What Are U.S. Export Controls and Regulations?

by | Nov 17, 2025 | Compliance

U.S. export controls are laws and regulations that govern how goods, software, technology, and services can be shared with foreign countries and foreign persons.
What Are U.S. Export Controls and Regulations

Export Controls and Regulations

U.S. Export Controls and Regulations exist to protect our national security, foreign policy interests, and regional stability, as well as crime control and economic competitiveness.

If your company manufactures products, develops technology, provides technical services, or plans to sell internationally, U.S. export controls likely apply to you—even if you’ve never shipped anything overseas before.

What are Export Controls?

At their core, export controls regulate what is being transferred, where it is going, who will receive it, and how it will be used.

An “export” does not only mean shipping a physical product across a border. Under U.S. regulations, exports also include:

  • Sending technical data or software electronically to another country
  • Uploading controlled data to foreign cloud servers
  • Carrying controlled technology on a laptop while traveling internationally
  • Sharing controlled information with a foreign national, even inside the United States (known as a deemed export)

Because exports can occur digitally or verbally, many companies are subject to export controls without realizing it.

U.S. export controls are laws and regulations that govern how goods, software, technology, and services can be shared with foreign countries and foreign persons.

Why Do Export Controls Exist?

Export controls are one of the U.S. government’s primary tools for protecting national security and preventing sensitive technology from being used for military, surveillance, or weapons-related purposes by foreign adversaries.

They also support broader foreign policy and economic goals, including sanctions enforcement, anti-terrorism efforts, and nonproliferation initiatives. Once controlled technology is released, it cannot be taken back—making prevention essential.

Who Must Comply?

U.S. export controls apply to:

  • U.S. companies and individuals
  • Foreign companies exporting U.S.-origin items
  • U.S. technology shared with foreign employees, contractors, or partners
  • Manufacturers, service providers, universities, and research facilities

Ignorance of the law is not a defense. Companies and individual employees can both be held liable for violations.

The Role of Export Regulations

Export controls are implemented through specific regulations administered by different U.S. government agencies. The two main regulatory frameworks exporters encounter are:

  • Export Administration Regulations (EAR) – Administered by the U.S. Department of Commerce, governing most commercial and dual-use items. (Learn more about EAR)
  • International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) – Administered by the U.S. Department of State, governing defense articles, services, and technical data. (Learn more about ITAR)

Other agencies also play critical roles in export enforcement and oversight, such as:

  • U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) administers economic sanctions and embargo programs, restricting trade with certain countries, companies, and individuals (regardless of product classification!).
  • U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) enforces export requirements at the border, reviewing filings, licenses, and documentation and detaining or seizing shipments that do not comply with U.S. export laws.

Ignorance of the law is not a defense. Companies and individual employees can both be held liable for violations (including fines or jail time).

What Export Controls Mean for Your Business

Export controls are not optional. Violations can result in:

  • Civil penalties reaching hundreds of thousands—or millions—of dollars
  • Criminal penalties, including prison time for individuals
  • Loss of export privileges
  • Reputational damage and loss of government contracts

The good news: compliance does not require becoming a legal expert. Most companies meet their obligations by understanding which rules apply, implementing basic procedures, training employees, and asking questions when something doesn’t feel right.

Key Takeaway

Export controls are one of the U.S. government’s primary tools for protecting national security and preventing sensitive technology from being used for military, surveillance, or weapons-related purposes by foreign adversaries.

They also support broader foreign policy and economic goals, including sanctions enforcement, anti-terrorism efforts, and nonproliferation initiatives. Once controlled technology is released, it cannot be taken back—making prevention essential.

S Massie Consulting supports companies with ITAR and EAR compliance through written compliance programs, internal procedures, and tailored employee training—helping organizations apply the rules consistently so you can say "yes" with confidence.

Contact us to schedule a consultation or compliance review.

Sarah Massie headshot

About Sarah Massie

President
S Massie Consulting LLC

Sarah Massie is a globally recognized export compliance expert, trusted consultant, and national speaker with over 20 years of international trade experience.

 

About S Massie Consulting

S Massie Consulting specializes in U.S. export compliance, helping businesses mitigate risks and expand globally. We empower you with the knowledge, skills, and strategies necessary to jumpstart your export compliance program so your company can thrive in the global marketplace.

We provide expert guidance and peace of mind through accurate export classification, customized EAR/ITAR compliance programs, and employee compliance training to simplify regulations and protect companies from costly fines, penalties, or even jail time.

Susan Calvin headshot

Praise from Susan Calvin

Operations Manager
AeroLEDs

Sarah Massie has been a pleasure to work with both professionally and personally. AeroLEDs began working with Sarah in 2016 when she led the State of Idaho’s efforts to help our company and others expand their sales internationally through attending international trade shows. She is not only knowledgeable about Export Compliance laws, but she made an extra effort to research questions I had when she did not immediately have the answer.

… [I] strongly recommend Sarah Massie for all your export compliance requirements.”

See More Client Praise

Are you ready to grow with confidence—on your terms?

Whether you're stepping into new markets or streamlining how things run behind the scenes, we’re here to walk with you. Together, we’ll build a compliance framework that feels solid, up-to-date, and designed for the kind of global growth you envision.

More Articles

Export Classification Starts in R&D

Export Classification Starts in R&D

If your product is being developed, export controls already apply. Classifying too late can expose your company to violations long before a sale ever occurs.
What Are U.S. Export Controls and Regulations?

What Are U.S. Export Controls and Regulations?

U.S. export controls are laws and regulations that govern how goods, software, technology, and services can be shared with foreign countries and foreign persons.
How to Comply With New BIS “Affiliates Rule” in 2026

How to Comply With New BIS “Affiliates Rule” in 2026

The new BIS Affiliates Rule mirrors OFAC’s 50% Rule, extending export controls to foreign affiliates owned 50% or more by listed entities and adding Red Flag 29 for unverifiable ownership.
No results found.