According to www.ttnews.com, the Trump administration is considering tougher auto import rules—including higher tariff costs and tighter North American content requirements—to accelerate automotive manufacturing reshoring to the U.S.
Preliminary Policy Considerations
U.S. officials have discussed requiring vehicle imports to contain a minimum amount of U.S.-made parts, according to people familiar with internal deliberations who asked not to be identified. Another option under early review would limit automakers’ ability to reduce tariff rates under the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), effectively raising the cost of importing vehicles that comply with current USMCA rules.
These considerations are at an early stage; no formal proposals have been submitted to Canadian or Mexican trade leaders, and implementation details remain undefined. The discussions are occurring ahead of a planned USMCA review, and the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative confirmed the administration is working to reshore U.S. manufacturing through that review—but declined to detail specific proposals.
Current USMCA Rules vs. Proposed Shifts
Under current USMCA provisions—which took effect in 2020—75% of a vehicle’s parts must originate from the U.S., Canada, or Mexico. In addition, 40% to 45% must be made by workers earning at least $16 per hour. These thresholds allow duty-free movement of compliant vehicles across North America.
The Trump administration has already imposed a 25% tariff on imported vehicles and auto parts, upending the seamless cross-border production model built under USMCA and its predecessor. While automakers have pledged billions in new U.S. investment and announced plans to shift some production from Canada, Mexico, and Japan, the source states that “a substantial uptick in auto investment has yet to materialize.” The U.S. remains heavily reliant on imports—especially for vehicles priced at $30,000 or less.
Industry and Government Responses
Mexico’s deputy economy minister for trade, Luis Rosendo Gutiérrez, stated on April 15:
“At the negotiation tables, there is no discussion of increasing auto tariffs or increasing rules of origin for autos.”
A spokesperson for Canada’s minister responsible for U.S. trade, Dominic LeBlanc, declined to comment. White House and Commerce Department representatives did not respond to requests for comment.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick criticized USMCA as a “bad industrial policy” on April 17 at the Semafor World Economy summit, adding:
“I think it needs to be reconsidered and reimagined correctly.”
Practical Implications for Supply Chain Professionals
For global supply chain professionals, these potential changes signal heightened regulatory uncertainty in North American automotive logistics. Current USMCA-compliant supply chains—designed around integrated cross-border assembly, just-in-time parts flows, and labor-cost arbitrage—could face recalibration if rules of origin tighten beyond 75% or if tariff-reduction mechanisms (e.g., duty drawbacks for U.S.-assembled vehicles using imported parts) are curtailed. Automakers and Tier 1 suppliers may need to reassess sourcing footprints, nearshoring feasibility, and compliance documentation rigor—particularly around wage-tiered labor certifications and part-level origin tracing. Given that the U.S. applies tariffs to the non-U.S. content of otherwise USMCA-compliant vehicles from Canada and Mexico, any expansion of this practice would directly impact landed cost modeling and customs valuation protocols.
Source: Transport Topics
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










