iPhone 17 Pro predicted to cost over $2000 because of Trump tariffs

Jump to First Reply
Posted:
in General Discussion edited April 4

Apple's iconic iPhone may soon cost you about double what it costs now, as analysts predict a 43% price increase in response to U.S. tariffs on imports from China and elsewhere in the world.

Smartphone with triple camera setup, metallic finish, against a background of various electronic device icons.
The iPhone 16 Pro Max could reach a price point of around $2300.



On April 2, or "Liberation Day" as President Trump called it, a new assortment of "reciprocal" tariffs was applied against every foreign country in the Apple supply chain. While there's a minimum 10% tariff on all goods coming into the United States, imports from China were hit with a 54% tariff.



Unsurprisingly, Apple's stock price suffered, as it took a dive of more than 9% in the period immediately following the announcement of Trump's tariffs. The iPhone maker was previously able to negotiate a tariff exemption during President Trump's first term in office, but it looks like that won't happen this time around.

According to a Reuters report published on Friday, analysts from Rosenblatt Securities believe that Apple could increase iPhone and Apple Watch prices by 43% to offset the added cost of the tariffs, passing the costs on to end consumers.

Apple's remaining product lines wouldn't be spared either, with projected price increases being roughly around 40% for each hardware platform.

Specifically, Rosenblatt Securities claims that we could see prices increase in the following manner:

  • iPhone -- 43%

  • Apple Watch -- 43%

  • iPad -- 42%

  • AirPods -- 39%



If implemented, this means that end consumers would have to pay over $1140 for the base model iPhone 16, which currently costs $799. The top-of-the-line iPhone 16 Pro Max with 1TB of storage would be priced at almost $2300, up from the current $1599 price point.

Even Apple's entry-level iPhone 16e, introduced in February 2025, would get a substantial price increase. Instead of its current $599 price tag, users would have to pay north of $850 for the device. This would make the iPhone 16e more expensive than the current iPhone 16 price point, even with all its drawbacks.

Not everyone agrees with the projected 43% price hike, however, as Counterpoint Research co-founder Neil Shah believes the number will be closer to 30%. He says this is the minimum amount required to offset the tariff costs.

Angelo Zino of CFRA Research, meanwhile, claims Apple will find it difficult to impose a price increase of more than 10% at present, given consumer sentiment. However, Zino does expect a major price adjustment for the iPhone 17 in September 2025.

Where Apple products are made, and how will tariffs affect them



China accounts for roughly 80% of Apple's total production capacity, meaning that around 90% of all iPhones, and 80% of iPads are assembled in the country.

Even with Apple's manufacturing efforts in Thailand, Taiwan, India, Vietnam, and elsewhere, the company and its suppliers will be negatively impacted by President Trump's latest set of tariffs. The iPhone maker's stock prices continue to suffer as well.

India assembles approximately 10% to 15% of iPhones, but has been expected to reach up to 20% by the end of 2025, helped by the country cutting import taxes for Apple and others. Apple is now required to pay a tariff of 26% on imports from India, which is significantly less than the tariff for China.

Rosenblatt Securities estimates that the tariffs imposed on Wednesday could cost Apple up to $40 billion. Rosenblatt believes that negotiations between Apple and the White House are likely.

However, how the tariffs have been applied make that less likely than before. The new tariffs have been implemented through the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA).

This practically means that there is no product list for exemptions, nor any facility for Apple to even apply for an exemption. The sole way to get an exemption under the new tariffs is by specific order from the President.

President Trump has already said that there will be no exemptions for any firm or any product, beyond an incredibly narrow list of components and raw materials that will have little effect on Apple's production.

But, Apple CEO Tim Cook, once called "Tim Apple" by the current president, has an established strategy for dealing with Trump. Their conversations typically revolve around a singular issue important to Apple.

Still, it remains to be seen whether the iPhone maker will be able to secure a tariff exemption as it did before. The company might also opt to raise prices across all of its product lines, which is a more likely scenario.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    SmittyWHiramAbifWesley HilliardwilliamlondonRogue01mrstepthtjrfunk
     4Likes 4Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 2 of 10
    Mike Wuerthelemike wuerthele Posts: 7,009administrator
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    Because they don't work the way Trump said that they do, or the way that you think that they do. The president's folks invented a forumula that has nothing to do with tariffs applied by countries importing US goods. The 54% tariff that China has responded to, was made by dividing a given country's trade deficit by its exports to the US. Then the resulting figure was divided in half.

    There was also a baseline 10% that was applied everywhere. This isn't reciprocal. This is just pulled out of Trump's advisor's asses.


    So. Tell me how that's supposed to work, since China increased tariffs on goods imported from the US this morning?



    edited April 4
    SmittyWHiramAbifrob53williamlondonnubusRogue01jrfunkrolling musubi
     5Likes 3Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 3 of 10
    Wesley Hilliardwesley hilliard Posts: 436member, administrator, moderator, editor
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    It seems you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work. The tariffs enacted by the Trump administration were calculated using the trade deficit divided by the exports. That's not how you determine what China's tariffs are on US goods.

    China's original rate was less than 5%, but now they've got no choice but to respond to the US tariffs. The only way prices go down on imported goods is if the US lowers tariffs, not China.

    All tariffs are a tax on the country that imposes the tariffs. It is basic economics. The US government tried to impose tariffs in the 1930s to save the economy, but spoiler! It failed and led to the great depression.
    SmittyWHiramAbifrob53williamlondonnubusjrfunk
     3Likes 3Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 4 of 10
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    It seems you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work. The tariffs enacted by the Trump administration were calculated using the trade deficit divided by the exports. That's not how you determine what China's tariffs are on US goods.

    China's original rate was less than 5%, but now they've got no choice but to respond to the US tariffs. The only way prices go down on imported goods is if the US lowers tariffs, not China.

    All tariffs are a tax on the country that imposes the tariffs. It is basic economics. The US government tried to impose tariffs in the 1930s to save the economy, but spoiler! It failed and led to the great depression.
    You go from "it seems like you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work" to writing false statements of tariffs creating the great depression and alluding to them only being tried in the 1930s.  

    The great depression was NOT caused by tariffs, and in fact tariffs have been utilized since the country's founding, and accounted for up to 95% of the revenue to the government up until the income tax was created in the early 20th century. 
    williamlondonRogue01jrfunk
     1Like 2Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 5 of 10
    Wesley Hilliardwesley hilliard Posts: 436member, administrator, moderator, editor
    HiramAbif said:
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    It seems you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work. The tariffs enacted by the Trump administration were calculated using the trade deficit divided by the exports. That's not how you determine what China's tariffs are on US goods.

    China's original rate was less than 5%, but now they've got no choice but to respond to the US tariffs. The only way prices go down on imported goods is if the US lowers tariffs, not China.

    All tariffs are a tax on the country that imposes the tariffs. It is basic economics. The US government tried to impose tariffs in the 1930s to save the economy, but spoiler! It failed and led to the great depression.
    You go from "it seems like you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work" to writing false statements of tariffs creating the great depression and alluding to them only being tried in the 1930s.  

    The great depression was NOT caused by tariffs, and in fact tariffs have been utilized since the country's founding, and accounted for up to 95% of the revenue to the government up until the income tax was created in the early 20th century. 
    I didn't say that tariffs caused the great depression. The great depression occurred in spite of tariffs. My mistake for not being more clear on my point.

    Oh, I didn't say tariffs are bad. Trump's tariffs are bad and stupid. But convenient of you to deliberately misunderstand me.

    Not to mention that you conveniently miss the fact that the reason the income tax was implemented was because tariffs disproportionately affected lower income Americans, where the income tax meant the rich paid their fair share and improved the economy.
    edited April 4
    williamlondonrolling musubi
     2Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 6 of 10
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,348member
    Whoever disliked the comments criticizing our idiot president has been drinking too much koolaid and refuses to understand how stupid these tariffs are for the USA and every other country.  
    williamlondonRogue01muthuk_vanalingam
     3Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 7 of 10
    Sooo who’s gonna keep upgrading iPhones every year if the price reaches over 2k
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 8 of 10
    Rogue01rogue01 Posts: 241member
    HiramAbif said:
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    It seems you are the one that doesn't understand how tariffs work. The tariffs enacted by the Trump administration were calculated using the trade deficit divided by the exports. That's not how you determine what China's tariffs are on US goods.

    China's original rate was less than 5%, but now they've got no choice but to respond to the US tariffs. The only way prices go down on imported goods is if the US lowers tariffs, not China.

    All tariffs are a tax on the country that imposes the tariffs. It is basic economics. The US government tried to impose tariffs in the 1930s to save the economy, but spoiler! It failed and led to the great depression.
    The great depression was NOT caused by tariffs, and in fact tariffs have been utilized since the country's founding, and accounted for up to 95% of the revenue to the government up until the income tax was created in the early 20th century. 
    You are incorrect.  Look up the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act.  It caused the US to sink further into the Great Depression.  "Hoover signed the bill against the advice of many senior economists, yielding to pressure from his party and business leaders. Intended to bolster domestic employment and manufacturing, the tariffs instead deepened the Depression because the U.S.'s trading partners retaliated with tariffs of their own, leading to U.S. exports and global trade plummeting. Economists and historians widely regard the act as a policy misstep, and it remains a cautionary example of protectionist policy in modern economic debates."

    Then go watch Ferris Bueller's Day Off as Ben Stein's famous classroom 
    speech also explained it.  We are headed for another depression due to Trump's misguided Tariffs.  The economy is crashing, if you haven't been paying attention.
    thtrolling musubi
     2Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 9 of 10
    skingersskingers Posts: 36member
    For those arguing about how Tariffs work or don't, keep this in mind.  The price of an iPhone will not go up outside of the US.  In fact for countries that do not change the Tariff for countries that make the iPhone there will be no change whatsoever.  So the correct headline would be  "iPhone 17 Pro predicted to cost over $2000 in the U.S. because of Trump tariffs".  I see a lot of people buying iPhones on business trips and holidays in the future.
    AllM
     1Like 0Dislikes 0Informatives
  • Reply 10 of 10
    AllMallm Posts: 72member
    slickdealer said:
    The most likely scenario remains that China lowers tariffs on US goods and our reciprocal tariffs automatically adjust.  

    Why all of these articles fail to mention how reciprocal tariffs work baffles me. 
    skingers said:
    For those arguing about how Tariffs work or don't, keep this in mind.  The price of an iPhone will not go up outside of the US.  In fact for countries that do not change the Tariff for countries that make the iPhone there will be no change whatsoever.  So the correct headline would be  "iPhone 17 Pro predicted to cost over $2000 in the U.S. because of Trump tariffs".  I see a lot of people buying iPhones on business trips and holidays in the future.
     The answer is Appleinsider is yellower than yellow now. Commenting on here is a waste of time at best, IMO.
     0Likes 0Dislikes 0Informatives
Sign In or Register to comment.