US coffee industry asks Trump to keep tariff exemption on Brazil beans
Jul, 10, 2026 Posted by Gabriel MalheirosWeek 202628
The U.S. coffee industry asked the Trump administration on Wednesday (8) to keep Brazilian green coffee exempt from tariffs, during a session of public consultation that is reviewing tariffs on Brazilian imports.
The National Coffee Association (NCA) also asked the administration to include instant coffee in the list of tariff-free Brazilian products, saying the product is key for the competitiveness of the U.S. coffee industry considering new product offerings such as the ready-to-drink coffee cans.
Datamar data shows that 3,980 TEUs of green coffee (HS codes 0901.11.10 and 0901.11.90) were exported to the United States between January and May 2026. The chart below shows the volumes recorded in recent years:
Green Coffee Exports to the United States | Jan 2023 – May 2026 | TEUs
Source: DataLiner (click here to request a demo)
The U.S. government is holding consultations this week related to the Section 301 investigation on Brazilian trade practices.
The Trump administration could impose a 25% tariff on imports of several Brazilian products, alleging the country’s practices were unfair on a range of issues from digital trade to illegal deforestation.
“Ensuring tariff-free imports of these coffee tariff codes will have significant benefits for the U.S. economy and for the nearly 200 million American adults who drink coffee each day,” said NCA’s President William Murray.
Brazil is the world’s largest producer and exporter of coffee, and supplies a third of U.S. needs. The country was hit by a 50% tariff last year that caused havoc in the U.S. coffee industry, until Washington decided to include green coffee in a list of exemptions.
Instant coffee remained taxed at 50% until the Supreme Court decision that knocked down most Trump tariffs. The product is currently subject to a 10% global tariff.
Murray said the tariffs have contributed to “highly visible price inflation on popular products”, putting pressure on U.S. companies manufacturing ready-to-drink, liquid coffee bases, syrups, and food service mixtures.
Source: Reuters
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