Key Points

Trump has warned Apple of imposing a 25% tariff on iPhones manufactured in India for the US market. Apple has significantly expanded production in India, hitting $22 billion in output last fiscal year. Nearly 15 million India-made iPhones were exported to the US in 2024. The move comes as Apple shifts production from China to India amid rising US-China trade tensions.

Key Points: Trump Threatens 25% Tariff on Apple iPhones Made in India

  • Trump pressures Apple to shift iPhone production from India to US
  • Apple ramped up India output to $22B in FY2025
  • 15M India-made iPhones exported to US last year
  • Trade tensions drive Apple's China-to-India shift
2 min read

Trump holds out 25% tariff threat to Apple if it makes iPhones in India

Trump warns Apple of 25% tariffs if iPhones sold in the US are manufactured in India, escalating trade tensions amid production shifts.

"I expect their iPhone's sold in the US to be built in the US, not India—or face a 25% tariff. – Donald Trump"

New Delhi, May 23

US President Donald Trump on Friday again sought to pressurise Apple on its decision to increase production of its iPhone in India.

Trump said that Apple will have to pay a 25 per cent import tariffs if its mobile handsets sold in US are not produced in the boundaries of the country.

In a social media post on his Truth Social, US President Donald Trump wrote, "I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhone's that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else,"

"If that is not the case, a Tariff of at least 25% must be paid by Apple to the U.S. Thank your for your attention to this matter," he further added in the post.

Earlier on May 15, while speaking in Doha, Trump said that he had spoken with the Apple CEO Tim Cook and asked him to limit Apple's expansion in India.

Recently, Apple took some steps to expand its iPhone production in India, setting up assembly plants operating in the country. Two of these plants are located in Tamil Nadu, and one is in Karnataka.

For these plants Apple has signed contract with manufacturers, such as Foxconn and Tata Group to set up production units.

In the last fiscal year, Apple produced USD 22 billion worth of iPhones in India in the 12 months through March 2025, which is a huge 60 per cent jump from the prior year.

Apple manufactured approximately 40-45 million iPhones in India in 2024, accounting for 18-20 per cent of its global output. Of this, about 15 million were exported to the US, 13 million to other international markets, and about 12 million were sold in the Indian market.

In January 2025, Apple achieved an 11th consecutive quarterly revenue record in India, with iPhone sales estimated at USD 10 billion in 2024.

India stands as the Apple's fourth-largest market globally in 2024, after the US, China, and Japan.

As reported last month, driven by the escalating trade tensions and high reciprocal tariffs announced by both China and US against each other, in a strategic move Apple decided to transition all production of iPhones destined for the US market to India from China.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
This is pure economic bullying by Trump. India has every right to attract global manufacturers with our skilled workforce and favorable policies. Apple's expansion here benefits both countries - creates jobs for us and gives Apple cost advantages. 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
While Trump's threats are concerning, we must focus on making India's manufacturing ecosystem even stronger. The Tata-Foxconn partnership shows we can deliver quality. Maybe it's time for Indian brands to step up too! #MakeInIndia
A
Amit S.
America first? What about India first? We should impose similar tariffs on US products if they continue this protectionism. Our market is growing fast - we have bargaining power now. 💪
S
Sunita R.
The numbers speak for themselves - $22 billion production value! This is exactly why we need to keep improving ease of doing business. Trump or no Trump, global companies will come where it makes economic sense.
V
Vikram J.
While I support Make in India, we must acknowledge that our manufacturing still depends heavily on Chinese components. We need to develop complete supply chains to truly benefit from such opportunities. Jai Hind!
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Neha T.
Interesting how US wants manufacturing back home after outsourcing for decades. But we should use this as motivation to build our own tech giants rather than just assembling for others. Where is India's Apple or Samsung? 🤔

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