In the same manner that some individuals browse Zillow listings of homes they’ll never purchase, Sooren Moosavy spends his evenings. He searches YouTube for reviews of Zeekr SUVs and BYD sedans, seeing people in Sydney or London gushing about vehicles that are less expensive than the typical American sedan.
He is a 28-year-old Baltimore resident who wants an electric car for less than $30,000. He has nothing worthwhile to gain from the current state of the American market.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Topic | U.S. Tariffs on Chinese-Made Electric Vehicles |
| Major Brands Involved | BYD, Zeekr, Geely, Lynk & Co, Volvo |
| Current U.S. Tariff Rate | Exceeding 100% on Chinese EVs |
| Canadian Tariff (Comparison) | 6.1% on 49,000 EVs annually |
| Average New Car Price (U.S.) | Approaching $50,000 |
| Typical Chinese EV Price (Europe) | Under $30,000 |
| Key U.S. Political Voices | Donald Trump, Senator Bernie Moreno |
| Industry Source | Cox Automotive dealer survey data |
| Chinese Export Reach | More than 66 countries globally |
| Manufacturing Workaround | Geely’s Volvo plant in South Carolina |
| Expected U.S. Launch Window | 24–36 months for Zeekr and Lynk & Co |
| Main Concerns Cited | Data security, U.S. job protection, safety standards |
This story has an odd silence about it. Life appears normal outside of Detroit’s assembly plants. The policy is loud within Washington. While petrol prices, insurance premiums, and sticker shock continue to rise, U.S. tariffs exceeding 100% have essentially created a wall around the auto market, keeping Chinese EVs out. In America today, the average new car costs close to $50,000. It used to feel like a luxury to have that number. It’s the floor now.
Chinese automakers, however, are present everywhere else. They now send cars into more than sixty countries, surpassing Japan as the world’s biggest automotive exporter. Nearby, Canada reached an agreement lowering tariffs on an initial 49,000 Chinese EVs annually to 6.1%. Mexico is looking to invest in factories. For less than the cost of a starter Toyota Camry, customers in Europe can purchase an electric vehicle with karaoke and a mini-fridge cooling system.

The inconsistency is difficult to ignore. According to recent surveys by Cox Automotive, about 50% of potential customers think Chinese automobiles are a great deal, and almost 40% say they would welcome them on American roads. However, only 26% of dealers think Chinese firms would adhere to US safety regulations, and only 15% want to see them. Often in the same discourse, the nation expresses both want and disinterest in the cars.
The political discourse has been direct. Earlier this year, Ohio Senator Bernie Moreno claimed that no Chinese car would be marketed in the United States while he was still alive as he was standing inside a Ford facility. That stance has been repeated by trade associations, who have warned Washington about threats to their ability to compete. The Chinese embassy in Washington responds by claiming that Chinese automobiles are just better engineered for the price, which is why they sell well elsewhere. Both may be partially accurate.
Interestingly, the workaround is already beginning to take shape. Zeekr and Lynk & Co. badges should be available in U.S. showrooms in two to three years, according to analysts, and Geely, the company that controls Volvo, has prepared its South Carolina plant. Chinese automobiles, according to Automotive Ventures’ Steve Greenfield, are essentially a prefabricated solution to America’s affordability dilemma. When they are built in the United States using American labor, the tariffs disappear.
After driving a few of these vehicles at CES, Edmunds writer Clint Simone described the technology as amazing for the cost. The word that sticks out is amazing. Not only are American consumers shielded from competition. They’re being kept in the dark about what they’re missing. Although walls in trade policy rarely last permanently, investors appear to think the wall will remain for the time being.
It seems almost unreal to watch this develop from the consumer’s perspective. Moosavy will probably continue to scroll. In Ohio, dealers like Rhett Ricart privately acknowledge that if the cars were delivered tomorrow, there would be a line of buyers. There’s a feeling that neither Beijing nor Washington will write the next chapter. On the day the first Zeekr with an American VIN rolls off an American line, it will be written in a parking lot in South Carolina.
