In 2025, the United States had a $112 billion trade deficit in pharmaceutical products, which the Trump administration has suggested it might try to equalize through tariffs. The United States is the world’s largest importer of pharmaceuticals and the second-largest exporter.
The countries with which the United States runs the largest trade deficits in pharmaceutical products are Ireland, Switzerland, Germany, India, and Singapore.
On April 2, the Trump administration announced tariffs of up to 100% on imported patented medicines, aimed at pushing drugmakers to manufacture more in the U.S. Most major pharmaceutical companies already cut deals with the administration and will face little to no tariffs, so the levies will primarily hit smaller drug and ingredient makers. Tariffs on drugs from countries that struck trade deals with the White House, including the EU, Japan, Liechtenstein, South Korea, and Switzerland, are capped at 15%, and products from the U.K. will be subject to a lower rate. Generic drugs are exempt but will undergo another review within one year. Large-company tariffs kick in after 120 days and smaller company tariffs after 180.
The following companies have signed an MFN agreement with the administration:
- Amgen [NASDAQ:AMGN]
- Boehringer Ingelheim
- Bristol Myers Squibb [NYSE:BMY]
- Genentech, subsidiary of Roche, [SIX:ROG]
- Gilead Sciences [NASDAQ:GILD]
- GSK [LSE:GSK]
- Merck [NYSE:MRK]
- Novartis [SIX:NOVN]
- Sanofi [EPA:SAN]
- Pfizer [NYSE:PFE]
- Eli Lilly [NYSE:LLY]
- Novo Nordisk [CPH:NOVO B]
- AstraZeneca [LSE:AZN]
- EMD Serono [subsidiary of Merck KGaA, ETR:MRK]
Editor’s note: Pharmaceutical products, for the purpose of this article, are encompassed in HTS groups 30.01, 30.02, 30.03, and 30.04, which include medicaments and immunological products. The data do not include supporting medical products used for diagnosis, surgery, clinical trials, or patient care.
Where does the U.S. import pharmaceuticals from?