President Donald Trump has levied or threatened tariffs on a broad range of countries covering a wide range of products as he tries to use access to the U.S. market as a cudgel for various policy aims — from job growth to raising tax revenue to border security and combating drug trafficking.

Wednesday is a day he’s dubbed “Liberation Day” for a slate of import taxes he has said he will announce that are known as reciprocal tariffs, or taxes on countries that have enacted trade barriers or tariffs on the U.S.

Trump has said automotive tariffs will start Wednesday as well, with collections beginning on Thursday.

Trump has at times pulled back or delayed implementing new import taxes at the 11th hour. So where do things stand? Below is a status report on some of the biggest tariff announcements made by Trump since he returned to office.

Kid Rock holds a signed executive order regarding entertainment ticket scalping after President Donald Trump signed it in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, Monday, March 31, 2025. (Pool via AP)

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But first, you might ask: What is a tariff? A tariff is a tax on goods or services from outside of our country brought into the U.S. Tariffs are slapped on products at the port of entry and paid by the importer or buyer. Those taxes typically are passed along by businesses to the buyers of products, whether the buyers are manufacturers obtaining parts that go into other things or a consumer shopping at a store or online.

They also do not happen in a vacuum as other countries tend to retaliate.

China

Status: Enacted

U.S. action: In February, the Trump administration enacted a 10% across the board tariff on goods from China and doubled that figure to 20% in March.

Chinese President Xi Jinping speaks at the Boao Forum for Asia Annual Conference in Boao, China, in 2018.

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Credit: Qilai Shen

China’s response: China retaliated in February with levies on agricultural and other heavy equipment and vehicles. In March, China put in place more tariffs, hitting agricultural products, including chicken, Georgia’s top agricultural product.

Canada and Mexico

Status: Enacted in part, but full measures could go into effect April 2.

U.S. action: In February, the U.S. threatened Canada and Mexico with steep tariffs — including 25% taxes on most goods from Mexico and 25% tariffs on most goods from Canada, except for energy products such as oil, which were to be hit with 10% tariffs. But Trump paused those tariffs until March, when they went partially into effect.

That month, Trump allowed tariffs to go into effect for all products briefly and then amended his order for those not in compliance with the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement or USMCA, the free trade deal Trump negotiated in his first term.

Consul General of Canada to the Southeast Rosaline Kwan, right, addresses the Rotary Club of Atlanta as Consul General of Mexico in Atlanta Javier Díaz de León, center, and moderator Martha Brooks look on Monday, March 17, 2025. The consuls general held a discussion about U.S., Canada and Mexico trade relations and recent tariffs instituted by the Trump administration with top Atlanta business and civic leaders. J. Scott Trubey/scott.trubey@ajc.com

Credit: J. Scott Trubey

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Credit: J. Scott Trubey

The exception made for products in compliance with the USMCA could lapse as soon as April 2. The White House also paused planned tariffs on automobiles entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico to April 2, which is now rolled into a broader plan for import taxes on foreign vehicles, listed below.

Canada and Mexico’s response: Canada has retaliated, but so far Mexico has not. Canada instituted tariffs on about $30 billion in U.S. goods and is prepared to slap tariffs on a similar amount of U.S. products as soon as April 2. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum has said her nation is prepared to retaliate.

Automobiles and auto parts

Status: Pending. Expected to go into effect April 2 with collections starting April 3, Trump has said. Tariffs on parts made in Canada and Mexico for vehicles assembled in the U.S. that are compliant with the USMCA are expected to go into effect when a process for taxing “non-U.S. content” is developed, likely in May.

In this image taken from video, electric cars are assembled at a new Hyundai electric vehicle plant in Ellabell, Ga., Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Russ Bynum)

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U.S. action: The U.S. has announced 25% tariffs on automobiles assembled in other countries and on auto parts imported into the U.S. The announcement came after previously announced tariffs on automobiles and auto parts entering the U.S. from Canada and Mexico had been put on hold.

The automotive supply chain is complex. U.S. brands assemble many vehicles in Mexico and Canada that are then sold in the U.S. Parts for many vehicles assembled in North America hop across borders multiple times before finished vehicles rolls off assembly lines.

The Chevrolet Equinox EV that starts at $33,600 was General Motors Co.'s best-selling EV in the fourth quarter. Consumers are emphasizing affordability in their purchases of new vehicles. Units of the Equinox EV have their final assembly in Mexico. (Jim Fets/Chevrolet/TNS)

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Credit: TNS

Several foreign automakers, including ones from Germany, Japan and South Korea, have U.S.-based factories but might receive parts from overseas that could be taxed under the new tariffs.

International response: Leaders of other nations have largely condemned the Trump administration’s plans. Canada and other countries have said they will retaliate with countermeasures.

Across the U.S., autos (nearly $93 billion) and auto parts (nearly $78 billion) are the top two imported products from Mexico, data from the Census Bureau show. Autos (about $43 billion) and auto parts (about $14 billion) are also top products from Canada sold in the U.S.

Highlighting the entwined nature of the North American automotive sector, Consul General of Mexico in Atlanta Javier Díaz de León told the Rotary Club of Atlanta recently, “These cars happen to be North American.”

Hyundai Motor Group announced a $21 billion plan in March to expand its U.S. production capacity. The plan includes production expansions at its factories in Georgia and Alabama. The company also announced a new nearly $6 billion steel factory in Louisiana to help it avoid tariffs.

Steel and aluminum

Status: Enacted

U.S. action: The Trump administration ended exemptions for certain countries on steel and aluminum imports, creating an across the board 25% tariff on those metals that started in March.

The lifting of the exemption hit trade partners such as Canada, the European Union, Japan, Mexico, South Korea and the United Kingdom.

International response: The European Union and other nations have responded with plans for countermeasures, including some by the EU that will go into effect Tuesday.

Bottles Champagne are for sale at a wine dealer shop as President Donald Trump threatened a 200% tariff on European wine, Champagne and spirits if the European Union goes forward with a planned tariff on American whiskey, Thursday, March 13, 2025 in Ville d'Avray, outside Paris. (AP Photo/Christophe Ena)

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Other “delayed” retaliatory measures by the EU include taxes on bourbon and motorcycles that could hit by mid-April. To that, Trump has threatened 200% tariffs on European alcohol imports such as French champagne.

Reciprocal tariffs

Status: Pending. Expected to go into effect April 2.

U.S. action: This is a bit squishier and has been a moving target. Trump signed a memorandum in February ordering his administration to study trade arrangements with other nations and develop a plan to restore what the White House called “fairness” in trade relations.

Or as Trump has put it: “What they charge us, we charge them.”

The administration messaging has shifted over time and it’s not clear what these import taxes might look like, but Trump has promised reciprocal tariffs will go into effect Wednesday. At times, the administration has signaled its tact would be individualized tariffs and at others, more across-the-board-style taxes for all imported goods. The Wall Street Journal on Sunday reported Trump was pushing for broad tariffs of potentially as high as 20% on all countries. On Sunday, Trump told reporters the levies — whatever they are — will hit all countries. These tariffs would be on top of other announced import taxes, Trump has said.

International response: Foreign leaders will undoubtedly respond but how might not be clear until after the White House announces its plans.

European Union

Status: Pending

U.S. action: In a cabinet meeting in February, Trump announced plans to slap tariffs of up to 25% on goods from the EU, which includes 27 nations. Trump threatened to hit cars and “all other things.”

But so far, further details about the EU tariffs have not been disclosed. The EU tariffs were separate from levies against steel and aluminum.

International response: The EU vowed to retaliate if the U.S. moves forward on the threatened tariffs.

Venezuela

Status: Pending. Could go into effect as soon as April 2.

U.S. action: Trump announced in March plans to slap 25% tariffs on goods imported into the U.S. from countries that buy oil from Venezuela.

Venezuelan Vice President and Oil Minister Delcy Rodriguez holds a document about oil sanctions during a press conference at Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Monday, March 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariana Cubillos)

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In other words, it would hit the goods of Venezuela’s trade partners that those partners sell here. The levies would come on top of other tariffs, Trump said.

The U.S. itself, incidentally, is also a buyer of Venezuelan crude. Trump has put pressure on the South American nation over immigration and gang violence he blames on undocumented immigrants.

International response: Unclear. But many countries purchase oil from Venezuela, including China, which is already subject to Trump’s trade action and has blasted the plan.

Semiconductors

Status: Pending

U.S. action: Trump has proposed tariffs of perhaps as high as 25% on foreign-made computer chips. But the effective date is not yet known.

Pharmaceuticals

Status: Pending

U.S. action: Trump has proposed tariffs on foreign-made pharmaceuticals. But the rate and effective date are not yet known.

“We have to bring pharmaceuticals, drugs and pharmaceuticals, back into our country,” he told reporters in recent days in video published by The Associated Press.

Wood products

Status: Pending

U.S. action: In March, Trump directed his administration to produce a report on the importation of lumber and other wood products and how they threaten “national security and economic stability,” claiming overreliance on imports threaten security, the construction industry and the U.S. economy.

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