Country exposure · ER

Eritrea
Africa · Asmara · authoritarian
What Eritrea means for your money — the prices you pay, the tariffs in motion, and where U.S. policy could change both.

$178K
U.S. imports, 2025
-79.1%
change in one year
$5M
U.S. exports, 2025
6M
Population
$2.5B
GDP
In your house
What you buy that Eritrea makes
America bought $178K in goods from Eritrea in 2025 — down 79.1% in a single year. Of every $100 of it, here's where the money went.
Wine, beer, and related products
wine and beer
Minimum value shipments
Alcoholic beverages, excluding wine
spirits and liquor
Apparel, textiles, nonwool or cotton
synthetic and performance apparel
Agricultural machinery, equipment
Other parts and accessories of vehicles
car parts and accessories
Engines and engine parts
Industrial engines
Apparel, household goods - cotton
cotton clothing and linens
2026 so far (through April): $243K in imports. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Trade in Goods (customs basis).
The other direction
What America sells to Eritrea
$5M in 2025 — a trade rupture cuts both ways, for American producers as well as American prices.
Nonfarm tractors and parts
$2MCell phones and other household goods, n.e.c.
$773Kcell phones and home electronics
Medicinal equipment
$444Kmedical devices and equipment
Excavating machinery
$261KMaterials handling equipment
$244KIndustrial machines, other
$214KMinimum value shipments
$167KPlastic materials
$95Kplastics for packaging and goods
Measuring, testing, control instruments
$93KWhere you stand
U.S. tariff posture toward Eritrea
No U.S. tariff action singles this country out. Its goods face the universal 10% temporary import surcharge under Section 122 of the Trade Act (which replaced the IEEPA reciprocal baseline in February 2026) plus the sectoral Section 232 duties — steel and aluminum at 50% — that apply to all countries. The Section 122 surcharge is statutorily temporary — scheduled to lapse on or about July 23, 2026 (a 150-day cap) unless extended or replaced.
Reciprocal tariff (universal baseline)
10%
The universal 10% floor — a Section 122 import surcharge since February 2026, previously the EO 14257 reciprocal baseline — applies to nearly all U.S. imports. This country has no higher assigned rate of its own.
Policy in motion
Tariff status: a moving target
No U.S. tariff action names Eritrea. These are the universal measures — applied to every country without a country-specific arrangement — that set its treatment.
2026-04-06
Section 232 metals coverage expanded
In effectThe April 2026 proclamation strengthening Section 232 actions on aluminum, steel, and copper expanded derivative-product coverage for all countries, keeping the general metals rate at 50%.
91 FR 18201 →2026-02-24
IEEPA reciprocal tariffs terminated — replaced by 10% Section 122 surcharge
In effectExecutive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions) terminated the IEEPA tariff duties — including the EO 14257 reciprocal baseline — effective February 24, 2026. A flat 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge (Proclamation 11012 of February 20, 2026) replaced them, leaving the universal rate unchanged at 10% on a different statutory basis. Section 122 caps such surcharges at 150 days, so this 10% surcharge is scheduled to lapse on or about July 23, 2026 absent further action (the administration has signaled it could raise the rate toward the 15% statutory maximum).
91 FR 9437 →2025-11-13
Agricultural products exempted from reciprocal tariffs
In effectExecutive Order 14360 of November 14, 2025 removed reciprocal duties from certain agricultural products listed in its annexes (coffee, cocoa, bananas, and other goods the U.S. does not produce in sufficient quantity), retroactive to November 13, 2025 — for all countries subject to the reciprocal tariff.
90 FR 54091 →2025-06-04
Section 232 steel and aluminum duties doubled to 50%
In effectThe June 3, 2025 proclamation raised Section 232 duties on steel and aluminum articles and derivatives from 25% to 50% for all countries, effective June 4, 2025.
90 FR 24199 →2025-04-05
Universal 10% reciprocal baseline takes effect
In effectExecutive Order 14257 (signed April 2, 2025) imposed a 10% ad valorem reciprocal duty on imports from all trading partners, effective April 5, 2025. Countries without a higher Annex I rate remain at this baseline.
Federal Register · 2025-06063 →2025-03-12
Section 232 steel and aluminum duties set at 25% for all countries
In effectProclamations of February 10, 2025 terminated all country exemptions and quota arrangements and applied 25% Section 232 duties to steel and aluminum imports from every country, effective March 12, 2025.
90 FR 9817 →
Reference
The country itself
Africa · Geography, people, economy, and government — public-domain data from the CIA World Factbook.
Eritrea won independence from Italian colonial control in 1941, but the UN only established it as an autonomous region within the Ethiopian federation in 1952, after a decade of British administrative control. Ethiopia's full annexation of Eritrea as a province 10 years later sparked a violent 30-year conflict for independence that ended in 1991 with Eritrean fighters defeating government forces. Eritreans overwhelmingly approved independence in a 1993 referendum. ISAIAS Afwerki has been Eritrea's only president since independence; his rule, particularly since 2001, has been characterized by highly autocratic and repressive actions. His government has created a highly militarized society by instituting an unpopular program of mandatory conscription into national service -- divided between military and civilian service -- of indefinite length. A two-and-a-half-year border war with Ethiopia that erupted in 1998 ended under UN auspices in 2000. Ethiopia rejected a subsequent 2007 Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC) demarcation. More than a decade of a tense “no peace, no war” stalemate ended in 2018 when the newly elected Ethiopian prime minister accepted the EEBC’s 2007 ruling, and the two countries signed declarations of peace and friendship. Eritrean leaders then engaged in intensive diplomacy around the Horn of Africa, bolstering regional peace, security, and cooperation, as well as brokering rapprochements between governments and opposition groups. In 2018, the UN Security Council lifted an arms embargo that had been imposed on Eritrea since 2009, after the UN Somalia-Eritrea Monitoring Group reported they had not found evidence of Eritrean support in recent years for al-Shabaab. The country’s rapprochement with Ethiopia led to a resumption of economic ties, but the level of air transport, trade, and tourism have remained roughly the same since late 2020. The Eritrean economy remains agriculture-dependent, and the country is still one of Africa’s poorest nations. Eritrea faced new international condemnation and US sanctions in mid-2021 for its participation in the war in Ethiopia’s Tigray Regional State, where Eritrean forces were found to have committed war crimes and crimes against humanity. As most Eritrean troops were departing northern Ethiopia in January 2023, ISAIAS began a series of diplomatic engagements aimed at bolstering Eritrea’s foreign partnerships and regional influence. Despite the country's improved relations with its neighbors, ISAIAS has not let up on repression, and conscription and militarization continue.

Geography
- Location
- Eastern Africa, bordering the Red Sea, between Djibouti and Sudan
- Area
- 117,600 sq km
- Climate
- hot, dry desert strip along Red Sea coast; cooler and wetter in the central highlands (up to 61 cm of rainfall annually, heaviest June to September); semiarid in western hills and lowlands
- Terrain
- dominated by extension of Ethiopian north-south trending highlands, descending on the east to a coastal desert plain, on the northwest to hilly terrain and on the southwest to flat-to-rolling plains
- Natural resources
- gold, potash, zinc, copper, salt, possibly oil and natural gas, fish
- Coastline
- 2,234 km (mainland on Red Sea 1,151 km; islands in Red Sea 1,083 km)
- Natural hazards
- frequent droughts, rare earthquakes and volcanoes; locust swarms volcanism: Dubbi (1,625 m), which last erupted in 1861, was the country's only historically active volcano until Nabro (2,218 m) came to life in 2011
People & society
- Population
- 6,416,435 (2025 est.)
- Nationality
- Eritrean(s)
- Ethnic groups
- Tigrinya 50%, Tigre 30%, Saho 4%, Afar 4%, Kunama 4%, Bilen 3%, Hedareb/Beja 2%, Nara 2%, Rashaida 1% (2021 est.)
- Languages
- Tigrinya (official), Arabic (official), English (official), Tigre, Kunama, Afar, other Cushitic languages
- Religions
- Eritrean Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Evangelical Lutheran, Sunni Muslim
- Median age
- 21.7 years (2025 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth
- 67.5 years (2024 est.)
Economy
- Economic overview
- largely agrarian economy with a significant mining sector; substantial fiscal surplus due to tight controls; high and vulnerable debts; increased Ethiopian trade and shared port usage decreasing prices; financial and economic data integrity challenges
- Industries
- food processing, beverages, clothing and textiles, light manufacturing, salt, cement
- Agricultural products
- sorghum, milk, barley, vegetables, root vegetables, cereals, pulses, wheat, beef, maize (2023)
- Exports - partners
- China 67%, UAE 26%, Philippines 5%, Italy 1%, Croatia 1% (2023)
- Imports - partners
- China 32%, UAE 27%, Turkey 9%, USA 7%, Italy 5% (2023)
Government
- Government type
- authoritarian
- Capital
- Asmara
- Independence
- 24 May 1993 (from Ethiopia)
- Constitution
- ratified by the Constituent Assembly 23 May 1997 (never implemented)
- Executive branch
- President ISAIAS Afwerki (since 24 May 1993)
- Legislative branch
- National Assembly (Hagerawi Baito)
Full reference data
Every field, by section — CIA World Factbook. Open a topic to expand it.
Introduction
Travel Facts
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US State Dept Travel Information - Overall information about foreign travel for US citizens.
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Page last updated: Thursday, December 01, 2022