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Country Reference

Countries Affected by IEEPA Tariffs

The IEEPA tariffs imposed from April 2025 hit imports from virtually every U.S. trading partner. The Supreme Court has ruled them all unconstitutional. Here's the full breakdown by country.

29+

Countries Affected

$179B

Total Tariffs Invalidated

10–145%

Tariff Rate Range

Major Trading Partners

These countries represent the largest share of affected U.S. imports. Click any country for a detailed refund guide.

Complete IEEPA Tariff Rate Table

Every country below was subject to IEEPA tariffs. All rates shown are the IEEPA-specific tariff — pre-existing duties under other authorities (Section 301, 232, etc.) are separate and remain in effect.

CountryIEEPA RateEst. Refund PoolDetail Page
ChinaUp to 145%$87B+View guide
Cambodia49%$1B+Coming soon
VietnamUp to 46%$8B+View guide
Sri Lanka44%$500M+Coming soon
Bangladesh37%$2B+Coming soon
Thailand36%$3B+Coming soon
TaiwanUp to 32%$4B+View guide
Indonesia32%$2B+Coming soon
Switzerland31%$5B+Coming soon
South Africa30%$1B+Coming soon
Pakistan29%$1B+Coming soon
IndiaUp to 26%$4B+View guide
Canada25%$18B+View guide
Mexico25%$20B+View guide
South KoreaUp to 25%$5B+View guide
JapanUp to 24%$7B+View guide
Malaysia24%$3B+Coming soon
European Union20%$22B+View guide
Israel17%$1B+Coming soon
Philippines17%$1B+Coming soon
United Kingdom10%$6B+Coming soon
Brazil10%$3B+Coming soon
Singapore10%$2B+Coming soon
Australia10%$1B+Coming soon
New Zealand10%$500M+Coming soon
Colombia10%$1B+Coming soon
Chile10%$1B+Coming soon
Turkey10%$1B+Coming soon
Saudi Arabia10%$1B+Coming soon

How IEEPA Tariff Rates Were Determined

The IEEPA tariff rates were set using a formula based on each country's trade deficit with the United States. Countries with larger trade deficits received higher rates — which is why China faced 145% while many allies saw the 10% baseline. The Supreme Court ruled that the method of calculation was irrelevant because IEEPA simply does not authorize tariffs at all, making every rate unconstitutional regardless of how it was derived.

The 10% Baseline vs. Country-Specific Rates

In April 2025, a 10% baseline tariff was applied to all imports under IEEPA. Shortly after, country-specific "reciprocal" rates were layered on top for major trading partners. Some countries — like China (145%), Cambodia (49%), and Vietnam (46%) — saw dramatically higher rates. Others like the UK, Australia, and Brazil remained at the 10% baseline. Regardless of the rate, all IEEPA tariffs are now refundable.

Multi-Country Importers

Many U.S. businesses import from multiple countries. If your supply chain spans several of the countries listed above, your total refund combines the IEEPA duties from all origins. Tariff Arrow handles multi-country claims seamlessly — our technology processes entries from any number of countries and ports in a single engagement. One claim process, one point of contact, maximum recovery.

Pre-Existing Tariffs That Are NOT Refundable

It's important to understand that only IEEPA-imposed tariffs are affected by the Supreme Court ruling. Tariffs under other legal authorities remain in effect: Section 301 tariffs on China (7.5-25%), Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum (25%), anti-dumping and countervailing duties, and normal MFN duty rates. Your CBP Form 7501 will show the breakdown between IEEPA duties and other tariff types. Tariff Arrow's analysis automatically separates these to ensure accurate refund calculations.

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