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Full list of Donald Trump’s new tariffs set to come into force next week

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Shutterstock (15410157aj) United States President Donald J Trump answers reporters questions during his meeting with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC., USA. Trump and Marcos are expected to discuss trade tariffs, increasing security cooperation in the face of China's growing maritime power in the West Philippine Sea and other topics. Trump Meets President Marcos of the Philippines, Washington, District of Columbia, USA - 22 Jul 2025
Economists expect the global economy to suffer as a result of the new measures (Picture: Shutterstock)

Donald Trump has signed the executive order which will bring into force sweeping new tariffs on imports from dozens of countries.

In a major break from the USA’s long-standing free trade policy, the US president has been hiking taxes on goods arriving on US soil from around the world.

In April, a universal 10% tariff affecting goods from nearly all other countries came into force.

Additional rates, which Trump dubiously calls ‘reciprocal tariffs’, were announced at the time but suspended after they led to a global stock market crash.

He has now revived the strategy, which will impose specific rates of 10% to 41% on 69 different countries next Friday.

Before Trump’s second term, US tariffs averaged around 2.2%, so economists expect the effect on trade to be seismic.

The figures have been changed since Trump held up a poster of his proposed tariffs at a press conference in April (Picture: Reuters)

What are Trump’s new tariffs?

Trump has repeatedly called these new rates ‘reciprocal tariffs’, claiming this means ‘they do it to us and we do it to them’.

In reality, very few of these 69 countries have been levying tariffs on US imports at anywhere near the same scale.

The president’s own council of economists said that more than half of countries ‘don’t really have any tariffs on us’.

But the Trump administration insists that other barriers to trade such as safety inspection and labelling requirements have the same effect.

It created a formula – heavily criticised by economists as overly simplistic – which it used to come up with the new rates it wuold charge each country.

Here is the full list of the new so-called ‘reciprocal tariffs’ coming into force next week:

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