Historical Tariff Impacts (2016-2026)
Learn from the past: How tariffs affected American wallets over the last decade
2026: Tariff Policy Developments
Supreme Court Strikes Down IEEPA Tariffs
Impact: Tariff rate dropped from 16.9% to 9.1% - potential household savings of $700-1,000 annually
Products: Various products
Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that President Trump's use of IEEPA (International Emergency Economic Powers Act) to impose sweeping tariffs exceeded presidential authority. Eliminated reciprocal, fentanyl, and universal baseline tariffs affecting ~$180 billion in annual tariff revenue. Largest single tariff rollback in modern history.
Section 122 Emergency Tariffs Imposed
Impact: 15% universal tariff raised effective rate back to 13.7%, adding $500-800 per household
Products: Various products
Two days after SCOTUS ruling, President Trump invoked Section 122 of 1974 Trade Act imposing 15% tariffs on all countries for maximum 150 days. USMCA countries (Canada, Mexico) largely exempted. Uncertainty remains whether these will expire or be made permanent.
Businesses Begin Passing Tariff Costs to Consumers
Impact: Prices expected to rise 4-6% in 2026 as businesses pass along costs
Products: Various products
After absorbing 80% of tariff costs in 2025, businesses began passing costs to consumers in early 2026. Groceries particularly affected due to thin margins. Companies that stockpiled inventory in 2025 now facing full tariff impact.
Proposed Greenland Tariffs
Impact: Would add 10% tariffs on 8 European countries, increasing household costs $150-200
Products: Various products
President Trump proposed 10% additional tariffs on Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, UK, Netherlands, Finland as part of Greenland purchase negotiations. Would push effective tariff rate to 17.5%, highest since 1932. Implementation status uncertain.
Cumulative 2025-2026 Tariff Impact
Impact: Est. $1,200-$1,750 per household annually, inflation +0.5-1.3 percentage points
Products: Various products
Total tariff burden from 2025-2026 policies estimated at $1,750 per household (pre-substitution). Tariffs responsible for pushing inflation from 2% to 2.7% by end of 2025. Core goods prices expected to rise 4.5% cumulatively through 2027.
January 2026 Inflation Report
Impact: Overall inflation 2.4%, but necessities higher: beef +15%, coffee +18%, electricity +6%
Products: Various products
While overall inflation moderated to 2.4% in January, tariff-affected categories showed sharp increases. Furniture and appliances hit particularly hard. Combination of tariff impacts and supply constraints driving prices for specific necessities well above overall inflation rate.
2025: Tariff Policy Developments
Apparel and Footwear Tariff Increases
Impact: Clothing +8-15%, footwear +12-20%
Products: Various products
Expanded tariffs on textile imports particularly impacted budget-conscious shoppers, with lower-priced items seeing largest percentage increases.
Aluminum Can Shortage Tariff Impact
Impact: 12-packs increased $0.75-$1.50, canned goods +5-8%
Products: Various products
Aluminum tariffs combined with supply constraints drove up packaging costs, affecting everything from soda to canned vegetables.
2024: Tariff Policy Developments
Electric Vehicle Battery Component Tariffs
Impact: EVs increased $2,000-$4,500 depending on model
Products: Various products
New tariffs on battery components from China aimed at boosting domestic production. Short-term effect raised EV prices, potentially slowing adoption.
Semiconductor Tariff Exemptions
Impact: Prevented estimated 5-8% price increases on electronics
Products: Various products
Exemptions on critical semiconductor imports helped stabilize consumer electronics pricing during chip shortage recovery.
Coffee Import Tariff Adjustments
Impact: Specialty coffee +$1.50-$3 per pound at retail
Products: Various products
Tariff changes on coffee imports from select countries. Combined with climate-related supply issues, pushed premium coffee prices higher.
Pharmaceutical Ingredient Tariffs
Impact: Generic medications increased 6-10%
Products: Various products
Tariffs on active pharmaceutical ingredients raised production costs for generic drug manufacturers, leading to price increases.
2023: Tariff Policy Developments
Solar Panel Tariff Relief
Impact: Solar installation costs decreased 8-12%
Products: Various products
Two-year pause on solar panel tariffs to accelerate clean energy adoption. Made residential solar more affordable for homeowners.
Avocado and Tomato Pricing Pressures
Impact: Produce prices 15-30% above previous year
Products: Various products
Combination of seasonal tariffs, weather disruptions, and supply chain issues drove fresh produce costs higher, particularly Mexican imports.
Lumber Tariff Rates Fluctuate
Impact: Rates dropped to 8% providing some relief
Products: Various products
Canadian lumber tariff rates reduced from 17.9% to 8%, providing modest relief for construction costs.
2022: Tariff Policy Developments
Steel and Aluminum Tariffs Maintained
Impact: Washing machines +$86, cars +$200-$400, appliances +12-15%
Products: Various products
Continuation of Section 232 tariffs (25% steel, 10% aluminum). Manufacturers passed costs to consumers across multiple product categories.
China Section 301 Tariffs Extended
Impact: Consumer goods 7.5-25% tariffs, added $625-$831 annual cost per household
Products: Various products
Tariffs on $370 billion in Chinese goods maintained. Affected everyday items from phones to furniture, with costs largely passed to American consumers.
Russian Import Ban (Sanctions)
Impact: Gas prices +$0.50-1.00 per gallon, seafood +15-25%
Products: Various products
Ban on Russian imports (not technically tariffs but import restrictions) significantly impacted energy and food prices.
2021: Tariff Policy Developments
Lumber Tariffs on Canadian Imports Doubled
Impact: New home prices increased $14,000-$24,000 on average
Products: Various products
Tariffs on Canadian lumber jumped from 9% to 17.9%, contributing to housing affordability crisis. Single-family home construction costs rose significantly.
Container Shipping Costs Surge
Impact: Shipping costs +300-400%, adding to tariff burden
Products: Various products
While not a tariff, shipping cost explosion compounded tariff impacts. Combined effect raised prices significantly across all imported goods.
2020: Tariff Policy Developments
COVID-19 Medical Supply Tariffs Suspended
Impact: Tariff relief helped stabilize medical supply prices during pandemic
Products: Various products
Temporary tariff exemptions on critical medical supplies to combat COVID-19 pandemic. Helped prevent additional price spikes on already scarce medical equipment.
Phase One Trade Deal - Some Tariff Relief
Impact: Minor relief on select products, most tariffs remain
Products: Various products
Phase One trade deal with China provided limited tariff relief on select products but maintained most consumer goods tariffs.
2019: Tariff Policy Developments
China Tariffs Raised to 25%
Impact: Average household cost +$600-800 annually
Products: Various products
Tariff rate on $200 billion of Chinese goods increased from 10% to 25%. Major impact on consumer goods across categories.
Additional China Tariffs on Remaining Goods
Impact: Electronics +3-8%, clothing +8-12%, toys +10-15%
Products: Various products
Tariffs extended to nearly all remaining Chinese imports including consumer electronics, clothing, and toys. Holiday shopping affected.
2018: Tariff Policy Developments
Steel and Aluminum Section 232 Tariffs
Impact: Cars +$300-500, appliances +$50-150, beer/soda +$0.10-0.15 per can
Products: Various products
25% tariff on steel, 10% on aluminum. Washing machine prices jumped $86-100. Auto prices rose $300-500. Beer and soda in aluminum cans more expensive.
Washing Machine Tariffs
Impact: Washing machines +$86-100 (12% increase)
Products: Various products
Targeted tariffs on imported washing machines led to price increases across all brands, even those made domestically, as manufacturers took advantage of reduced competition.
China Section 301 Tariffs - Wave 1
Impact: Limited direct consumer impact initially
Products: Various products
First wave of tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese goods, primarily industrial products. Consumer impact minimal at this stage.
China Tariffs Expand - Consumer Goods Hit
Impact: Consumer goods +5-15% depending on category
Products: Various products
Tariffs expanded to $200 billion in Chinese goods, including consumer products. Furniture, luggage, and tools saw notable price increases.
2017: Tariff Policy Developments
Lumber Dispute with Canada Escalates
Impact: Softwood lumber prices +20%, new home costs +$1,300
Products: Various products
Commerce Department imposed countervailing duties averaging 20% on Canadian softwood lumber, significantly impacting construction costs.
2016: Tariff Policy Developments
Solar Panel Safeguard Tariffs Begin
Impact: Solar installation costs increased 10-18%
Products: Various products
Initial safeguard tariffs on imported solar panels began raising costs for residential and commercial installations.