Presidential Updates to Automobile Import Adjustment Rules Issued
Published Date: 5/2/2025
Presidential Document
Summary
The U.S. government is updating rules on importing cars and car parts because too many imports could hurt national security. This affects car makers and importers, with new changes aiming to keep the market balanced and protect American jobs. These updates kick in soon and could impact import costs and trade talks.
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Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 2 mixed.
Automobile and Parts Tariffs Effective Dates
Tariffs on automobiles have been in effect since 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on April 3, 2025. Tariffs on automobile parts are set to go into effect on or after 12:01 a.m. eastern daylight time on May 3, 2025.
Manufacturer Import Adjustment Offsets
Manufacturers of automobiles assembled in the United States may apply for an import adjustment offset equal to 3.75% of the aggregate MSRP value of U.S.-assembled automobiles from April 3, 2025 through April 30, 2026, and 2.5% of aggregate MSRP for automobiles assembled from May 1, 2026 through April 30, 2027. The offsets are tied to parts accounting for 15% of an automobile's value for one year and 10% for an additional year and may be used to offset that manufacturer's automobile parts tariff liability under Proclamation 10908.
Eligibility, Documentation, and Penalties
The Secretary must establish a process within 30 days for manufacturers to apply for offsets and manufacturers must submit documentation (projected assembly counts and plant locations, projected tariff costs broken down by direct and supplier-incurred costs, total requested offset amount, importer of record identities and allotted amounts, and a certified statement under penalty of perjury). CBP will implement approved offsets and may assess monetary penalties up to the maximum allowed by law if an importer claims more than its approved offset.
Limits on Use and Scope of Offsets
Offsets apply only to automobiles that undergo final assembly in the United States, may be used only to offset that manufacturer's automobile parts tariff liability under Proclamation 10908, are capped at the manufacturer's total automobile parts tariff liability under Proclamation 10908, and manufacturers may designate which importers of record (including suppliers) are eligible to use allotted offset amounts.
Stated Goal: Boost U.S. Production and Jobs
The proclamation states the modified system is intended to reduce reliance on foreign manufacturing, encourage expansion of domestic production capacity and research and development, shift manufacturing into the United States, and create jobs in the automotive industry.
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