As President Donald Trump’s trade policies take effect, record tariff revenues have begun flowing into U.S. government coffers.
Last month, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) stated that the agency instituted 13 tariff-related presidential actions and collected more than $200 million in related revenues.
“Serving on America’s frontline, CBP strictly enforces all laws and Presidential directives to secure our economic sovereignty and is fully equipped and ready to collect duties owed for goods subject to tariff and small packages.”
These figures are lower than Trump’s recent estimates.
“We were losing 2 billion a day. ... Now we’re making $3 billion a day,” he stated.
At a “Make America Wealthy Again” event on April 2, Trump announced a 10 percent universal baseline tariff on most U.S. trading partners and country-specific reciprocal levies.
Days later, the president issued a 90-day pause, confirming that nations subjected to reciprocal tariff rates would see their rates lowered to 10 percent. This would allow countries to negotiate trade deals with the United States. The administration has confirmed trade negotiations with dozens of nations.
Trump told reporters on Air Force One this past weekend that he is “unlikely” to authorize a second 90-day pause.
White House officials have not definitively estimated how much the federal government could take in from higher import duties.
Peter Navarro, the president’s senior trade adviser, projected that tariffs could raise about $600 billion a year, or approximately $6 trillion over 10 years.
While it can be challenging to put together forecasts amid changes to the tariff regime, Navarro’s numbers generally differ from other economists’ projections.
Scrapping Income Tax
Before boarding Air Force One on his return to Washington, Trump told reporters that he believes tariffs could be enough to eliminate the income tax.“We’re going to make a lot of money, and we’re going to cut taxes for the people of this country,” Trump said on April 27. “It’ll take a little while before we do that, but we’re going to be cutting taxes, and it’s possible we’ll do a complete tax cut, because I think the tariffs will be enough to cut all of the income tax.”
Until 1913, the U.S. government primarily depended on tariff revenues, which accounted for about 90 percent of the federal income. When the federal income tax was introduced, the United States shifted its primary revenue source from tariffs to income tax in the subsequent years.

This year, senior administration officials have espoused various tax-cutting plans.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, speaking to CBS News last month, floated the president’s idea of exempting people earning less than $150,000 from paying income tax.
“That’s aspirational,” Lutnick said.
Lutnick and others have stated that the White House will still pursue axing taxes on tips, overtime pay, and Social Security benefits.
Abolishing the federal income tax for those earning $150,000 a year or less would be a progressive system and benefit tens of millions of tax filers.
Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, said that without massive changes to the annual budget, the federal government would need to impose enormous tariff rates on all imported goods to maintain current revenues.
“The challenge is that it is unclear what will happen to sales if all imported products double in price,” Slok said in a February note sent to The Epoch Times. “Given higher prices result in lower sales, it may require as much as 200 percent tariffs on all imported goods for the total tariff revenue to replace income taxes.”
The total value of goods imported into the United States was approximately $3 trillion in 2024.
The current average effective U.S. tariff rate, incorporating all 2025 tariffs, is 22.5 percent, according to The Budget Lab. This is the highest in more than a century.