U.S. Goods Imports Drop in April After Pre-Tariff Spike

U.S. goods imports fell by almost 20 percent in April, as many of the sweeping tariffs announced by the Trump administration came into effect. Consumer goods and industrial supplies were most affected by the expected trade slowdown, as imports dropped 32 percent and 31 percent compared to March levels, respectively.
While this sounds like a drastic reaction to the new high-tariff environment, a closer look at the numbers reveals that trade activity wasn’t as low as the percentage declines suggest. Tariff frontloading resulted in record high goods imports in the months leading up to Trump’s “Liberation Day” announcements, which is why month-over-month growth rates need to be taken with a grain of salt.
Take consumer goods for example: According to the Census Bureau’s advance estimate, the U.S. imported consumer goods worth $69.6 billion in April. While that’s a shocking 32-percent decline from March at first glance, it’s also a 5-percent increase compared to April 2024. The same is true for overall goods imports, which are down 20 percent from inflated March levels but up three percent from April 2024.
The one category that saw a significant year-over-year decline in imports was vehicles with imports of vehicles dropping 19 percent compared to April 2024. Interestingly, there was no pre-tariff bump in vehicle imports, indicating that the 25-percent tariff on vehicles not assembled in the U.S. that was announced on March 26 wasn't anticipated or that it was simply impossible for companies to expedite shipments to the U.S. in order to avoid the tariffs.