U.S. Tariffs Trigger 55% Plunge In Brazilian Coffee Exports
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's coffee shipments to the United States collapsed in August after Washington imposed a steep tariff.
Data from Brazil's coffee exporters association (Cecafé ) show exports dropped 55.24% year-on-year to 251,902 sixty-kilogram bags, down from more than 560,000 a year earlier.
In July, shipments had reached about 450,000 bags, highlighting how fast the U.S. duty reshaped trade. The reason is straightforward. On August 6, 2025, the U.S. government raised import tariffs on Brazilian goods to 50%.
The move combined Brazil's existing 10% reciprocal tariff rate with an additional 40% applied under emergency trade powers. Coffee , one of Brazil's flagship exports, did not receive an exemption.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed the start date, and Brazil's Foreign Ministry acknowledged the measure and requested consultations at the World Trade Organization.
This matters because the United States depends heavily on Brazilian beans. USDA figures show that Brazil supplied about 35% of U.S. unroasted coffee imports in 2023.
When tariffs of 50% apply to a supplier that large, costs climb quickly and roasters reconsider contracts. Cecafé officials warn that sales to the U.S. at that rate are commercially“inviable.”
The impact does not stop at the border. Bureau of Labor Statistics data show average U.S. retail prices for ground roast coffee reached $8.41 per pound in July, already up 14.5% from the year before.
Higher duties on Brazilian beans risk feeding even more pressure into consumer prices. Brazil is the world's largest coffee producer, confirmed by its federal supply agency Conab and the International Coffee Organization.
Because coffee production cannot expand or shrink overnight, sudden trade barriers cannot be offset quickly by planting more trees or switching suppliers. This rigidity means tariffs have immediate consequences for trade flows and household budgets.
The story behind the numbers is mercantile, not abstract. The 55% plunge in exports from Brazil to the U.S. shows how tariffs-announced in Washington and noted in customs schedules-can reorder global trade within weeks.
For American consumers, it points to higher grocery bills. For Brazilian producers, it threatens access to a crucial market. And for international trade, it underlines how policy choices, rather than demand, can set the price of everyday goods like coffee.
Data from Brazil's coffee exporters association (Cecafé ) show exports dropped 55.24% year-on-year to 251,902 sixty-kilogram bags, down from more than 560,000 a year earlier.
In July, shipments had reached about 450,000 bags, highlighting how fast the U.S. duty reshaped trade. The reason is straightforward. On August 6, 2025, the U.S. government raised import tariffs on Brazilian goods to 50%.
The move combined Brazil's existing 10% reciprocal tariff rate with an additional 40% applied under emergency trade powers. Coffee , one of Brazil's flagship exports, did not receive an exemption.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection confirmed the start date, and Brazil's Foreign Ministry acknowledged the measure and requested consultations at the World Trade Organization.
This matters because the United States depends heavily on Brazilian beans. USDA figures show that Brazil supplied about 35% of U.S. unroasted coffee imports in 2023.
When tariffs of 50% apply to a supplier that large, costs climb quickly and roasters reconsider contracts. Cecafé officials warn that sales to the U.S. at that rate are commercially“inviable.”
The impact does not stop at the border. Bureau of Labor Statistics data show average U.S. retail prices for ground roast coffee reached $8.41 per pound in July, already up 14.5% from the year before.
Higher duties on Brazilian beans risk feeding even more pressure into consumer prices. Brazil is the world's largest coffee producer, confirmed by its federal supply agency Conab and the International Coffee Organization.
Because coffee production cannot expand or shrink overnight, sudden trade barriers cannot be offset quickly by planting more trees or switching suppliers. This rigidity means tariffs have immediate consequences for trade flows and household budgets.
The story behind the numbers is mercantile, not abstract. The 55% plunge in exports from Brazil to the U.S. shows how tariffs-announced in Washington and noted in customs schedules-can reorder global trade within weeks.
For American consumers, it points to higher grocery bills. For Brazilian producers, it threatens access to a crucial market. And for international trade, it underlines how policy choices, rather than demand, can set the price of everyday goods like coffee.

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