The 10% US Tariff Surcharge Is Set to Expire July 24

The 10% US Tariff Surcharge Is Set to Expire July 24

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A three-week countdown is running on one of the biggest cost drivers behind US retail prices this year. The Section 122 global tariff surcharge — a 10% charge the administration placed on imports from virtually every country starting February 24, 2026 — is set to expire automatically on July 24, 2026, whether or not the legal fight over it is resolved.

What’s actually happening

Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 lets the executive branch impose temporary import restrictions to address balance-of-payments issues, but it caps them at 150 days unless Congress votes to extend them. That clock runs out at 12:01 a.m. ET on July 24, 2026. On May 7, 2026, the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled in Oregon v. United States and Burlap and Barrel, Inc. v. United States that the surcharge was unlawful in the first place. Just five days later, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit stayed that ruling, which means the tariff is still being collected on imports right now while the appeal plays out. Regardless of how the appeal resolves, the statutory 150-day limit means the surcharge lapses on its own next month unless lawmakers act — and an extension is considered unlikely.

Why this matters if you shop US stores from abroad

Tariffs on imported goods don’t stay with the importer — retailers and suppliers build that cost into shelf prices across the board, not just on the specific items being taxed. For months, a flat 10% surcharge sitting on top of an already complicated stack of country- and category-specific tariffs has been part of what US brands factor into their pricing. When a cost like that lifts, even temporarily, it’s one less thing pushing prices up on the electronics, apparel, beauty, and fashion goods that keep showing up in demand from international buyers and resellers.

That doesn’t mean prices flip overnight on July 25 — retailers don’t reprice instantly, and the U.S. Trade Representative is also running two separate Section 301 investigations covering 76 potential tariff determinations that are expected to wrap up before the July 24 deadline, so this isn’t the last word on U.S. trade costs this year. But for shoppers and small resale businesses who buy in bulk from U.S. retailers, a genuine reduction in one major tariff layer — even a partial or temporary one — is worth watching, especially heading into back-to-school and pre-holiday buying season.

The bigger picture: tariffs are getting more complicated, not less

What’s clear from the last year of Section 122, Section 301, and de minimis changes is that U.S. import costs now depend heavily on what you’re buying, where it originates, and exactly when it ships. That’s a lot for an individual shopper or a small reseller to track — which is exactly the kind of complexity a package forwarding address is built to absorb. Viabox customers shop U.S. stores using a real Portland, Oregon address, and duties and import rules on the receiving end are handled separately from whatever is happening with U.S. tariff policy on the way in. You’re not trying to time a court ruling to get a good price — you’re just buying when the deal is good and shipping when you’re ready.

What to watch next

  • Whether the Federal Circuit rules on the merits before July 24, or whether the surcharge simply lapses on schedule
  • Whether Congress moves to extend Section 122 authority — currently seen as unlikely
  • Results of the two pending Section 301 investigations, which could introduce new tariffs even as this one expires

None of this changes how you shop — it just changes what things cost. If you’ve been holding off on a US order waiting for prices to settle, the next few weeks are worth keeping an eye on.

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