A decades-old pillar of global e-commerce has crumbled, as the US tariff exemption for small-value packages officially ended on Friday.
The move to eliminate the $800 “de minimis” loophole is a seismic shift in trade policy, one that promises to raise costs, upend supply chains, and fundamentally reshape the business models of online giants and small businesses alike.
As of 12:01 a.m. EDT, US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) began collecting normal duty rates on all global parcel imports, regardless of their value.
The sweeping change broadens a targeted cancellation of the exemption for packages from China and Hong Kong that was implemented in May, a move the Trump administration has framed as a critical front in the war on fentanyl.
A loophole closed, a lifeline cut
For the White House, the policy shift is a matter of national security and economic fairness.
“President Trump’s ending of the deadly de minimis loophole will save thousands of American lives by restricting the flow of narcotics and other dangerous prohibited items, and add up to $10 billion a year in tariff revenues to our Treasury,” White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told reporters.
This is not a temporary measure. A senior administration official was blunt, stating that any push to restore the exemptions for even trusted trading partners was “dead on arrival.”
“This is a permanent change,” the official said, ending an era that began in 1938 with a modest $5 exemption for gifts and was expanded to $800 in 2015 to foster e-commerce growth.
The Shein and Temu effect
That 2015 expansion, however, inadvertently created a superhighway for direct-to-consumer behemoths.
After President Donald Trump’s first-term tariffs hit bulk Chinese goods, fast-fashion giants like Shein and Temu masterfully exploited the de minimis rule, shipping billions of individual packages directly to American consumers, each one slipping under the tariff radar.
The scale of this explosion is staggering.
CBP data shows the number of packages claiming the exemption skyrocketed nearly tenfold, from 139 million in fiscal 2015 to a mind-boggling 1.36 billion in fiscal 2024—a rate of nearly 4 million packages entering the country tariff-free every single day.
A ‘historic win’ and the price of change
For American manufacturers who have struggled to compete, the closure of this loophole is a monumental victory.
The National Coalition of Textile Organizations hailed the move as a “historic win,” arguing it finally closes a channel that allowed foreign firms to avoid tariffs and undercut American jobs, sometimes with goods made with forced labor.
“The administration’s executive action closes this channel and delivers long overdue relief to the US textile industry and its workers,” the group said.
But this relief will come at a cost for online shoppers. Retail analysts say the end of the exemption will inevitably raise prices for a vast range of goods, as duties are now passed on to the consumer.
It will, however, level the playing field, putting e-commerce firms on a par with traditional retailers like Walmart that have always paid tariffs on their bulk container imports.
The financial impact is already being felt. Since the exemption was first eliminated for China and Hong Kong on May 2, the CBP has already collected more than $492 million in additional duties.
Now, with the policy extended to the entire world, that number is set to climb dramatically, ushering in a new and more costly reality for the digital age.
The post US tariff: Why your online orders from overseas might cost more now appeared first on Invezz