Mexico
⚡ Actively retaliating against US tariffs
Mexico surpassed China as America's top trading partner in 2023, a position it cemented in 2024 with $418 billion in exports to the US. The relationship, governed by the USMCA free trade agreement, was upended in early 2025 when 25% IEEPA tariffs were imposed citing fentanyl trafficking and border security — effectively overriding the zero-tariff provisions of the trade deal.
Current Tariff
📊25%
Was 0.0%
US Imports
📥$418.0B
2024 total
US Exports
📤$322.7B
2024 total
Trade Balance
⚖️$-95.3B
US deficit
Trade Flow (2024)
Tariff Rate Change
📈 5-Year Import Trend
📋 Trade Relationship Analysis
Mexico surpassed China as America's top trading partner in 2023, a position it cemented in 2024 with $418 billion in exports to the US. The relationship, governed by the USMCA free trade agreement, was upended in early 2025 when 25% IEEPA tariffs were imposed citing fentanyl trafficking and border security — effectively overriding the zero-tariff provisions of the trade deal.
The auto industry is the backbone of US-Mexico trade. Vehicles and auto parts alone represent over $130 billion in bilateral trade, with parts crossing the border multiple times during assembly. A single car manufactured in Mexico can contain components that cross the border 7-8 times, meaning tariffs compound dramatically. Major automakers including GM, Ford, and Stellantis have warned that 25% tariffs could add $3,000-$10,000 per vehicle.
Mexico retaliated strategically, targeting US agricultural exports including corn, pork, and dairy — products from politically important farm states. The country also threatened to reduce cooperation on immigration enforcement, adding diplomatic pressure.
The situation has been marked by extreme volatility, with tariffs paused, reimposed, and modified multiple times in 2025. Mexico's nearshoring boom, which brought billions in new manufacturing investment as companies diversified away from China, now faces its own tariff threat. The uncertainty has frozen billions in planned factory investments.
Tariff Impact
Pre-2025
0.0%
Current
25%
Increase
+25.0%
🏷️ Top Imported Products
| Product | Tariff Rate | Import Value | Price Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passenger Vehicles | 25% | $62.8B | +$3,000-10,000 per car |
| Auto Parts & Components | 25% | $68.4B | +$1,500-3,000 per vehicle |
| Beer & Spirits | 25% | $5.8B | +$3-6 per six-pack |
| Avocados | 25% | $3.1B | +$0.50-1.00 per avocado |
| Medical Devices | 25% | $18.2B | +15-25% equipment costs |
| Flat-Screen TVs | 25% | $8.7B | +$75-200 per TV |
| Fresh Produce (Tomatoes, Berries) | 25% | $11.3B | +25-40% at grocery stores |
📅 Tariff Timeline
🎯 Retaliation — US Products Targeted
| US Product Targeted | US Exports at Risk | Estimated Loss |
|---|---|---|
| Corn & Grain | $5.4B | $2.8B |
| Pork Products | $2.1B | $1.3B |
| Dairy Products | $1.8B | $900M |
| Apples & Tree Fruits | $1.2B | $600M |
💡 Did You Know?
- •Mexico became America's #1 trading partner in 2023, overtaking China for the first time
- •80% of Mexico's exports go to the United States — making it the most US-dependent major economy
- •A single Ford F-150 contains parts that cross the US-Mexico border up to 8 times during manufacturing
- •Mexico supplies 80% of America's avocados — the Super Bowl alone drives $200M in avocado sales