Tariffs Bite into Tax Refunds
Erica York (VP Tax Foundation) discusses how the Trump tariffs will cut into the income tax relief for all tax brackets due. Read on . . .
We’ve spent a lot of time in this newsletter tracking the surge in tariff revenue over the past year. Now it’s tax filing season, and those two stories are colliding. Recent headlines have focused on tax refunds because Congress made several tax cuts retroactive for 2025 when it passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act last year. Taxpayers will see those benefits when they file their returns with the IRS this year, so refunds will rise. But last year’s tariffs will take a big bite out of those tax cuts.
We estimate the seven major retroactive provisions amount to a $129 billion tax cut for 2025—much of which will show up as tax refunds. Filers in the bottom 20 percent will see only small changes on average, since they already have little or no income tax liability and therefore benefit less from expanded deductions and credits. Filers in other income groups receive average tax cuts ranging from $245 to $1,981.
While the income tax relief may be welcome, much of it is offset by higher tariffs, which we estimate raised taxes by about $132 billion in 2025. For the middle three income groups, the President’s tariffs erase between 70 percent and 95 percent of the tax cut. Lower-income filers are, on average, worse off under the combined effect of the tariffs and tax cuts in 2025.
Looking at percentage changes in after-tax income tells a similar story. Tariffs are a relatively flat and somewhat regressive form of taxation, and the new tax law delivers larger income tax cuts for upper income groups than for the bottom quintile. Taken together, the combination of tariffs and OBBBA made the tax system less progressive in 2025.
The tax man giveth but the tariff man taketh away.
Erica York
Vice President of Federal Tax Policy
Tax Foundation


