07 Aug 2025
President Trump's decision to charge import duties for low  value goods entering the US is a major blow to the UK's SME exporters, says the  British Chambers of Commerce (BCC).
Under the Executive Order issued by the President, duties  will be payable on goods valued under $800 from 29 August 2025. These will be  in line with the rates applied to other goods from each country in accordance  with its tariff rates.
For most UK goods export sectors this means the tariff rate  they used to have plus the additional 10% reciprocal rate applied to most UK  goods since April.
Alternatively, for the first six months only, a specific  rate of $80 per item would apply to low value packages from the UK entering the  US. After that period, the duties described above will be enforced on all  packages of UK origin in scope.
William Bain, Head of Trade Policy, said: 'This  development has been coming for several months but is still a major blow to UK  exporters to the US. Smaller firms and sole traders, who have invested strongly  in e-commerce sales internationally, will be worst hit.
'But the UK is in a comparatively advantageous position in  terms of these additional duties compared with those faced by other countries.
'The EU is also likely to scrap its de minimis threshold by  2028, and the UK government is launching a review into removing the threshold  here too.'