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U.S. Container Imports Slump 8.4% in September as Trump Tariffs Bite

In September 2025, U.S. imports of containerised goods plunged 8.4% year-on-year, with a particularly sharp 22.9% drop in goods arriving from China.

The fallout is widely seen as a direct consequence of President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff agenda.

Ports across America still handled 2.31 million TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent units)—the third-highest September volume ever recorded—but that number is now part of a downward trend.

Why the Drop?

  1. Frontloading before tariffs
    Retailers rushed to import holiday stock early, in anticipation of impending tariff hikes. That means the usual peak import period has already passed.
  2. New tariff burdens
    The U.S. is introducing fresh 25% tariffs on items like upholstered furniture, cabinets, and vanities—measures that may shift sourcing and suppress future volumes.
  3. Trade realignment
    China’s share of U.S. container imports slipped from 34.5% in August to 33% in September. Meanwhile, manufacturers and importers appear to be pivoting toward countries like India, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia.

What’s Next for U.S. Ports & Trade

  • Analysts at the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates now expect monthly import volumes at major container ports to fall below 2 million TEUs for the rest of the year.
  • The slump raises red flags for U.S. supply chains—less inventory buffer, more pressure on logistics, and harsher cost negotiations.
  • If tariffs stay in place or escalate, global trade flows could shift permanently, with knock-on effects for both exporters and importers.

“This year’s peak season has come and gone largely because retailers frontloaded imports ahead of reciprocal tariffs taking effect.”
— Jonathan Gold, Vice President for Supply Chain & Customs Policy, NRF

original article

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