DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling Won’t Bring Car Prices Back to Earth

February 21, 2026
in News
The Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling Won’t Bring Car Prices Back to Earth

It has never been more expensive to buy a new car. The average transaction price last month for buyers in the United States was $48,576, up nearly a third from 2019, according to Edmunds. The “affordable” car—$20,000 or less—is dead.

The high prices have been pinned on plenty of economic dynamics: lingering pandemic-era supply chain issues, the introduction of expensive technology into everyday cars, higher labor and raw materials costs, and new tariffs by the Trump administration affecting imported steel, aluminum, and cars themselves.

Now, despite a US Supreme Court ruling that will nix some of those Trump tariffs, car buyers will likely get no respite.

“The core cost structure facing the auto industry hasn’t fundamentally changed overnight,” writes Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds’ head of insights, in an emailed statement. Put more simply: Cheaper cars aren’t coming, at least not because of this ruling.

The Supreme Court’s decision gets in the way of the president’s power to use the International Emergency Economic Power Act, or IEEPA, to levy tariffs in response to emergencies. Trump used this power to apply tariffs to countries around the globe, the emergency being “large and persistent” trade deficits. The administration applied other new duties on Canada, China, and Mexico because of what it called emergencies related to the flow of migrants and drugs into the United States.

But most of the tariffs that affect the auto industry come from another law, section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act. That provision can apply to imports that “threaten to impair” the country’s national security. Tariffs on steel, aluminum, copper—key raw materials for cars—and imported auto parts and vehicles themselves came under this provision, and are still in effect. This includes 15 percent tariffs on cars built in Europe, Japan, and South Korea.

Automakers have actually done an OK job shielding consumers from the effects of tariffs, Caldwell says. Even as retailers have blamed tariffs for steadily rising prices of consumer goods like electronics and appliances, car prices are up just 1 percent since this time last year, the firm’s data shows. But as the tariff regime drags on, that could change in ways that make new car buyers even less happy.

“If cost pressures continue to build, automakers may have less room to shield shoppers from higher prices,” Caldwell says, “but for now, the broader market impact is still playing out.”

The post The Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling Won’t Bring Car Prices Back to Earth appeared first on Wired.

Justice Brett Kavanaugh frets over ‘mess’ that might follow Supreme Court ruling
News

Justice Brett Kavanaugh frets over ‘mess’ that might follow Supreme Court ruling

by Raw Story
February 21, 2026

Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a Trump appointee, filed a dissent in the 6-3 Supreme Court decision clamping down on Trump’s ability ...

Read more
News

ICE Barbie Orders MAGA Makeover for Secret Service

February 21, 2026
News

Revealed: Surprising reason John Roberts may like Trump’s ‘tongue-lashing’

February 21, 2026
News

Conan O’Brien breaks silence over killing of Rob and Michele Reiner after his holiday party

February 21, 2026
Media

CBS to Air Star’s Axed ‘60 Minutes’ Segment Days After He Quits

February 21, 2026
ICE changes story and admits detainee died of ‘spontaneous use of force’

ICE changes story and admits detainee died of ‘spontaneous use of force’

February 21, 2026
Trump’s ‘offensively disgusting’ joke about Congressional medal sparks outrage

Trump’s ‘offensively disgusting’ joke about Congressional medal sparks outrage

February 21, 2026
Bridge Owner Donated $1 Million to MAGA Inc. PAC Before Trump Blasted New Span

Bridge Owner Donated $1 Million to MAGA Inc. PAC Before Trump Blasted New Span

February 21, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026