Retaliation Tracker

When the US raises tariffs, trading partners hit back. The result: American farmers lose export markets, manufacturers face counter-tariffs, and workers get caught in the crossfire.

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$566+ billion in US exports are now subject to retaliatory tariffs from 8 countries. American farmers, manufacturers, and service providers bear the cost. Retaliation is strategic — targeting politically sensitive products like bourbon, soybeans, Harley-Davidsons, and orange juice to maximize pressure on US lawmakers.

Total Est. US Export Impact

💥

$565.5B

Cumulative across all actions

Countries Retaliating

🌍

8

With active tariff responses

Retaliatory Actions

📋

24

Individual tariff responses

Timeline of Retaliation

🇨🇳ChinaFeb 4, 202515%Est. $21.0B impact

Initial retaliation on US agricultural and energy exports.

Products: US soybeans, corn, wheat, LNG, coal, crude oil, farm equipment, autos

🇨🇦CanadaFeb 4, 202525%Est. $30.0B impact

Dollar-for-dollar retaliation on $30B of US exports.

Products: US consumer goods, orange juice, steel, appliances

🇨🇦CanadaMar 4, 202525%Est. $60.0B impact

Expanded to $60B more in US goods. Surtax on all US-origin vehicles.

Products: US vehicles, steel, aluminum, agriculture, furniture

🇲🇽MexicoMar 10, 20255-25%Est. $15.0B impact

Targeted US agricultural exports and steel products.

Products: US corn, pork, dairy, apples, cheese, steel

🇪🇺European UnionMar 12, 202525-50%Est. $8.5B impact

Counter-tariffs on iconic American products in response to Section 232 expansion.

Products: US steel, aluminum, bourbon, motorcycles, denim, peanut butter

🇨🇳ChinaApr 4, 202534%Est. $52.0B impact

Matched Liberation Day tariffs with 34% on all US imports.

Products: All remaining US goods

🇨🇳ChinaApr 10, 2025125%Est. $78.0B impact

Escalated to 125% on all US products during peak trade war.

Products: All US goods

🇲🇽MexicoApr 15, 202520%Est. $25.0B impact

Broadened retaliation following Liberation Day tariffs.

Products: Expanded to US poultry, auto parts, chemicals

🇦🇺AustraliaApr 15, 20250%

Australia chose diplomacy over retaliation. AUKUS alliance considerations.

Products: (No retaliation)

🇪🇺European UnionApr 16, 202525%Est. $21.0B impact

Broader retaliation after Liberation Day. Targeted Boeing, US agriculture.

Products: US soybeans, LNG, tech services, aircraft parts

🇯🇵JapanMay 1, 20250%

Japan chose bilateral negotiation over retaliation. Offered to increase US agricultural purchases.

Products: (No direct retaliation)

🇨🇳ChinaMay 12, 202510%Est. $15.0B impact

Reduced to 10% as part of Geneva Agreement 90-day pause.

Products: All US goods

🇧🇷BrazilMay 15, 202510-25%Est. $3.5B impact

Targeted retaliation on US ethanol and agricultural products.

Products: US ethanol, wheat, chemicals

🇮🇳IndiaJun 1, 202520-40%Est. $5.0B impact

Targeted key US agricultural exports to India.

Products: US almonds, apples, lentils, stainless steel

🇬🇧United KingdomJun 1, 20255-10%Est. $1.5B impact

Modest retaliation while pursuing bilateral trade deal.

Products: (Limited measures)

🇰🇷South KoreaJul 1, 20250%

South Korea pursued negotiations and accelerated US factory investments instead.

Products: (No formal retaliation)

🇨🇳ChinaSep 1, 202530-50%Est. $45.0B impact

Partial re-escalation after pause expired. Targeted tech and agriculture.

Products: US tech products, agriculture, vehicles

🇨🇦CanadaOct 15, 202525%Est. $55.0B impact

Continued retaliatory tariffs despite IEEPA court ruling. Bilateral negotiations ongoing.

Products: Maintained on most US goods

🇮🇳IndiaNov 1, 202510-20%Est. $3.0B impact

Reduced rates as part of bilateral trade talks.

Products: Partial rollback of retaliation

🇯🇵JapanDec 1, 20255%Est. $2.0B impact

Modest duties on US bourbon and some agricultural products amid stalled talks.

Products: (Nominal measures on select products)

🇪🇺European UnionFeb 28, 202620%Est. $18.0B impact

Adjusted retaliatory package in response to Section 122 tariffs.

Products: US agricultural goods, chemicals, consumer products

🇨🇳ChinaMar 1, 202625%Est. $35.0B impact

Current retaliatory level on major US export categories.

Products: US agriculture, energy, chemicals

🇨🇦CanadaMar 1, 202625%Est. $50.0B impact

Retaliatory tariffs maintained pending new trade framework negotiations.

Products: US consumer goods, agricultural products, vehicles

🇲🇽MexicoMar 1, 202615-20%Est. $22.0B impact

Adjusted retaliatory tariffs. USMCA renegotiation talks underway.

Products: US agriculture, machinery, consumer goods

Most Targeted US Products

Products mentioned most frequently across all retaliatory actions — the goods foreign governments use as political leverage against the United States.

agriculture

Targeted by 4 actions

chemicals

Targeted by 4 actions

steel

Targeted by 4 actions

vehicles

Targeted by 3 actions

consumer goods

Targeted by 3 actions

soybeans

Targeted by 2 actions

corn

Targeted by 2 actions

wheat

Targeted by 2 actions

LNG

Targeted by 2 actions

All US goods

Targeted by 2 actions

aluminum

Targeted by 2 actions

apples

Targeted by 2 actions

Country-by-Country Breakdown

🇨🇳

China

6 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$246.0B

Feb 4, 202515%Est. $21.0B impact

Initial retaliation on US agricultural and energy exports.

Products: US soybeans, corn, wheat, LNG, coal, crude oil, farm equipment, autos

Apr 4, 202534%Est. $52.0B impact

Matched Liberation Day tariffs with 34% on all US imports.

Products: All remaining US goods

Apr 10, 2025125%Est. $78.0B impact

Escalated to 125% on all US products during peak trade war.

Products: All US goods

May 12, 202510%Est. $15.0B impact

Reduced to 10% as part of Geneva Agreement 90-day pause.

Products: All US goods

Sep 1, 202530-50%Est. $45.0B impact

Partial re-escalation after pause expired. Targeted tech and agriculture.

Products: US tech products, agriculture, vehicles

Mar 1, 202625%Est. $35.0B impact

Current retaliatory level on major US export categories.

Products: US agriculture, energy, chemicals

🇪🇺

European Union

3 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$47.5B

Mar 12, 202525-50%Est. $8.5B impact

Counter-tariffs on iconic American products in response to Section 232 expansion.

Products: US steel, aluminum, bourbon, motorcycles, denim, peanut butter

Apr 16, 202525%Est. $21.0B impact

Broader retaliation after Liberation Day. Targeted Boeing, US agriculture.

Products: US soybeans, LNG, tech services, aircraft parts

Feb 28, 202620%Est. $18.0B impact

Adjusted retaliatory package in response to Section 122 tariffs.

Products: US agricultural goods, chemicals, consumer products

🇨🇦

Canada

4 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$195.0B

Feb 4, 202525%Est. $30.0B impact

Dollar-for-dollar retaliation on $30B of US exports.

Products: US consumer goods, orange juice, steel, appliances

Mar 4, 202525%Est. $60.0B impact

Expanded to $60B more in US goods. Surtax on all US-origin vehicles.

Products: US vehicles, steel, aluminum, agriculture, furniture

Oct 15, 202525%Est. $55.0B impact

Continued retaliatory tariffs despite IEEPA court ruling. Bilateral negotiations ongoing.

Products: Maintained on most US goods

Mar 1, 202625%Est. $50.0B impact

Retaliatory tariffs maintained pending new trade framework negotiations.

Products: US consumer goods, agricultural products, vehicles

🇲🇽

Mexico

3 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$62.0B

Mar 10, 20255-25%Est. $15.0B impact

Targeted US agricultural exports and steel products.

Products: US corn, pork, dairy, apples, cheese, steel

Apr 15, 202520%Est. $25.0B impact

Broadened retaliation following Liberation Day tariffs.

Products: Expanded to US poultry, auto parts, chemicals

Mar 1, 202615-20%Est. $22.0B impact

Adjusted retaliatory tariffs. USMCA renegotiation talks underway.

Products: US agriculture, machinery, consumer goods

🇯🇵

Japan

2 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$2.0B

May 1, 20250%

Japan chose bilateral negotiation over retaliation. Offered to increase US agricultural purchases.

Products: (No direct retaliation)

Dec 1, 20255%Est. $2.0B impact

Modest duties on US bourbon and some agricultural products amid stalled talks.

Products: (Nominal measures on select products)

🇮🇳

India

2 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$8.0B

Jun 1, 202520-40%Est. $5.0B impact

Targeted key US agricultural exports to India.

Products: US almonds, apples, lentils, stainless steel

Nov 1, 202510-20%Est. $3.0B impact

Reduced rates as part of bilateral trade talks.

Products: Partial rollback of retaliation

🇰🇷

South Korea

1 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

None

Jul 1, 20250%

South Korea pursued negotiations and accelerated US factory investments instead.

Products: (No formal retaliation)

🇦🇺

Australia

1 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

None

Apr 15, 20250%

Australia chose diplomacy over retaliation. AUKUS alliance considerations.

Products: (No retaliation)

🇧🇷

Brazil

1 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$3.5B

May 15, 202510-25%Est. $3.5B impact

Targeted retaliation on US ethanol and agricultural products.

Products: US ethanol, wheat, chemicals

🇬🇧

United Kingdom

1 retaliatory actions

Total est. impact

$1.5B

Jun 1, 20255-10%Est. $1.5B impact

Modest retaliation while pursuing bilateral trade deal.

Products: (Limited measures)

🇺🇸 American Workers Caught in the Crossfire

Retaliation isn't an abstraction — it's a soybean farmer in Iowa watching their largest export market disappear overnight. It's a distillery worker in Kentucky whose bourbon can't compete with a 50% EU tariff. It's a hotel worker in Orlando whose European guests stopped coming.

Foreign governments design retaliatory tariffs with surgical precision. They target products from politically important states and districts — bourbon from Kentucky, soybeans from the Midwest, Harley-Davidsons from Wisconsin, orange juice from Florida. The goal isn't economic — it's political.

The data tells a stark story:

  • Soybean exports to China down 35% — costing Midwest farmers billions in lost revenue
  • Bourbon exports down 30% — Kentucky distillers scaling back production
  • Inbound tourism down 15-20% — anti-American sentiment reducing visitor spending
  • Farm bankruptcies up 20% — the agricultural sector bearing disproportionate pain
  • Port volumes down 12-18% — logistics workers losing shifts and jobs

The federal government has provided emergency aid to farmers (over $28 billion since 2018), but bailouts don't replace lost markets. Once a trading partner finds an alternative supplier — Brazilian soybeans instead of American, Australian wine instead of Californian — those markets may never come back.

See how retaliation affects your state and industry.