Trump pledges additional 100% tariffs on China by Nov. 1

In an aerial view, a container ship arrives at the Port of Oakland on Aug. 1, 2025 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
President Donald Trump threatened to add a 100% tariff rate on Chinese goods Friday, saying in a social media post he was responding to export controls from the worldβs second-largest economy.
βChina has taken an extraordinarily aggressive position on Trade in sending an extremely hostile letter to the World, stating that they were going to, effective November 1st, 2025, impose large scale Export Control on virtually every product they make, and some not even made by them,β Trump wrote on Truth Social.
The United States would respond with the 100% tariff on Chinese goods, also starting Nov. 1, he said. The tariffs would be stacked onto existing tariffs his administration has imposed on the country, he said.
Trump added that he would impose his own export controls βon any and all critical software.β
βIt is impossible to believe that China would have taken such an action, but they have, and the rest is History,β he wrote.
Trump left open the possibility of scrapping or adjusting the additional tariffs before November, saying in the Oval Office late Friday that βWeβre gonna have to see what happens.β
βThatβs why I made it Nov. 1,β he said. βWeβll see what happens.β
He told reporters he has not canceled a planned meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, at an international economic conference in South Korea this week, but raised some doubt that the meeting would take place.
βI donβt know that weβre going to have it,β he said. βBut Iβm going to be there regardless, so I would assume we might have it.β
Tariffs a main part of Trump policy
Trump has used tariffs, taxes paid by the importer of foreign goods, as the central tool of his trade policy, applying broad tariffs on U.S. allies and adversaries alike, with a particular focus on China.
The two countries imposed escalating trade barriers on one another since Trump announced wide-ranging tariffs in early April. The U.S. tariff rate for Chinese goods peaked at 145% before the two sides negotiated an end to the trade war.Β
Chinese goods still see a base tariff rate of 30%.
Trump invoked emergency authority to raise tariffs on China, arguing that the tariffs were a putative measure for Chinaβs inability to control fentanyl supplies flowing into the U.S., but federal courtsΒ are still deciding the legality of that move.