US and Taiwan sign trade deal that includes tariff reductions

Published Feb 13, 2026

Tridge summary

The United States and Taiwan have signed a trade deal that will cut tariffs, expand access for American goods to the Asian market and funnel billions of dollars into energy and technology projects in the United States, Bloomberg reported. Under the terms of the deal, Taiwan will buy more than $44 billion in U.S. liquefied

Original content

natural gas and crude oil and further open its market to American goods, including meat and dairy products, wheat, medical supplies and cars. Taipei also pledged to buy about $15 billion in U.S. civilian aircraft and components and invest about $25 billion in power generation equipment by 2029. The signing formalizes an agreement announced in January that would cut tariffs on goods from the self-governing island from 20% to 15%. Exceptions are made for generic drugs, microchips and smartphones, which the Trump administration is investigating with the possibility of future tariffs. The average tariff rate on Taiwanese goods exported to the United States will be reduced to about 12.3% from 35.8%, which was in effect after the reciprocal tariffs were imposed last April. The share of exports to the United States subject to reciprocal tariffs will be reduced from 24% to 15.5%. The remaining goods subject to U.S. inspections will continue to receive most-favored-nation treatment. Taiwan ...

Would you like more in-depth insights?

Gain access to detailed market analysis tailored to your business needs.
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.