Trending Tariff Update Procurement Strategy

China-US 90-Day Tariff Pause: What Casting Buyers Should Do Right Now

April 26, 2026 · 5 min read · VerifyCasting Trending Analysis

⚡ Breaking: China and the US have agreed to extend the suspension of 24% reciprocal tariffs for another 90 days. Meanwhile, the 25% Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs remain in effect. This creates a narrow but critical window for casting procurement teams.

The Situation at a Glance

On April 24, 2026, China and the United States reached consensus to continue suspending the 24% reciprocal tariffs for 90 additional days. Both sides agreed to push for an extension of the paused US reciprocal tariff measures and corresponding Chinese countermeasures.

But here's the nuance that matters for casting buyers: the Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs at 25% remain fully in effect since March 12. The 90-day pause only covers the additional reciprocal tariffs layered on top during the trade escalation — not the baseline steel/aluminum duties.

March 12, 2026

Section 232 tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports to the US take effect at 25%. EU, Canada, Mexico, and China all affected.

April 2, 2026

Trump signs executive order imposing "reciprocal tariffs" on all trading partners.

April 24, 2026

China and US agree to suspend 24% reciprocal tariffs for 90 days. Section 232 steel/aluminum tariffs unaffected.

What This Means for Casting Procurement

1. The Tariff Stack: Understand Your Real Cost

For casting imports from China to the US, the effective tariff landscape right now looks like this:

Tariff Layer Status Impact on Castings
Section 232 (Steel/Aluminum) Active — 25% Applies to steel and aluminum casting inputs
Reciprocal Tariff (24%) Suspended 90 days Temporarily not collected — potential savings
Section 301 (Original) Active — varies 7.5–25% Still applies to most Chinese casting exports
AD/CVD (Anti-dumping) Case-by-case Specific to product category

A steel casting that was facing a cumulative tariff burden of 56%+ (232 + reciprocal + 301) is now at approximately 32–50% for the next 90 days. That's a meaningful reduction, but far from "normal."

2. The 90-Day Window: Lock In Pricing Now

✅ Recommended Action: If you have pending purchase orders or Q2/Q3 volume commitments with Chinese foundries, execute them within this 90-day window. The suspension could expire without renewal, pushing costs back up overnight.

Here's why timing matters:

3. Diversification Doesn't Pause — But Priorities Shift

Many procurement teams have been accelerating moves to Vietnam, India, and Mexico for casting supply. The 90-day pause doesn't change the long-term trajectory, but it does give you breathing room to:

4. Quality Verification Becomes More Critical

When tariffs were at their peak, some buyers accepted lower quality from alternative suppliers simply to avoid the tariff cost. Now that the playing field is temporarily more level, there's no excuse for skipping quality due diligence.

Before committing volume during this window:

Three Scenarios After the 90 Days

Scenario Probability Procurement Play
Extension / Permanent Reduction Moderate Continue current sourcing, renegotiate annual contracts
Tariffs Resume at 24% Moderate Orders placed before expiry are safe; accelerate alternative qualification now
Escalation (higher reciprocal tariffs) Low Execute force majeure clauses; pivot to non-US markets for re-export strategies

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