses or other export authorizations. 

Related: ITAR vs Ear Compliance

Get the Help You Need from Cargo Export USA

If you need further assistance, you can reach our team by calling (866) 485-4892 or navigating to our contact page. We have plenty of resources that we can provide to ensure you enjoy a smooth exporting experience.  

You can also get help from Linda D., our export consultant. She has decades of experience in the industry, which means she’ll be able to provide you with insightful advice to ensure your endeavors are a success. 

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