Food & Beverage

What's the Tariff on Chocolate?

Chocolate products from Switzerland, Belgium, Cรดte d'Ivoire.

๐Ÿ’ก
The 15% tariff on Chocolate is paid by American importers, not foreign manufacturers. Your Premium chocolate bar now costs $6.89 instead of $5.99 โ€” that's $0.9 more, or 15% of the sticker price going directly to tariff taxes.

Current Tariff Rate

15%

Pre-2025 Rate

5.6%

Rate Increase

+9.4pp

Price Impact

+15%

+$0.9

Real-World Price Impact

Before Tariffs

$5.99

Premium chocolate bar

โ†’

After Tariffs

$6.89

Premium chocolate bar

That's $0.9 more per unit โ€” a 15% price increase paid by the American buyer.

Note: Price estimates assume full tariff pass-through to consumers. Actual retail prices may vary โ€” manufacturers may absorb some costs, shift production, or adjust margins.

The Story Behind This Tariff

Chocolate tariffs layer on top of an already-stressed global cocoa market. Cรดte d'Ivoire and Ghana produce 60% of the world's cocoa, but premium chocolate manufacturing happens in Switzerland, Belgium, and Germany. The 15% tariff hits finished chocolate products โ€” bars, truffles, bonbons โ€” from European confectioners who transform African beans into luxury goods. Cocoa prices have tripled since 2023 due to West African crop failures, so the tariff arrives at the worst possible moment. Lindt, Godiva, Toblerone, and Belgian praline makers face margin destruction. The US chocolate industry (Hershey, Mars) sources most cocoa as raw beans duty-free, then processes domestically โ€” giving American manufacturers a structural advantage. Premium European chocolate occupies a $3.2B niche that domestic producers cannot easily replicate, as Swiss and Belgian chocolate traditions rely on proprietary conching techniques and recipe heritage spanning centuries. Valentine's Day and Christmas chocolate sales will be visibly more expensive.

๐Ÿ“ฆ Supply Chain

Primary Origin

Switzerland/Belgium

Made in USA

78%

Import Volume

$3.2B

Alternatives

US chocolate brands (Hershey, Ghirardelli)

๐Ÿ“… Tariff Timeline

2019

WTO Airbus dispute included some chocolate products

25% (select)

2021

Tariff truce restored lower duties

5.6%

2025

Section 122 baseline tariff on all chocolate imports

15%

๐Ÿ‘ฅ Consumer Impact

Households Affected

110M

Annual Cost Per Household

$15

๐Ÿ’ก Did You Know?

  • โ€ขGlobal cocoa prices hit $12,000/ton in 2025, triple the 2023 price โ€” the tariff adds to already historic cost pressures
  • โ€ขSwitzerland exports $800M of chocolate to the US annually despite having zero domestic cocoa production
  • โ€ขThe average American eats 9.5 pounds of chocolate per year, with $2.3B spent on premium imported brands

Tariff Details

HTS Code
1806.31
Current Rate
15%
Pre-2025 Rate
5.6%
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 Chocolate 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 15% tariff on Chocolate is paid by American importers โ€” US companies that purchase these goods from abroad. The cost is then passed to American consumers through higher retail prices.

  • โœ“ The foreign seller receives the same price as before
  • โœ“ The US importer pays 15% of the customs value to CBP
  • โœ“ The retailer marks up the higher landed cost
  • โœ“ You pay more at the register: $5.99 โ†’ $6.89

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