A U.S. appeals court on Thursday extended its block on a lower court ruling against the Trump administration's 10% global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act, keeping the tariffs in place for three importers that had won a reprieve from the duties last week.The decision from the Federal Circuit appeals court allows the U.S. to continue collecting tariffs from three importers while the government's appeal plays out.Also read: US refunds $22 billion in first repayments of Trump's tariffs in MayThe U.S. trade court ruled against the new tariffs on May 7, but did not widely block their collection.The three importers impacted by the ruling are two small businesses and the state of Washington, which paid tariffs on purchases by the University of Washington.The Trump administration appealed, and the appeals court on May 12 temporarily allowed tariffs to resume for the three importers who won in lower court.Also read: US Customs’ $166 billion tariff refund plan faces court fight over who gets access to payoutsThe 10% global tariff was imposed in February, after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down most of the tariffs that Trump imposed in 2025.The 10% global tariff is scheduled to expire in July, unless extended by Congress.The latest global tariffs were imposed under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974.
Trump’s 10% global tariffs stay in force after appeals court extends pause on trade court decision
A US appeals court has kept a 10% global tariff in place for three importers. This decision follows a lower court ruling that had granted them a reprieve. The US government is appealing the earlier decision. The tariffs were imposed under Section 122 of the Trade Act. They are scheduled to expire in July unless Congress extends them.









