An independent, nonpartisan record of every U.S. tariff and the revenue it generates.

Tariff Tracker pulls live customs and trade data from Treasury, Census, and the Federal Register, presented exactly as the government publishes it; daily, with full historical context back to January 2025.

Updated each business dayOpen data, public sourcesNo advertising, no tracking
Total Tariff Revenue · Jan 2025 – April 2026iCent-accurate cumulative figure from the U.S. Treasury's Monthly Treasury Statement (Table 4, Customs Duties line). Reflects net receipts after refunds and drawbacks.
$362,659,333,310.97
+$5.6B since April 2026 (provisional · all customs receipts)iFrom the Daily Treasury Statement. Bundles Customs Duties with Merchandise Processing Fee and Harbor Maintenance Tax, so this figure is slightly broader than the MTS number above. Updates each business day.
Today's Customs Receipts
$443M
▲ +$24M vs prior business day
Month-to-Date Revenue
$5,569M
May 2026
Calendar YTD Revenue
$104,182M
YTD 2026
Tariffed Product LinesiCount of HTS codes carrying an active trade-action surcharge (Section 232, Section 301, executive surcharges, etc.). A 'product line' is one 10-digit HTS code. Placeholder figure pending Yale Budget Lab effective-rate parsing.
8,217
of 29,583 total product lines

About

Tariff Tracker is an independent, nonpartisan resource designed to present its users, be they journalists, researchers, lawyers, importers or the average American citizen, with the economic facts about United States Tariffs and Tariff policy, straight from the source.

This project started with a simple question: what is the reality about our current tariff revenue? Since tariffs are, and have increasingly become a political, as well as an economic issue, when various sides debate over the economic success or failure of tariffs, what is the truth and where can one go to find it? That is why Tariff Tracker exists. What started as a simple tool to show how much revenue the United States had collected since January 2025 has grown into a broader set of tools for the professional and the layman alike.

Since the goal of this site is truth, you will not find editorials or arguments here; just the facts, from their sources. Tariff Tracker seeks to answer questions by giving you the data and allowing you to come to your own conclusions. For specifics on where the data comes from and how it's compiled, see our methodology page.

This is a free resource and accepts no outside funding, nor does it have any special interests behind it; operational costs are covered privately, with any user donations going toward continued operation.

Tariff Tracker will continue so long as tariffs are a part of United States economic policy; and while we are proud of this resource as is, we will always be on the lookout for ways to improve, including providing new features if the opportunity arises. If you have an idea for a feature or tariff-related information you would like to see, email us at contact@tarifftracker.org.