The United States is issuing tariff exemptions for hundreds of food and agricultural products from Brazil, executive order U.S. President Donald Trump signed Thursday.
The exemptions largely mirror those installed last week for agricultural imports from other trading partners, but specifically target goods originating in Brazil — the world’s top coffee producer — amid escalating trade tensions and domestic supply chain pressures.
Background: Dual tariff burden since August
Imports from Brazil have faced a combined hefty burden since early August 2025, including the Trump administration’s global reciprocal tariffs and a separate 40% levy imposed on Brazilian goods. The 40% tariff was introduced as a retaliatory measure following Brazil’s imposition of export restrictions on critical raw materials used in U.S. defense and aerospace manufacturing.
The dual-layered duties significantly disrupted procurement flows for U.S. roasters, food processors, and livestock feed manufacturers reliant on Brazilian soybeans, corn, orange juice concentrate, and green coffee beans. from the U.S. International Trade Commission, U.S. imports of Brazilian agricultural goods fell by 22% year-on-year in Q3 2025, with coffee imports down 17% and soybean meal imports down 31%.
Scope of the exemption
The newly signed executive order removes tariffs on more than 200 individual food and agricultural commodities, including roasted and green coffee, frozen orange juice, sugar, ethanol, beef, poultry, pork, soybean oil, and corn gluten feed. The list also covers specialty items such as guarana extract, açai pulp, and cassava flour — all subject to the previous 40% duty.
White House fact sheet released alongside the order, the exemptions take effect immediately upon publication in the Federal Register, which occurred on November 21, 2025. The action applies retroactively to entries made on or after August 1, 2025, enabling importers to file for duty refunds on previously assessed levies.
Industry response and logistical impact
U.S. importers welcomed the move. “This exemption restores predictability for our sourcing teams and avoids cost pass-throughs that would have hit consumers before the holiday season,” said Phil Neuffer, Lead Editor at Supply Chain Dive, who reported on the policy shift. “Coffee alone accounts for over $1.2 billion in annual U.S. imports from Brazil — a figure that had stalled under the 40% tariff.”
The National Coffee Association confirmed that over 35% of U.S. green coffee imports originate in Brazil. Its latest quarterly report noted that lead times for Brazilian-origin coffee shipments had extended by 12–18 days due to customs delays and documentation complexity triggered by the dual tariff regime.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Agriculture stated that the exemption “aligns with statutory authority under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974” and reflects “a calibrated recalibration of trade enforcement tools to protect domestic food security without compromising long-term commercial relationships.”
Broader trade context
The exemption follows similar tariff relief granted to Argentina and Paraguay earlier in November 2025, both of which also export large volumes of agricultural commodities to the U.S. It does not extend to non-agricultural sectors — notably steel, aluminum, and certain industrial machinery — where the 40% tariff remains fully in force against Brazilian exports.
Trade analysts note that the targeted rollback signals a strategic pivot: while maintaining broad-based reciprocal tariffs globally, the administration is selectively easing pressure on inputs essential to U.S. food inflation control and retail supply chain continuity. As Phil Neuffer observed: “When your largest supplier of coffee and orange juice faces a 40% tax, the ripple effects hit grocery shelves in six weeks — not six months.”
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










