These are the products that China exports the most to the United States and that it intends to raise the price of in the country with the new tariffs

China is set to raise the price of their products in the United States. Read to know the sectors that might be affected.

Modified on:
August 1, 2025 9:00 pm

The U.S.-China trade war was taken to a critical phase in 2025 with the threat of new tariffs set to reshape consumer prices and supply chains. American households may soon be looking directly at cost increases on a list of essential goods—from electronics to children’s toys—dominating China’s $501 billion in annual exports to the U.S.

Top exports to the U.S. from China

According to 2023 trade data, the following product categories dominate Chinese shipments to American markets:

  • Electrical & electronic equipment: $124.52 billion
  • Machinery & nuclear reactors: $88.98 billion
  • Furniture & prefabricated buildings: $30.66 billion
  • Toys & sports equipment: $29.36 billion
  • Plastics: $23.25 billion
  • Apparel (Knit/crocheted): $18.90 billion
  • Vehicles (Non-railway): $18.26 billion

These industries face 10-100% targeted tariffs, imposed in phases until 2026.

High- impact tariffs on strategic sectors

1. Electric vehicles (EVs) & batteries

This sector will see tariff increase: from 25% to 100% in 2024

  • Impact: The value of Chinese EV exports to the U.S. was $18.26 billion in 2023 with such firms as BYD leading this charge. A 100% tariff would approximately double retail prices on models such as the $12,000 Seagull EV to ~$24,000—still competitive versus U.S. peers but broadening market inflation.
  • Supply chain ripple: Higher tariff on lithium batteries from 7.5% to 25% will increase production cost for US automakers using components from China.

2. Electronics & semiconductors

Tariff increase: 25% to 50% by 2025

  • Impact: The tariff increase is applicable on $124.52 billion worth of annual exports of consumer electronics such as smartphones and laptops, and industrial chips.

The analysts believe this can translate into a 12-18% price hike in the mid-range segment in Q3 2025.

3. Solar power components

Tariff increase: From 25% to 50% in 2024

  • Impact: 80% of U.S. solar panels are imported from China. This would add $0.20–$0.30 to the cost per watt to install and hurts the competitiveness of renewable energy.

4. Toys & clothing

Tariff increase: 10% on all Chinese imports

  • Impact: A 10% tax on the $29.36 billion of toys and $18.9 billion of clothing exports could add a 15–20% increase to the cost of holiday toys and 8–12% for clothing after retailer markups are included.

Consumer cost breakdown

The Tax Foundation estimates new tariffs to hit the average American household with a $800/year bill in 2025 with pain points of:

  • Electronics: +$220/year (phones, laptops, game consoles)
  • Home goods: +$180/year (furniture, lighting, plastics)
  • Transportation: +$150/year (EVs, auto parts)
  • Apparel/toys: +$120/year

Importantly, 54% of U.S. footwear imports and 40% of textile imports come from China, making these industries particularly vulnerable.

China’s retaliatory strategy

Beijing has responded with 15% tariffs aimed at:

  • U.S. coal
  • Liquefied natural gas (LNG)
  • Specialty vehicles (e.g., Ford F-150 Raptor)
  • Agricultural equipment

China stopped tungsten and molybdenum exports – inputs without which electronics can’t be made, potentially raising U.S. tech company production costs by 10–15%.

Long-run economic implications

  • Accelerating inflation: Core CPI could rise 0.5–1.2 percentage points per annum through 2026, pushing on already bubbly cost pressures.
  • Supply chain shifts: Apple, Tesla to pick up plans to rebalance supply chains into Vietnam and Mexico, though costs of reshoring are not feasible.
  • Global spillover: EU and India likely to follow similar tariffs on China goods, posing 2-3% global trade volume contraction by 2026.

The roadmap for consumers 

To soften the blow of tariffs :

  • Delay purchases: Look for pre-tariff inventory sales by companies like IKEA and Hasbro.
  • Find alternatives: Mexican-made goods are tariff-free until March 2025, which is temporary relief.
  • Seek exemption: Consumer groups are asking for exemptions for products like child car seats and medical devices.

With the resumption of trade negotiations, there is growing pressure on both the Biden and Trump administrations to strike the right balance between protectionism and affordability. As Chinese exports continue to grow at 10.7% YoY in December 2024, the next phase of tariff war is going to be the real test of economic resilience between the two big countries.

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Jack Nimi
Jack Nimihttps://polifinus.com/author/jack-n/
Nimi Jack is a graduate on Business Administration and Mass Communication studies. His academic background has equipped him with a robust understanding of both business principles and effective communication strategies, which he has effectively utilized in his professional career. He is also an author with two short stories published under Afroconomy Books.

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