Burden-of-tariffs explainer

Who pays tariffs?

Who pays tariffs in practice: importer of record at customs, economic burden across suppliers, retailers, and consumers, with examples.

Source-first answer

The importer of record pays tariffs to customs. But the economic burden is negotiable and often shared: suppliers may discount, importers may accept lower margins, retailers may raise prices, and customers may pay more. Contracts and Incoterms affect who is responsible operationally, but CBP collects from the importer of record.

Pays customs
Importer of record

CBP collects at entry from the responsible importer.

Economic burden
Shared or shifted

Depends on price power, contracts, and margins.

Planning tool
Landed cost

Use landed cost to see what price or margin must change.

Does the shipper or buyer pay tariffs?

Freight terms can determine who handles logistics costs, but the customs duty obligation is attached to the importer of record. A seller can reimburse or price-adjust, yet CBP still collects from the importer on the entry.

How the cost gets passed on

Tariffs can show up as higher retail prices, reduced importer margin, lower supplier prices, or changes in sourcing. The answer depends on market competition and contract leverage.

Planning-only notice: TariffsChart is not a customs broker, law firm, tax advisor, or government authority. Verify classifications, rates, effective dates, exclusions, and filing instructions with official sources and qualified professionals.

FAQ

Does China pay U.S. tariffs?

Foreign exporters do not pay CBP directly. U.S. importers pay customs duties, though exporters may absorb some cost through lower prices.

Do consumers pay tariffs?

Consumers can pay part of the tariff through higher prices, but the amount depends on competition, margins, and supply-chain contracts.

Do tariffs hurt the poor?

Tariffs can be regressive when they raise prices on everyday goods, but the distributional impact depends on product categories and pass-through.