Gamers spared new tariffs but 20 percent hike looms

Gamers won't face higher prices on graphics cards from the latest Trump tariffs, but they still feel the pinch from earlier trade taxes. A federal order spotted by PCMag shows that GPUs escaped the newest round of China tariffs, which could have doubled their prices. These fresh taxes hit fifteen different semiconductor imports, including electronic ICs and micro-assemblies, but leave out the specific tariff code for graphics cards. The market feared massive price hikes that thankfully won't happen - at least not from these particular trade actions.

Despite dodging the latest bullet, graphics cards remain subject to an earlier 20% tariff on aluminum imports from China. This existing tax already covers GPUs and other computer parts, meaning prices will climb regardless. Stores currently sell inventory that arrived before these taxes took effect, but that supply won't last forever. Once retailers need to restock, they'll pass those extra costs to customers, with price increases expected within weeks. The full impact will likely hit the market starting in May.

The GPU market already struggles with supply problems, making affordable access to new models nearly impossible. Average consumers find themselves priced out of cards like the RTX 50 series or RX 9070. These difficulties stem directly from international tensions rather than technical or manufacturing issues. The situation frustrates gamers who simply want reasonably priced hardware. Graphics card manufacturers NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel all face these same tariff challenges.
 

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