72.5% of Guatemalan Exports to US Remain Tariff-Free After Supreme Court Ruling

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🔵 Executive Summary

Following the recent US Supreme Court ruling reversing previously imposed emergency tariffs, 72.5% of Guatemala’s exports to the United States will continue entering duty-free, according to a technical assessment by Agexport.

The tariff-free portion represents USD 3,676.6 million in exports. The remaining 27.5%, valued at USD 1,392.4 million, will face a temporary additional 10% ad valorem tariff under a new Executive Order.

While the ruling restored much of Guatemala’s preferential access, a temporary 10% flat tariff remains in place for selected categories until July 24, 2026.


📜 Executive Order Framework

Under Section 122 of the Executive Order published February 23:

  • A flat 10% additional tariff applies to certain imports.

  • Effective from 00:01 EST on February 24, 2026.

  • Scheduled to remain in place until 00:01 EDT on July 24, 2026.

  • Subject to defined exceptions.

The measure creates a mixed tariff landscape rather than a full rollback.


📊 Sectoral Breakdown

✅ Sectors Maintaining 0% Tariff

  • Traditional agriculture

  • Apparel

  • Textiles

These categories represent the majority of Guatemala’s export value to the US and remain protected under existing bilateral agreements.


⚠️ Sectors Subject to 10% Tariff

Sector Export Value (USD)
Manufacturing 684.7 million
Non-traditional agriculture 656.0 million
Other products 35.2 million
Fisheries & aquaculture 16.5 million

Non-traditional agriculture exposure is particularly significant, potentially affecting niche and value-added exports.


🌎 Context: Limited Structural Change

According to Agexport:

  • 70.4% of Guatemala’s export supply was already tariff-free prior to the ruling.

  • Existing bilateral trade agreements underpin much of the duty-free access.

Therefore, the Supreme Court decision introduces limited structural change but maintains short-term uncertainty for the remaining product categories.

A tariff-heading (HS code) level comparative analysis is underway to clarify exposure.


🧭 Strategic Response & Recommendations

Agexport is:

  • Participating in a technical committee with the Ministry of Economy (MINECO).

  • Providing sector-specific evidence to advocate for full tariff elimination.

  • Maintaining continuous monitoring of regulatory developments.

Exporters are advised to:

  • Conduct margin stress-testing under multiple tariff scenarios.

  • Review rules of origin and HS classifications.

  • Include regulatory change clauses in contracts.

  • Optimize logistics and cost structures.

  • Maintain close communication with sectoral export bodies.


🧭 CMB Market Interpretation

The current scenario reflects partial normalization rather than full tariff certainty.

Key Observations:

  • Majority of exports remain protected under preferential frameworks.

  • Temporary 10% tariff introduces manageable but real margin pressure.

  • Non-traditional agricultural exports face competitive headwinds.

  • Policy clarity remains time-bound until July 2026.

Short-Term Outlook:
Limited disruption for core agricultural exports.

Medium-Term Risk:
Extension or modification of the 10% tariff could affect planning cycles.

Strategic Implication:
Public–private coordination becomes central to safeguarding remaining tariff exposure.


📊 Risk Assessment

Factor Risk Level
Core Agricultural Export Disruption Low
Non-Traditional Agriculture Exposure Moderate
Policy Extension Risk Moderate
Margin Compression Risk Manageable
Bilateral Trade Stability Relatively Stable

🏁 Conclusion

The US Supreme Court ruling preserves tariff-free access for the majority of Guatemalan exports, reinforcing the strength of existing bilateral trade frameworks.

However, the temporary 10% tariff affecting 27.5% of exports introduces selective pressure that requires careful scenario planning and coordinated policy engagement.

For now, Guatemala retains its position as a reliable US trade partner, but strategic vigilance remains essential through mid-2026.