No more cheap skirts: Trump ends tax exemption for low-value Chinese
imports
[April 04, 2025] By
ANNE D'INNOCENZIO and DIDI TANG
A notice to customers dazzled by the low-priced products on Chinese
shopping apps: the days of getting trendy clothing, tools and gag gifts
that cost less than lunch delivered to your door in 10 days are probably
numbered.
President Donald Trump is ending a little-known but widely used
exemption that has allowed as many as 4 million low-value parcels — most
of them originating in China — to arrive in the U.S. every day tax-free.
An executive order the president signed Wednesday will eliminate the “de
minimis provision” for goods from China and Hong Kong on May 2. The tax
exemption, which applies to packages valued at $800 or less, has helped
China-founded e-commerce companies like Shein and Temu to thrive while
cutting into the U.S. retail market.
“Shoppers had a full array of product and options of timing,” Marshal
Cohen, chief retail advisor at market research firm Circana, said. “Now,
they’re going to have a limited array of options and timing: so you can
still buy this product, but you may have to wait three or four weeks.”
U.S. politicians, law enforcement agencies and business groups have
described the long-standing policy as a trade loophole that gave
inexpensive Chinese goods an advantage and served as a portal for
illicit drugs and counterfeits to enter the country.
The sweeping tariffs Trump announced on Wednesday also aim to end the
duty-free exception for all imported goods worth less than $800, but
only when the U.S. government has the personnel in place to process
parcels from every country.

What will be the effect on prices and shipping times?
A White House fact sheet said small packages of Chinese products sent
through the international postal network will be subject to a duty rate
of either 30% of their value or $25 per item, an amount that will
increase to $50 per item after June 1.
Commercial carriers such as FedEx and UPS will be required to report
shipment details and remit the appropriate duties to U.S. Customs and
Border Protection, according to the White House. After Trump's latest
round of tariffs, the tariff rate for Chinese products will be at least
54%.
Supporters of the de minimis exception have argued that its elimination
would drive up costs and hurt low-income consumers and small businesses.
The tariff costs threaten to deal a blow to the U.S. operations of
companies like Shein and Temu, which rapidly expanded in the U.S. using
the de minimis provision to deliver ultra-cheap fast fashion items from
China.
However, it's unclear what impact the loss of the tax exemption will
have on the two online retailers, as well as on American companies like
Amazon and Walmart, whose platforms include virtual marketplaces where
international sellers offer products.
Shein and Temu already have been building warehouses in the U.S. so they
could get orders to U.S. shoppers more quickly. Shein recently opened a
fulfillment and logistics hub in the Seattle area. Neither company could
be reached for comment Thursday.
Ram Ben Tzion, chief executive officer of the digital vetting platform
Publican, said he expected the companies to “be forced to rethink their
business strategy and possibly explore opting out of the U.S. market.”
In an emailed statement to AP, FedEx said it would support its customers
to adapt to the new regulatory requirements and said it would be
important for shippers to have “paperwork completed correctly ahead of
pick-up” for shipments to move smoothly.
Hilton Beckham, an assistant commissioner of the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, said the federal agency was ready to implement the latest
tariffs.

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A worker loads boxes of goods from a truck outside a wholesale
clothing mall in Beijing on June 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Andy Wong,
File)
 “Our automated systems are fully
updated to capture, assess, and administer all new duties, and clear
guidance will be provided to support uniform enforcement across the
nation,” Beckham said.
Ben Tzion, of Publican, said he would “highly doubt” the U.S.
government was ready to process the huge number of low-value
shipments to be taxed starting next month.
The Hong Kong government said the HongKong Post would “temporarily
maintain” postal services to the U.S through May 2 but “will not
collect any so-called tariffs on behalf of the U.S. authorities.”
What is the de minimis provision?
Introduced in 1938, the de minimis exception was intended to
facilitate the flow of small packages valued at no more than $5, the
equivalent of about $109 today. The threshold increased to $200 in
1994 and $800 in 2016. But the rapid rise of cross-border
e-commerce, driven by China, has challenged the intent of the
decades-old customs exception rule.
Chinese exports of low-value packages soared to $66 billion in 2023,
up from $5.3 billion in 2018, according to a February report by the
Congressional Research Service. And the U.S. market has been a major
destination.
The Chinese government, which sees cross-border e-commerce as a
critical part of its foreign trade, has introduced favorable
policies, including financial support and infrastructure building,
to foster its growth.
Former President Joe Biden proposed a rule last year that said
foreign companies can’t avoid tariffs simply by shipping goods that
they claim to be worth $800 or less. Trump tried in February to end
the exception but his initial order was called off within days when
it appeared the U.S. was not prepared to process and collect tariffs
on the millions of parcels.
U.S. Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, a Democrat from Connecticut, said she was
pleased Trump acted a second time to eliminate the rule.
“For too long, this customs loophole has let foreign exporters flood
our market with cheap goods and helped drug traffickers move
fentanyl past our borders — resulting in factory closures, job
losses, and deaths,” DeLauro said.

An explosion of cheap goods
In 2023, for the first time, more than 1 billion such packages came
through U.S. customs, up from 134 million in 2015. By the end of
last year, Customs and Border Protection said it was processing
about 4 million small shipments a day.
The cheap prices and increasing popularity of Shein and Temu
squeezed fast-fashion retailers like Forever 21 and H&M. Forever 21
blamed the tax exemption in part for its decision to file for
bankruptcy last month and close its U.S. stores,
“We have been unable to find a sustainable path forward, given
competition from foreign fast-fashion companies, which have been
able to take advantage of the de minimis exemption to undercut our
brand on pricing and margin,” Chief Financial Officer Brad Sell said
in a statement.
Meanwhile, Amazon launched late last year a low- cost online
storefront featuring electronics, apparel and other products priced
under $20, in an apparent effort to compete with Temu and Shein.
Amazon shipped the products to U.S. customers from a warehouse it
operates in China, according to documentation the company provided
to sellers.
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