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A small change in US import duties can significantly affect export profitability. For Indian exporters trading with the United States, understanding how tariffs work is essential for pricing competitiveness and supply chain planning.
Recently, the United States announced a cut in reciprocal tariffs from 25 percent to 18 percent, effective immediately. This move goes beyond trade paperwork. It signals stronger trade ties, lower geopolitical friction and improved growth visibility for export driven economies like India. Early market signals reflected this shift, with Gift Nifty indicating a potential 500 point gap up, pointing to a risk on sentiment in Indian markets.
Why US tariffs matter more than ever
The United States remains India’s largest export destination. In 2023, Indian exports to the US crossed USD 83 billion, spanning IT services, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, textiles, engineering goods and more. US import tariffs directly influence final landed costs, pricing power and margins. For Indian exporters, tariff awareness is no longer optional. It is a core part of export planning.
The recent tariff reduction eases pressure on exporters who were either absorbing higher duties or passing costs on to buyers at the risk of losing competitiveness.
How US import tariffs work
US import tariffs are duties charged when goods enter the country. They are determined by product classification under the Harmonized System code. Each HS code carries a specific duty rate applied at the port of entry.
While the average US tariff rate is around 3 to 4 percent, this masks wide variation across sectors. Apparel and textiles often face duties between 10 and 18 percent. Footwear can attract even higher rates. Steel and aluminium remain subject to 25 percent and 10 percent duties under Section 232 measures. Pharmaceuticals often enter at low or zero duty. These differences make accurate classification and early cost planning critical.
India and the tariff landscape
India does not have a free trade agreement with the United States. Indian goods typically enter under Most Favoured Nation tariff rates. This makes tariff changes particularly impactful, since exporters cannot rely on preferential treatment. A reduction from 25 percent to 18 percent directly improves pricing flexibility, especially for cost sensitive categories like textiles, chemicals and engineering goods.
What the tariff cut means for India
Indian exporters stand to gain from stronger export momentum across IT services, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, textiles and engineering goods. Lower duties allow either margin expansion or more competitive pricing. Improved trade flows support a stronger INR outlook, while policy stability encourages capital inflows into Indian equities. Reduced geopolitical friction lowers the risk premium applied to Indian markets and supports positive sentiment around Make in India and PLI linked sectors.
Preparing for tariff resilience
Tariffs are only one part of the landed cost. Customs fees, port charges, compliance documentation and logistics costs all add up. With shipping rates and port congestion still volatile, exporters need full cost visibility to maintain delivery reliability.
Smart exporters treat tariff management as a supply chain function. Regular HS code audits, scenario planning and coordination between logistics, finance and compliance teams are essential. With the right logistics partner, exporters can respond faster to policy shifts and build resilient supply chains.
The tariff cut marks a more supportive environment for Indian exports. For exporters who plan proactively, it presents an opportunity to price better, compete stronger and grow with confidence in the US market.



