Tariff Calculator
Calculate US import tariffs, duties, and total landed costs. Estimate how tariffs affect the price of imported goods.
âšī¸ Updated February 2026. On Feb 20, the Supreme Court struck down IEEPA-based tariffs. However, Section 232 tariffs remain in full effect covering steel (25%), aluminum (25%), autos (25%), lumber, furniture, heavy trucks, semiconductors, pharma, and copper. The avg effective tariff rate is ~6.7% on all imports â highest since 1973. Adjust the rate below for your specific product.
Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, autos, electronics, etc.
Auto-filled based on country. Adjust if you know the exact rate for your product.
đ How to Use
Enter the product value, select the category and country of origin, and the calculator will estimate the tariff amount and total landed cost. Shipping costs are included in the dutiable value as per US customs rules.
Understanding US Tariffs
Base Tariff Rate
Section 232 tariffs cover a wide range of products: steel (25%), aluminum (25%), autos (25%), plus lumber, furniture, heavy trucks, semiconductors, pharma, and copper. The IEEPA tariffs were struck down but Section 232 remains.
Country-Specific Tariffs
Tariff rates vary by product and country of origin. Check the HTS code for your specific product at hts.usitc.gov for exact rates.
Dutiable Value
The value on which tariffs are calculated, typically including the product cost plus shipping and insurance.
Landed Cost
The total cost of a product delivered to you, including product value, shipping, and all tariffs/duties.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the current US tariff rates?
As of February 2026, Section 232 tariffs remain in effect: 25% on steel, aluminum, autos, plus tariffs on lumber, furniture, heavy trucks, semiconductors, pharma, and copper. The Supreme Court struck down IEEPA tariffs but Section 232 tariffs are unaffected. Average effective rate: ~6.7% on all imports. Verify at hts.usitc.gov.
Do tariffs apply to personal purchases?
Personal imports valued under $800 (de minimis threshold) are generally exempt from tariffs. Above that amount, standard duty rates apply.
How do tariffs affect consumer prices?
Importers typically pass tariff costs to consumers through higher retail prices. A 15% tariff can increase the final price of goods by 10-20% after markups through the supply chain.