President Donald Trump said 25% duties on medium- and heavy-duty trucks would begin Nov. 1, the latest expansion of his tariff regime aimed at protecting domestic industries.
The proposal has been subject to an intense lobbying campaign by Detroit’s legacy automakers. Trump originally said last month that heavy-duty truck levies would start Oct. 1, but that timeline slipped as officials heard appeals from companies concerned about the impact.
“Beginning November 1st, 2025, all Medium and Heavy Duty Trucks coming into the United States from other Countries will be Tariffed at the Rate of 25%,” the president posted Monday, without offering further details.
Trump’s announcement is tied to a probe launched in April by the US Commerce Department into heavy truck imports. That investigation, conducted under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act, allows for the imposition of import taxes on goods deemed critical to national security.
The probe focused on medium- and heavy-duty trucks weighing more than 10,000 pounds as well as parts, with the Commerce Department stating that a “small number” of foreign suppliers made up the bulk of US imports due to “predatory trade practices.”
The duties threaten an industry already feeling impacts from tariffs on steel and aluminum as well as tighter environmental regulations. New levies on imports could raise prices on vehicles used in a variety of sectors, including shipping, construction and municipal services.
Stellantis NV has urged the administration to waive or soften charges that could hit medium-duty Ram pickups the company makes in Mexico, according to people familiar with the matter. Rivals General Motors Co. and Ford Motor Co. have pushed back on the request, saying it would give Stellantis a cost advantage over US-assembled trucks that contain imported parts already subject to tariffs, the people said.
But proponents of the move say it will help strengthen domestic manufacturing. Trump, in a social media post last week announcing the tariffs, cast them as necessary to “protect our Great Heavy Truck Manufacturers from unfair outside competition.”
Trump’s planned tariffs on imported heavy trucks “are a huge win for American workers and great US manufacturers,” Nick Iacovella of the Coalition for a Prosperous America, a protectionist group, said after Trump’s initial announcement. “This action will strengthen this vital sector and protect it from unfair foreign competition.”
About 245,000 medium- and heavy-duty trucks were imported to the US last year, a trade flow worth more than $20 billion, according to Commerce Department data.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trump-says-us-tariffs-heavy-182911805.html
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