Country exposure · BA

Bosnia and Herzegovina
Europe · Sarajevo · parliamentary republic
What Bosnia and Herzegovina means for your money — the prices you pay, the tariffs in motion, and where U.S. policy could change both.

$157M
U.S. imports, 2025
-11.9%
change in one year
$29M
U.S. exports, 2025
4M
Population
$28.3B
GDP
In your house
What you buy that Bosnia and Herzegovina makes
America bought $157M in goods from Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2025. Of every $100 of it, here's where the money went.
Other military equipment
Iron and steel mill products
steel for cars and construction
Engines and engine parts
Finished metal shapes
Toys, games, and sporting goods
toys, games, sporting goods
Furniture, household goods, etc.
furniture, mattresses, lamps
Generators, accessories
Books, printed matter
books and printed materials
Chemicals-inorganic
Industrial machines, other
2026 so far (through April): $41M in imports. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Trade in Goods (customs basis).
The other direction
What America sells to Bosnia and Herzegovina
$29M in 2025 — a trade rupture cuts both ways, for American producers as well as American prices.
Chemicals-other
$7MComputers
$3Mlaptops, desktops, monitors
Passenger cars, new and used
$2Mnew and used cars
Pulpwood and woodpulp
$2MEngines and engine parts
$2MMedicinal equipment
$1Mmedical devices and equipment
Other industrial supplies
$1MLaboratory testing instruments
$1MPharmaceutical preparations
$1Mmedicines and pharmacy items
Where you stand
U.S. tariff posture toward Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnia and Herzegovina was assigned 35% — the highest U.S. tariffs in Europe alongside Serbia — and, unlike several neighbors, secured no bilateral deal or rate cap, so the 35% took effect August 7, 2025. Its expired GSP duty-free access (covering 3,500+ products) remains unrenewed. Executive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions, Feb 20, 2026) terminated the IEEPA reciprocal duties, and Proclamation 11012 replaced it with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge effective February 24, 2026 — a sharp reduction. Bosnia has no Section 232 steel/aluminum exposure, though wood furniture faces a separate Section 232 surcharge.
Reciprocal tariff (assigned — terminated)
35%
The rate this country was assigned under the EO 14257 reciprocal Annex — no longer in force. The Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA tariffs and they were terminated February 24, 2026 (EO 14389), replaced by a universal ~10% Section 122 surcharge. See the timeline below for the current effective rate.
Policy in motion
Tariff status: a moving target
U.S. tariff policy toward Bosnia and Herzegovina has changed 4 times since 2025. This page tracks it.
2026-02-24
IEEPA reciprocal tariffs terminated — replaced by 10% Section 122
In effectExecutive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions) terminated the IEEPA tariff duties effective February 24, 2026, replacing Bosnia's 35% reciprocal rate with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge under Proclamation 11012 (capped at 150 days).
91 FR 9437 →2025-08-07
35% rate takes effect — no deal reached
In effectExecutive Order 14326 set the post-pause Annex I reciprocal rates; Bosnia's rate was set at 35% effective August 7, 2025 — the highest in Europe alongside Serbia — with no bilateral agreement to cap or reduce it.
90 FR 37963 →2025-04-10
Elevated reciprocal rates paused to 10% for 90 days
In effectExecutive Order 14266 suspended the higher country-specific reciprocal rates — including Bosnia's 35% — back to the 10% baseline for 90 days to allow negotiations.
90 FR 15625 →2025-04-05
Reciprocal tariff regime begins — Bosnia assigned 35%
In effectExecutive Order 14257 imposed a 10% universal reciprocal duty effective April 5 and a 35% country-specific rate for Bosnia and Herzegovina scheduled to take effect April 9 — among the highest assigned to any European country.
90 FR 15041 →
Made for America
What Bosnia and Herzegovina makes for America
Bosnia and Herzegovina is a direct U.S. source of 6 essential goods Americans rely on — the items themselves, shipped finished off the line.
Go deeper
The supply chain view
Bosnia and Herzegovina sits upstream of 1 essential American goods through 1 tracked inputs.
Full supply-map profile →Reference
The country itself
Europe · Geography, people, economy, and government — public-domain data from the CIA World Factbook.
After four centuries of Ottoman rule over Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary took control in 1878 and held the region until 1918, when it was incorporated into the newly created Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. After World War II, Bosnia and Herzegovina joined the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). Bosnia and Herzegovina declared sovereignty in October 1991 and independence from the SFRY on 3 March 1992 after a referendum boycotted by ethnic Serbs. Bosnian Serb militias, with the support of Serbia and Croatia, then tried to take control of territories they claimed as their own. From 1992 to 1995, ethnic cleansing campaigns killed thousands and displaced more than two million people. On 21 November 1995, in Dayton, Ohio, the warring parties initialed a peace agreement, and the final agreement was signed in Paris on 14 December 1995. The Dayton Accords retained Bosnia and Herzegovina's international boundaries and created a multiethnic and democratic government composed of two entities roughly equal in size: the predominantly Bosniak-Bosnian Croat Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the predominantly Bosnian Serb-led Republika Srpska (RS). The Dayton Accords also established the Office of the High Representative to oversee the agreement's implementation. In 1996, the NATO-led Stabilization Force (SFOR) took over responsibility for enforcing the peace. In 2004, European Union peacekeeping troops (EUFOR) replaced SFOR. As of 2022, EUFOR deploys around 1,600 troops in Bosnia in a peacekeeping capacity. Bosnia and Herzegovina became an official candidate for EU membership in 2022.

Geography
- Location
- Southeastern Europe, bordering the Adriatic Sea and Croatia
- Area
- 51,197 sq km
- Climate
- hot summers and cold winters; areas of high elevation have short, cool summers and long, severe winters; mild, rainy winters along coast
- Terrain
- mountains and valleys
- Natural resources
- coal, iron ore, antimony, bauxite, copper, lead, zinc, chromite, cobalt, manganese, nickel, clay, gypsum, salt, sand, timber, hydropower
- Coastline
- 20 km
- Natural hazards
- destructive earthquakes
People & society
- Population
- 3,653,499 (2025 est.)
- Nationality
- Bosnian(s), Herzegovinian(s)
- Ethnic groups
- Bosniak 50.1%, Serb 30.8%, Croat 15.4%, other 2.7%, not declared/no answer 1% (2013 est.)
- Languages
- Bosnian (official) 52.9%, Serbian (official) 30.8%, Croatian (official) 14.6%, other 1.6%, no answer 0.2% (2013 est.)
- Religions
- Muslim 50.7%, Orthodox 30.7%, Roman Catholic 15.2%, atheist 0.8%, agnostic 0.3%, other 1.2%, undeclared/no answer 1.1% (2013 est.)
- Median age
- 45.7 years (2025 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth
- 78.5 years (2024 est.)
Economy
- Economic overview
- import-dominated economy; remains consumption-heavy; lack of private sector investments and diversification; jointly addressing structural economic challenges; Chinese energy infrastructure investments; high unemployment; tourism industry impacted by COVID-19
- Industries
- steel, coal, iron ore, lead, zinc, manganese, bauxite, aluminum, motor vehicle assembly, textiles, tobacco products, wooden furniture, ammunition, domestic appliances, oil refining
- Agricultural products
- maize, milk, vegetables, potatoes, plums, wheat, apples, barley, chicken, tomatoes (2023)
- Exports - partners
- Germany 15%, Croatia 14%, Serbia 12%, Austria 10%, Slovenia 9% (2023)
- Imports - partners
- Italy 13%, Germany 11%, Serbia 11%, China 9%, Croatia 8% (2023)
Government
- Government type
- parliamentary republic
- Capital
- Sarajevo
- Independence
- 1 March 1992 (from Yugoslavia)
- Constitution
- 14 December 1995 (constitution included as part of the Dayton Peace Accords)
- Executive branch
- Chairperson of the Presidency Zeljko KOMSIC (chairperson since 16 July 2025; presidency member since 20 November 2018 - Croat seat); Denis BECIROVIC (presidency member since 16 November 2022 - Bosniak seat); Zeljka CVIJANOVIC (presidency member since 16 November 2022 - Serb seat)
- Legislative branch
- Parliamentary Assembly (Skupstina)
Full reference data
Every field, by section — CIA World Factbook. Open a topic to expand it.
Introduction
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Page last updated: Wednesday, October 05, 2022