Tariffs on Chinese goods have surged to 30.93%, while Mexico’s are at just 4.18%—the tariff gap has doubled, accelerating the shift of manufacturing to Mexico.
The Tariff Gap Doubles: Mexico’s Advantage Shines
Amid escalating Sino-US trade tensions, Mexico is rapidly solidifying its position as America’s most competitive trading partner. The latest data shows that the average tariff rate on goods from various countries entering the US stands at 9.81%, while Mexico’s effective export tax rate is merely 4.18%.
In comparison:
- 🇲🇽 Mexico: 4.18%
- 🇩🇪 Germany: 9.79%
- 🇻🇳 Vietnam: 12.72%
- 🇯🇵 Japan: 13.89%
- 🇨🇳 China: 30.93%
In the past year, the tariff cost gap between Mexican and Chinese goods entering the US has nearly doubled. In early January 2025, tariffs on Mexican imports to the US were less than 1%, while Chinese goods faced a rate of 12.3%. This disparity has since significantly widened.
The Sino-US Tariff War: From Trade Tensions to Structural Decoupling
2025 marked a dramatic escalation in the Sino-US tariff war:
- Average US tariffs on Chinese goods reached 47.5%, covering 100% of Chinese products.
- In April-May 2025, tariffs spiked to 127.2%.
- Negotiations in Geneva and South Korea brought rates down to around 51.8%.
- China’s retaliatory tariffs once reached as high as 147.6%, later dropping to 31.9%.
- Compared to the start of the trade war in 2018, current US tariffs on Chinese goods are now more than 15 times higher.
More importantly, average US tariffs on other global countries rose from 3.0% to 18.4%, reflecting a broader protectionist stance by Washington.
Nearshoring Accelerates: Trade is Not Vanishing, but Relocating
As China is gradually squeezed out of numerous sectors in the US market, trade isn’t disappearing; it’s being repositioned. The Sino-US trade dispute is accelerating nearshoring, encouraging manufacturers to shorten supply chains and reduce tariff risks.
Mexico stands as the biggest winner in this trend. Reports indicate that Mexico is strengthening its nearshore manufacturing capabilities through new industrial parks and upgraded infrastructure. Several companies are optimizing their North American market supply chain layouts.
The Mexican electronics manufacturing services (EMS) market is projected to grow from $17.18 billion in 2025 to $22.09 billion by 2031, with an annual growth rate of 4.25%.
Challenges for the Maquiladora Model
However, Mexico’s traditional advantages are not without challenges. US law firm Foley & Lardner warns against a common misconception—the “Maquiladora fallacy“: many businesses incorrectly assume that IMMEX (Mexican Export Manufacturing) status automatically exempts them from tariffs.
In reality, under the “take-the-lower” rule of USMCA, tariffs on non-USMCA materials cannot exceed the lower of either the tariff due in Mexico or at entry into the US/Canada for finished goods.
Alejandro Gómez-Strozzi, a partner at Foley & Lardner, emphasizes that in high-tariff environments, companies focusing on compliance, origin planning, and tariff modeling will find Mexico remains the most robust platform.
Mexico’s Tariffs Against China: Dual Protection
Mexico itself is building trade barriers. Starting from January 2026, Mexico imposes tariffs ranging from 5% to 50% on 1,463 tariff items from countries without a trade agreement (including China, South Korea, India, Malaysia, Thailand), involving import volumes of approximately $52 billion, or about 8.6% of total Mexican imports.
This move reflects Mexico’s dual strategy: protecting domestic industries while responding to US pressure to limit Chinese commercial influence.
Supply Chain Restructuring: Who Are the Winners?
The global supply chain is undergoing profound restructuring. In this transformation:
- Mexico, leveraging its geographic advantage, the USMCA framework, and continuously improving industrial infrastructure, has become the preferred nearshore destination.
- Vietnam and India have diverted some manufacturing from China in certain sectors but face higher tariffs from the US.
- China is attempting to bypass tariff barriers through its “going global” strategy by setting up factories in third countries.
- Contract manufacturers are seen as the biggest beneficiaries of expanding business in Mexico, helping US and Canadian companies improve their cost structures and labor scalability.
Sources: Mexico Business News, Foley & Lardner, GlobeNewsWire, Mordor Intelligence, February 2026










