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What is happening with tariffs on ferrous and non-ferrous metals in Europe and what it means for business
In recent months, rules for importing metals – steel, aluminum, and other non-ferrous metals – in Europe have significantly tightened.
What exactly are the changes?
The European Commission has strengthened protective measures for steel imports: tariff quotas have been reduced, rules for quota transfers have been tightened, and tariffs are imposed on volumes exceeding the quotas (last season – 25%, in the latest proposal – up to 50% for out-of-quota shipments). This decision is taken in response to the surplus of cheap imports and pressure on European producers.
For batches exceeding the limit, high tariffs of up to 50% will be applied to out-of-limit steel quantities. These measures are introduced to protect European metal producers from cheap imports and to preserve jobs.
At the same time, a review of the policy regarding aluminum is underway, and protection mechanisms for non-ferrous metals are being discussed; the EU is considering export measures (for example, scrap taxes) and coordination with partners.
The USA has introduced or increased metal tariffs, while the EU has announced countermeasures and negotiations for mutual concessions. In short: the USA raised tariffs on steel and aluminum imports – from June 4, 2025, the import tariff on steel and aluminum was increased from 25% to 50% for most countries.
An exception is made for the United Kingdom – for it, the tariff remains 25% under the agreement.
The USA also expanded the list of “derivative products.”
In August 2025, the Department of Commerce added 407 categories of goods containing steel or aluminum under this tariff – these include machinery, equipment, turbine parts, pumps, and more.
This means that raw materials, as well as many metal products, are now subject to tariffs, even if the metal does not appear as a separate “metal product.”
Additionally, the USA canceled a number of exceptions and “loopholes.” Previously, there were countries or goods exempt from these tariffs or with reduced rates; now these exceptions have been removed.
Rules under which metal could be “added” to a product to avoid tariffs have also been reformed.
CBAM policy adds another layer – from January 1, 2026, importers will have to account for the price of “embedded” carbon.
Why this matters
If your company purchases metal from abroad, the risk of having to pay higher tariffs has increased.
This can increase the cost of materials, which directly affects product cost.
It becomes necessary to plan in advance where and how much metal will be purchased to stay within limits and avoid extra expenses.
What can be done immediately
Check your contracts and ensure that the supplier and you understand who will pay any possible tariff if the batch exceeds the limit.
Diversify supplies – find suppliers within Europe or those whose products already comply with the new rules. This reduces the risk of unexpected tariffs.
Increase stock – if you usually purchase “just in time,” consider buying slightly earlier while conditions are still stable.
Monitor the origin of the metal – where the metal came from and how it was produced. The more transparent the supply chain, the lower the risk.
Communicate with suppliers and customers – inform them that conditions are changing, and discuss how you will act if metal prices rise.
What it means
For small and medium-sized businesses, this may mean higher costs or the need to adapt more quickly. For companies purchasing large volumes of metal, this is a signal: time to plan ahead, work with reliable suppliers, and review strategies.
Conclusion: practical checklist
Review contracts and add tariff clauses.
Increase the share of local/certified suppliers.
Ensure stock buffers and consider hedging (protection against unexpected price changes).
Invest in carbon footprint accounting and “green” certification.
Actively participate in industry associations and monitor changes in EU policy.
The market becomes more predictable only for those who act proactively.
Winning are those working with added value: alloyed/special alloys, complex products.
Sources
European Commission – announcements on strengthening steel protection (March 25, 2025). Trade and Economic Security+1
Reuters – EU proposal to reduce tariff quotas and increase out-of-quota tariffs to 50% (Oct 2025)
Official CBAM reference – EU Taxation and Customs Union
Guardian – media coverage of EU retaliations against the USA (Mar 2025)
Industry reactions and analysis (Eurofer, SP Global) on the impact of tariffs and trade agreements