What's the Tariff on Cobalt?
Cobalt primarily from DRC, processed in China.
Current Tariff Rate
34%
Pre-2025 Rate
0%
Rate Increase
+34pp
Price Impact
+34%
+$11,220
Real-World Price Impact
Before Tariffs
$33,000
1 ton cobalt
After Tariffs
$44,220
1 ton cobalt
That's $11,220 more per unit — a 34% price increase paid by the American buyer.
Note: Price estimates assume full tariff pass-through to consumers. Actual retail prices may vary — manufacturers may absorb some costs, shift production, or adjust margins.
The Story Behind This Tariff
Cobalt is the most geopolitically fraught mineral in the global economy. The Democratic Republic of Congo produces 73% of the world's cobalt, much of it from artisanal mines plagued by child labor and dangerous conditions. But the tariff doesn't target the DRC — it targets China, which controls 80% of cobalt processing through companies like CMOC and Huayou Cobalt that have invested billions in Congolese mining operations. The 34% IEEPA tariff on Chinese-processed cobalt exposes a critical vulnerability: even cobalt mined in the DRC passes through Chinese refineries before reaching battery factories in the US, Europe, or Japan. The tariff is strategically motivated — decoupling from Chinese mineral processing — but the 10-15 year timeline to build alternative refining capacity means the near-term effect is simply higher costs for EV batteries, aerospace alloys, and smartphone components. Cobalt-free battery chemistries (LFP) are gaining market share partly in response to these supply chain risks.
📦 Supply Chain
Primary Origin
DRC (mined), China (processed)
Made in USA
2%
Import Volume
.4B
Alternatives
LFP batteries (cobalt-free), Australian mining expanding
📅 Tariff Timeline
2018
Section 301 List 3 includes cobalt from China
25%2019
Cobalt excluded from Section 301 due to strategic concerns
0%2024
DRC-China cobalt supply chain consolidates further
0%2025-Feb
IEEPA tariff recaptures cobalt from China at 34%
34%👥 Consumer Impact
Households Affected
12M
Annual Cost Per Household
5
💡 Did You Know?
- •The DRC produces 73% of global cobalt but captures only 3% of the value chain — Chinese processors take the lion's share
- •An estimated 40,000 children work in artisanal cobalt mines in the DRC, creating severe ethical sourcing challenges
- •Tesla's shift toward LFP (cobalt-free) batteries in standard-range vehicles was partly driven by cobalt supply chain risks
Tariff Details
- HTS Code
- 8105.20
- Current Rate
- 34%
- Pre-2025 Rate
- 0%
- Tariff Type
- IEEPA
Legal Authority
IEEPA Executive Order (April 2, 2025)
Effective: April 2, 2025
"Liberation Day" — broad tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act
The tariff on Cobalt is paid by the American importer at the port of entry and passed through to consumers as higher retail prices. The foreign manufacturer does not pay the tariff.
Who Actually Pays This Tariff?
Despite claims that tariffs are paid by foreign countries, the 34% tariff on Cobalt is paid by American importers — US companies that purchase these goods from abroad. The cost is then passed to American consumers through higher retail prices.
- ✓ The foreign seller receives the same price as before
- ✓ The US importer pays 34% of the customs value to CBP
- ✓ The retailer marks up the higher landed cost
- ✓ You pay more at the register: $33,000 → $44,220
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