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
+$23.5B 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
$381M
▲ +$3M vs prior business day
Month-to-Date Revenue
$23,549M
June 2026
Calendar YTD Revenue
$122,161M
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

Argentina

U.S. customs duties, top product categories, and applicable tariff actions for imports from Argentina, since January 2025.

Cumulative Customs Duties

Source: U.S. Census Bureau · Since January 2025
$494M

Estimated customs duties on imports from Argentina since January 1, 2025, calculated from Census Bureau trade data.

Tariff column:Column 1 (Normal Trade Relations / MFN)

Top Product Categories by Duties

HTS chapters · cumulative since January 2025
ChapterCategoryDuties
76Aluminum$168M
02Meat$45M
20Prepared vegetables$37M
03Fish and seafood$37M
15Fats and oils$27M
17Sugars$19M
22Beverages and spirits$18M
84Mechanical appliances$17M
04Dairy, eggs, honey$16M
08Fruit and nuts$16M

Applicable Tariff Actions

Status as of June 2026
Section 232 (Steel)Active
Trade Expansion Act of 1962, §232 · Product-based — covered steel goods from most sources

National-security tariffs on covered steel products from most sources, subject to country-specific exemptions. Unaffected by the 2026 IEEPA ruling. Source

Section 232 (Aluminum)Active
Trade Expansion Act of 1962, §232 · Product-based — covered aluminum goods from most sources

National-security tariffs on covered aluminum products from most sources, subject to country-specific exemptions. Unaffected by the 2026 IEEPA ruling. Source

Section 232 (Autos / Auto parts)Active
Trade Expansion Act of 1962, §232 · Product-based — covered vehicles and parts from most sources

National-security tariffs on covered vehicles and parts from most sources, subject to country-specific exemptions. Unaffected by the 2026 IEEPA ruling. Source

Section 122 (Balance-of-Payments)Active
Trade Act of 1974, §122 · Global — applies to most imports

Replaced the invalidated IEEPA tariffs: an across-the-board surcharge raised to 15% (the statutory maximum) effective February 24, 2026. The Court of International Trade held it unlawful on May 7, 2026, but the injunction binds only the named plaintiffs, so it remains in force for most importers; the government has appealed to the Federal Circuit. The 150-day authority expires around July 24, 2026 unless Congress extends it. Source

IEEPA ReciprocalInvalidated
International Emergency Economic Powers Act · Formerly most imports

Struck down by the Supreme Court on February 20, 2026, which held that IEEPA does not authorize tariffs. No longer in effect. Source

This panel describes which U.S. tariff actions apply to imports from Argentina; it does not attribute specific dollar amounts to each action. See the methodology for sourcing and limits.

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