Industrial

What's the Tariff on Lithium-Ion Batteries?

Batteries primarily from China, South Korea, Japan.

💡
The 54% tariff on Lithium-Ion Batteries is paid by American importers, not foreign manufacturers. Your EV battery pack now costs $12,320 instead of $8,000 — that's $4,320 more, or 54% of the sticker price going directly to tariff taxes.

Current Tariff Rate

54%

Pre-2025 Rate

7.5%

Rate Increase

+46.5pp

Price Impact

+54%

+$4,320

Real-World Price Impact

Before Tariffs

$8,000

EV battery pack

After Tariffs

$12,320

EV battery pack

That's $4,320 more per unit — a 54% 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

Lithium-ion battery tariffs represent the sharpest tension between industrial policy and clean energy goals. China controls 77% of global battery cell production through CATL, BYD, and EVE Energy, with South Korea's LG and Samsung SDI and Japan's Panasonic comprising most of the rest. The 54% combined tariff (IEEPA + Section 301) makes Chinese batteries prohibitively expensive, effectively blocking the cheapest path to EV affordability. However, this is partly intentional — the IRA's battery manufacturing tax credits aim to build a domestic supply chain, and tariffs prevent Chinese producers from undercutting nascent US factories. The problem is timing: US battery gigafactories won't reach meaningful scale until 2027-2028, creating a 2-3 year gap where batteries are expensive regardless of source. The tariff also hits energy storage systems for solar and wind, slowing grid-scale renewable deployment.

📦 Supply Chain

Primary Origin

CN

Made in USA

10%

Import Volume

$15.8B

Alternatives

South Korea (LG, Samsung SDI), domestic gigafactories (2027+)

📅 Tariff Timeline

2018

Section 301 — Li-ion batteries at 25%

25%

2024

Section 301 review increases battery tariff

25%

2025

IEEPA stacks additional duties on Chinese batteries

54%

👥 Consumer Impact

Households Affected

85M

Annual Cost Per Household

$195

💡 Did You Know?

  • CATL alone produces more battery cells than all non-Chinese manufacturers combined
  • China controls 65% of lithium processing, 77% of cell production, and 90% of anode material — the entire battery supply chain
  • The IRA offers $45/kWh tax credits for US-made batteries, but Chinese cells cost $55/kWh — tariffs are needed to close the gap

Tariff Details

HTS Code
8507.60
Current Rate
54%
Pre-2025 Rate
7.5%
Tariff Type
IEEPA + Section 301

Legal Authority

IEEPA + Section 301

Effective: April 2025 (stacked)

Combined IEEPA emergency tariff and existing Section 301 China tariffs

The tariff on Lithium-Ion Batteries 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 54% tariff on Lithium-Ion Batteries 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 54% of the customs value to CBP
  • ✓ The retailer marks up the higher landed cost
  • ✓ You pay more at the register: $8,000 → $12,320

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