Published: 16:04, February 13, 2026 | Updated: 16:11, February 13, 2026
Trump trade team working to scale back scope of metals tariffs
By Bloomberg
An employee cleans a container at a steel tank factory in Mexico City, Feb 11, 2025, the day after US President Donald Trump announced that the United States would impose 25 percent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports. (PHOTO / AP)

The Trump administration is working to narrow its broad tariffs on steel and aluminum products that companies find difficult to calculate and the European Union wants reined in as part of its pending trade deal with the US, a person familiar with the matter said.

The US Trade Representative’s Office is scrambling to resolve complications spawned last year by the Commerce Department’s efforts to rush out President Donald Trump’s tariff agenda, the person said.

The White House has communicated to companies that adjustments are in the works, but details and timing remain unclear, the person said.

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The rollback plans were reported earlier by the Financial Times.

Spokespeople for USTR and Commerce didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment sent outside of business hours in Washington.

50 percent levies

Trump last year imposed a 50 percent levy on foreign steel and aluminum in a measure. The step wound up hitting other major trading partners hard, including Canada, the EU, Mexico and South Korea.

READ MORE: Doubled US steel, aluminum tariffs spark criticism, trade war concerns across globe

Later added to the list were so-called derivative products that contained the metals, creating an arduous task for companies to identify the percentage of the materials in goods they sourced from overseas.  

Trump’s taxes on US imports have also come under increased scrutiny this week in Congress and in separate reports by the Congressional Budget Office and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York — both of which said American consumers and businesses are shouldering most of the costs of his tariffs. That runs counter to his repeated assertions that they’re paid by foreign exporters.

READ MORE: Senator: Trump mulling significant tariff relief for US vehicle production

Ending or curtailing the derivative tariffs would be a positive step for the US-EU trade accord. A framework for the deal was negotiated last year but remains not fully implemented.

The EU still faces a 50 percent US duty on steel and aluminum exports as well as on many other derivative products. Washington revises the list of derivative products that are subject to the higher tariff rate several times a year.

The EU is particularly concerned that the breadth of goods hit by the 50 percent metals rate — surpassing hundreds of items — as well as potential new, higher levies on different industries will dilute the EU-US trade deal and the agreed 15 percent tariff ceiling, Bloomberg has previously reported.