What's the Tariff on Bananas?
Bananas from Guatemala, Ecuador, Costa Rica.
Current Tariff Rate
10%
Pre-2025 Rate
0%
Rate Increase
+10pp
Price Impact
+10%
+$0.07
Real-World Price Impact
Before Tariffs
$0.69
1 bunch bananas
After Tariffs
$0.76
1 bunch bananas
That's $0.07 more per unit — a 10% price increase paid by the American buyer.
Note: Price estimates assume full tariff pass-through to consumers. Actual retail prices may vary — manufacturers may absorb some costs, shift production, or adjust margins.
The Story Behind This Tariff
Bananas are the most consumed fruit in America and have been duty-free for decades, making the 10% Section 122 tariff symbolically significant despite its modest rate. Guatemala, Ecuador, and Costa Rica dominate supply through multinational companies like Chiquita (now Cutrale-Safra) and Dole. Bananas are the world's most traded fruit, and their remarkably low price — averaging $0.63 per pound — reflects ruthless supply chain efficiency built over a century by the original 'banana republics.' The tariff increases seem small per bunch but compound across 130 billion bananas consumed annually in the US. The banana supply chain is fragile: the Cavendish variety that comprises 99% of exports faces extinction from Panama Disease TR4 fungus, and higher costs reduce the industry's ability to invest in disease-resistant varieties. Lower-income households spend proportionally more on bananas, making this a regressive tariff on America's cheapest healthy food.
📦 Supply Chain
Primary Origin
Guatemala
Made in USA
0%
Import Volume
$2.9B
Alternatives
Ecuador, Costa Rica, Honduras, Colombia
📅 Tariff Timeline
1993
EU banana trade war (US was not directly tariffing)
0%2000
WTO rules on banana tariff disputes
0%2025
Section 122 universal baseline applies to bananas
10%👥 Consumer Impact
Households Affected
130M
Annual Cost Per Household
$8
💡 Did You Know?
- •Americans eat 27 pounds of bananas per person per year — more than apples and oranges combined
- •The Cavendish banana variety faces extinction from Panama Disease TR4, and the tariff reduces investment in alternatives
- •Bananas are the #1 item sold at Walmart — the tariff affects America's most-purchased grocery product
Tariff Details
- HTS Code
- 0803.90
- Current Rate
- 10%
- Pre-2025 Rate
- 0%
- Tariff Type
- Section 122
Legal Authority
Section 122 (Balance of Payments)
Effective: April 2025
Baseline 10% tariff on imports to address balance of payments
The tariff on Bananas is paid by the American importer at the port of entry and passed through to consumers as higher retail prices. The foreign manufacturer does not pay the tariff.
Who Actually Pays This Tariff?
Despite claims that tariffs are paid by foreign countries, the 10% tariff on Bananas is paid by American importers — US companies that purchase these goods from abroad. The cost is then passed to American consumers through higher retail prices.
- ✓ The foreign seller receives the same price as before
- ✓ The US importer pays 10% of the customs value to CBP
- ✓ The retailer marks up the higher landed cost
- ✓ You pay more at the register: $0.69 → $0.76
Related Products in Food & Beverage
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10%
1 lb premium coffee: $14.99 → $16.49
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20%
1L extra virgin olive oil: $12.99 → $15.59
Wine (Imported)
20%
Bottle of French wine: $18 → $21.6
Beer (Imported)
10%
Six-pack imported beer: $12.99 → $14.29
Cheese (Imported)
20%
1 lb Parmigiano: $22.99 → $27.59
Chocolate
15%
Premium chocolate bar: $5.99 → $6.89
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