Consumers now face "tariff surcharges" for some goods as companies pass along costs
Source: cbs
Updated on: April 11, 2025 / 9:37 AM EDT / CBS News
The Trump administration's volley of tariffs has U.S. companies scrambling for ways to absorb and if possible avoid the added business costs.
Some enterprises, from small businesses to nationally recognized brands, have already announced higher prices, citing President Trump's tariffs. Others, from footwear companies to furniture brands, are warning consumers to brace for increased costs.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told CNBC Thursday that he expects the tariffs to lead to higher prices on a host of consumers goods, noting that the the site's third-party sellers are likely to pass on tariff-related costs.
Some consumers are also bracing for impact by by stocking up on goods they think are likely to become more expensive if U.S. "reciprocal levies" on dozens of countries, which are paused for 90 days, take effect. .....................
Read more: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-tariff-surcharge-prices/?linkId=795967013
Always==in the end--we all pay for #TRUMPS cruelty!!
Link to tweet

Diamond_Dog
(36,600 posts)
Justice matters.
(8,286 posts)*they bully those who don't (like us) when we tell them he's a crook and it will not happen.
*masats = make america suffer again (worst than during covid)
The Madcap
(1,103 posts)To unnecessary purchases.
Harker
(16,078 posts)Magoo48
(6,233 posts)No one will maintain this , but it is a goal to work towards.
bucolic_frolic
(49,814 posts)They either charge for it, or borrow. There's a cost to both. Consumers pay.
I always thought it would be China that tried to raise prices once they realized the power they held.
We are so screwed. Also many slow-moving items will disappear from shelves.
multigraincracker
(35,448 posts)Justice matters.
(8,286 posts)175% up to ? tomorrow? Where's the stupid limit?
AllaN01Bear
(24,755 posts)CrispyQ
(39,468 posts)I guess this is what the 1% wanted? For Trump to blow up the economy?
Stallion
(6,632 posts)cstanleytech
(27,538 posts)RobertDevereaux
(1,988 posts)Astrohaus, the team behind Freewrite, is an American company. Like many American companies, and virtually all consumer electronic brands, our cost base is global. We work with contractors in Europe, in South America, and in Asia. We purchase components from a global supply chain and assemble our product in China, but make no mistake, we are an American company. The majority of our costs, including goods, services, and payroll, are from the United States. Most of our team lives in the Midwest. I founded this company in Detroit, Michigan, and am still here. I am proud to have built an American company that supports 10+ Americans and their families.
But now we are caught in a trade war that threatens our very existence. A war that was building up over time but has crescendoed to a point that no business owner could have prepared for. As I write this today, we have to pay an additional 145% of the cost of any product made in China as a tax to the U.S. Government. Yesterday it was 104%, up from 54%. In March it was 20% and in February it was 10%. Tomorrow?
Astrohaus is an importer because there is no consumer electronics industry in the U.S. China has emerged over the decades as the world's factory. At first, as a low-cost solution, but in 2025, they are undeniably the best in the world.
Now we are in a pickle because we have established relationships with our contract manufacturing partners that go back to when we started in 2014. Yes, some of the folks we work with today have been with us since the very beginning. They took a chance on us and helped us get off the ground. I have personally spent months on the ground in Hong Kong and China working closely with these folks, whom I now call friends.
Everyone, including our contract manufacturing partners, is helping us explore our options, but the truth is that it is incredibly difficult to move factories. It takes careful planning, huge expense, and much more time than we have.
Unfortunately, we can't wait to let the trade war resolve itself, nor do we have the advantage big companies like Apple have with a diversified supply base in various countries. We must work with our existing supply base in China, and that means adjusting prices to cover some of our new costs. That's assuming a trade deal gets done, because 100%+ tariffs are simply untenable long term.
As one last hurrah, today through Sunday we will be keeping prices as they have been. Get them while they last.
On Monday, we will be raising prices. Not because we want to, but because we have to. Thank you for standing by us over the years. We aren't going anywhere.
Write on,
Adam
Freewrite Founder & CEO
Midnight Writer
(23,702 posts)Let consumers know exactly why prices are going up and who is to blame.
moonshinegnomie
(3,308 posts)all due to tariffs
truthisfreedom
(23,384 posts)The use of the word tariff on consumer receipts. At that point, sellers should mark the receipts presidential border tax for the itemized tariff charge.
WestMichRad
(2,245 posts)MichMan
(14,888 posts)Nike charges $100 for a shoe that probably costs them $10 to make. The tariff is assessed on the $10, so even if it cost them $20, they still have a very significant profit margin.
Bengus81
(8,693 posts)Those fuckers haven't paid a tariff on anything setting there,that will come later. Consumers getting FUCKED over once again.
Never let a good crisis go to waste...............
BigmanPigman
(52,863 posts)Business charging more for dryers when it is the washers which are the products that will actually increase. Fucking rip off business CEOs will get their $1,000,000% bonus this year like every year. Putin pays well and so does insider trading with criminals running the govt.
But, that's just my opinion and I am in a shitty mood.
Initech
(104,500 posts)If anyone else did this, they'd be thrown out on their ass.
LiberalArkie
(17,953 posts)the item. They will tack on to their import cost the tariff. Then they will mark it up.
The distributor has their markup which is the above price.,
The seller then marks it up again to the customer.
A duty in Europe and elsewhere stays separate as it is paid by the end customer, so the total for the items will be cheaper because it is not marked up every single step.
MichMan
(14,888 posts)LiberalArkie
(17,953 posts)I thought it was just passed down until it got to the customer.
MichMan
(14,888 posts)Wonder Why
(5,498 posts)Then again, "Texas is a whole nother country."
AllaN01Bear
(24,755 posts)Lovie777
(18,008 posts)Deminpenn
(16,738 posts)about who to blame.
GreenWave
(11,059 posts)Or are thy precharging tariffs over and above what they were?
Resist160
(24 posts)I was in Wal-Mart this morning 4/11/25. I bought dish towels and was charged $2.18 CSR Tom charge. Then I bought pre-cut fabric that I always purchase to backing on a quilt I am making. I was also charged $2.18 CSR Tom charge for the fabric. I ALWAYS purchase this pre-cut fabric and never got a $2.18 charge. I looked on their website and no explanation given. Be prepared.
republianmushroom
(19,488 posts)alarimer
(17,127 posts)Amy excuse to bilk customers.
mdbl
(6,188 posts)and undying loyalty to Dump. Just make everyone poorer instead.