The Complete IEEPA Tariff List: Every Tariff Imposed
A complete list of every IEEPA tariff imposed under the Trump administration in 2025, organized by date, country, rate, and HTS code.
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Check if you qualifyThis page is a reference resource listing every IEEPA tariff imposed during the 2025 executive order program. Use this list to identify which tariffs may have affected your entries and to cross-reference the HTS Chapter 99 codes you see on CBP Form 7501.
All tariffs listed below were declared unlawfully imposed by the Supreme Court on February 20, 2026 in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump and are subject to refund through the CAPE portal.
IEEPA Tariff Chronological Reference
Round 1: Canada and Mexico — February 4, 2025
Executive Order: [Canada/Mexico IEEPA Emergency Declaration — Federal Register, Feb. 2025]
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | All goods not listed below | 25% | 9903.01.01 |
| Canada | Energy products (crude oil, natural gas, refined petroleum, coal) | 10% | 9903.01.02 |
| Canada | Potash | 10% | 9903.01.02 |
| Mexico | All goods | 25% | 9903.01.03 |
Key facts:
- Effective date: February 4, 2025
- Justification: National emergency declaration citing fentanyl trafficking across northern and southern borders
- Impact on USMCA: USMCA preferential rates were effectively suspended for goods subject to IEEPA surcharges
- Notable affected sectors: auto parts, lumber, agricultural products (Canada); auto parts, fresh produce, beer, tequila (Mexico)
Round 2: China Initial IEEPA Tariff — February 2025
Executive Order: [China IEEPA Tariff Order — Federal Register, Feb. 2025]
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | All goods | +10% | 9903.01.10 |
Key facts:
- Justification: National emergency related to fentanyl precursor chemical exports from China
- Additive: Applied on top of existing Section 301 tariffs, not in place of them
- Notable: This brought total tariff rates on some Chinese goods (already subject to 25% Section 301) to 35%
Round 3: China Escalation I — March 2025
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | All goods | +20% | 9903.01.11 |
Key facts:
- Replaced the February +10% rate
- Administration stated escalation was in response to China’s retaliatory measures
- Combined with typical 25% Section 301 rate: total 45% for many goods
Round 4: China Escalation II + Reciprocal Tariffs — April 2025
Two separate executive orders:
China:
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | All goods | +34% | 9903.01.12 |
Reciprocal Tariffs (selected countries):
| Country | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|
| European Union | ~20% | 9903.01.21 |
| United Kingdom | 10% | 9903.01.22 |
| Japan | 24% | 9903.01.26 |
| South Korea | 25% | 9903.01.28 |
| Taiwan | 32% | 9903.01.29 |
| India | 26% | 9903.01.27 |
| Vietnam | 46% | 9903.01.25 |
| Thailand | 36% | 9903.01.30 |
| Cambodia | 49% | 9903.01.31 |
| Bangladesh | 37% | 9903.01.32 |
| Indonesia | 32% | 9903.01.33 |
| Malaysia | 24% | 9903.01.34 |
Note: This table includes the major trading partners. The reciprocal tariff executive order applied rates to approximately 180 countries and territories. Verify your specific source country against the full Federal Register notice.
Round 5: China Escalation III — May 2025
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | All goods | +84% | 9903.01.13 |
Key facts:
- Administration announced this escalation in response to what it characterized as Chinese bad-faith trade negotiations
- Combined with 25% Section 301 on many goods: total duty exceeded 100% of customs value
- Beginning of peak tariff period — entries from May through February 2026 carry the largest per-unit IEEPA amounts
Round 6: China Escalation IV (Peak) — June 2025
| Country | Goods Covered | Rate | HTS Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| China | All goods | +125% | 9903.01.14 |
Key facts:
- Highest IEEPA rate imposed during the program
- Imports at this rate represent the largest per-unit refund claims in CAPE Phase 1
- This rate remained in effect until the Supreme Court ruling on February 20, 2026
Goods That Were Excluded from IEEPA Tariffs
The administration issued certain exclusions and carve-outs during the IEEPA tariff program. Notable categories that were excluded from some or all IEEPA tariffs include:
- Certain pharmaceutical products and medical devices (humanitarian carve-outs)
- Some agricultural products imported under quotas
- Goods imported for government use
Exclusions were issued through CBP Federal Register notices and applied to specific HTS codes. If you believe your goods may have been excluded, review the exclusion notices published during 2025 against your entry documentation.
How to Use This List
- Identify the country of origin for each of your affected entries
- Identify the entry date for each entry
- Cross-reference with the table above to determine which IEEPA rate applied
- Verify by looking for the 9903.01.xx code on your CBP Form 7501
- Sum the IEEPA duty amounts across all eligible entries to estimate your potential CAPE claim
For assistance mapping your entries to this list and preparing a CAPE declaration, see our CAPE portal walkthrough and our DIY vs. expert help guide.
Related Resources
- IEEPA Tariff Codes Reference — How Chapter 99 codes work
- IEEPA Tariffs by Country — Country-specific breakdown
- When Did IEEPA Tariffs Start? — Effective date timeline
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