Americans paying tariff costs is no longer a theoretical debate. A new economic study shows U.S. consumers are absorbing nearly the entire financial burden of tariffs, contradicting repeated claims that foreign exporters bear the cost.
Research released this week by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy finds that roughly 96 percent of tariff expenses imposed by the United States are being paid domestically through higher prices. Exporters abroad have largely avoided lowering prices, instead cutting shipment volumes and redirecting goods to other markets.
Tariffs as policy, but at what price?
The findings arrive nearly a year after President Donald Trump announced sweeping tariffs in April 2025 under what the administration labeled “Liberation Day.” At the time, the White House argued the measures would strengthen the U.S. economy and pressure foreign governments to make concessions.
According to the Kiel Institute study, the opposite has occurred. Export prices charged by foreign suppliers have remained stable, while U.S. importers have paid the tariffs at the border and passed most of the cost directly to American consumers. The result has been higher prices across a range of goods, from food items to manufactured products.
“The claim that foreign countries pay these tariffs is a myth,” wrote Julian Hinz, the institute’s research director and lead author of the study. “The data show the opposite: Americans are footing the bill.”
Export volumes fall, not prices
The study analyzed more than 25 million shipment records from January 2024 through November 2025, representing nearly $4 trillion in trade. It found that exporters absorbed only about 4 percent of tariff costs. Instead of discounting goods for the U.S. market, many suppliers reduced shipments and shifted sales elsewhere.
One example cited in the research involved tariffs imposed on India in August 2025. After a 50 percent tariff was enacted, exports from India to the U.S. fell between 18 percent and 24 percent relative to shipments to markets such as the European Union, Canada, and Australia. Similar patterns appeared across multiple trading partners.
Hinz noted in comments to the The Wall Street Journal that tariffs do not represent wealth transfers from foreign producers to the U.S. government. Instead, they function much like a consumption tax levied on domestic buyers.
Rising revenue, shrinking trade
Tariffs have generated an estimated $200 billion in additional customs revenue for the U.S. Treasury. The study emphasizes that nearly all of this revenue originates from American households and businesses, not overseas exporters.
The researchers liken the effect to a redistribution of wealth from consumers and companies to the federal government, with limited evidence of broader economic gains. While tariff supporters argue the measures protect domestic industries, the data show little sign of exporters lowering prices to remain competitive in the U.S. market.
At the same time, overall trade volumes have declined. As exporters pivot away from the U.S., the range of available goods narrows, reducing competitive pressure that might otherwise limit price increases.
Manufacturing goals fall short
The Trump administration has repeatedly framed tariffs as a tool to revive U.S. manufacturing. However, employment data suggest those gains have not materialized. Since April 2025, manufacturing jobs have declined every month, with roughly 60,000 positions lost between Liberation Day and November.
Economists cited in the report argue that higher input costs from tariffs have offset any potential benefits for domestic producers. Manufacturers dependent on imported components face higher expenses, squeezing margins and limiting hiring.
Legal uncertainty and future impact
The tariff regime also faces legal scrutiny. The Supreme Court is expected to rule on whether the administration’s use of emergency powers under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to impose tariffs is lawful. During oral arguments in November, several justices appeared skeptical of the administration’s authority.
Despite that uncertainty, economists anticipate the White House would seek alternative mechanisms to maintain trade restrictions if the court rules against the current approach. In recent days, Trump has signaled renewed tariff threats against European allies amid broader geopolitical disputes, including tensions involving Greenland and criticism from French President Emmanuel Macron.
For now, the evidence suggests Americans paying tariff costs is not a temporary outcome but a structural feature of current trade policy. As exporters adapt and consumers face higher prices, the study raises fresh questions about who truly benefits from tariffs and at what economic cost.





