Trump Tariffs 2026: Taiwan Faces 12.5 Percent Rate but Gains Relief Through U.S. Supply Chain Integration
Listeners, welcome to Taiwan Tariff News and Tracker, where we break down how Washington’s tariff politics are shaping Taiwan’s economy, supply chains, and strategic position in the world.
According to Politico, the Trump administration is moving ahead with a sweeping new tariff plan: a baseline duty of at least 10 percent on imports from major U.S. trading partners, justified under a Section 301 investigation into goods made with forced labor. Politico reports that six partners, including Canada, Mexico, and the European Union, could face a 10 percent rate, while another 44 economies could see a 12.5 percent tariff. Taiwan was part of the broader investigation universe, and while it has not been singled out for forced-labor noncompliance, Taiwanese exporters now have to assume that the “new normal” is a higher-tariff world whenever Trump leans on Section 301.
At the same time, metals tariffs that matter to Taiwan’s high-end manufacturing base are being quietly but significantly retooled. Trade law firm Sandler, Travis & Rosenberg notes that President Trump’s June 1 proclamation once again rewrites the Section 232 tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper, effective June 8, 2026. The base rate for covered metals stays at 25 percent, but with important carve-outs and caps. Logistics provider C.H. Robinson explains that for favored partners including Taiwan, total duties on many covered metal and derivative products are effectively capped at about 15 percent, depending on the existing Column 1 duty rate in the U.S. tariff schedule. In practice, that means Taiwanese exporters of steel-intensive industrial equipment, components, and certain machinery will face a ceiling on the combined tariff hit, rather than the full 25 percent rate that still applies to less-favored countries.
Green Worldwide and C.H. Robinson both highlight another change that matters to Taiwan’s role in U.S.-Asia supply chains: if a product uses at least 85 percent U.S.-origin steel, aluminum, or copper by weight, it can qualify for a preferential 10 percent Section 232 duty, down from the earlier 25 percent. By lowering the content threshold from 95 percent to 85 percent, the White House is signaling that it wants foreign manufacturers, including those in Taiwan, to pull more U.S. metal into their production lines to keep access to lower tariffs when they ship back into the American market.
For Taiwan, the story right now is a double-edged sword. On one side are broad Trump tariffs that rebuild a protectionist wall and create constant headline risk for any export-dependent economy. On the other are targeted, rules-based relief mechanisms—caps at roughly 15 percent for metals from trusted partners, and 10 percent rates where U.S. content is sufficiently high—that sophisticated Taiwanese manufacturers can actively plan around.
Put simply, tariffs are back at the center of U.S. economic statecraft, and Taiwan is being nudged toward deeper integration with U.S. supply chains even as it navigates higher and more complex tariff schedules.
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