Trump’s $2,000 tariff rebate plan: What to know

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U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters upon his return to Washington at Joint Base Andrews, in Maryland, U.S., November 9, 2025.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

Over the weekend, President Donald Trump suggested paying Americans directly for their health-care costs and sending tariff rebate checks to families, not unlike the stimulus payments issued during the Covid-19 pandemic.

In a Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump wrote, “Republicans should give money DIRECTLY to your personal HEALTH SAVINGS ACCOUNTS.”

The president also floated the idea that a tariff “dividend” was possible. “A dividend of at least $2000 a person (not including high income people!) will be paid to everyone,” he wrote in another post Sunday on Truth Social.

Later that day, in an interview with ABC News, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that he had not discussed the idea of a tariff rebate with the president and that there were no specific proposals in the works.

That suggests that this is not “a real or likely policy move,” said Brett House, economics professor at Columbia Business School. “I don’t think consumers should expect to see these rebate checks.”

A White House official told CNBC that “the Administration is committed to putting this money to good use for the American people.”

American families are under pressure

Tariffs are a tax on imports from foreign nations, paid by U.S. entities that import the good or service. Businesses often bear some of the cost and pass on the rest to consumers through higher prices.

Although the size and extent of the tariff hit has been hard to gauge, some of the impact is already weighing on household finances, economists say. An Oct. 30 analysis by the Budget Lab at Yale found that the current tariff policies in effect are expected to cost each household $1,800, on average, in 2025.

Read more CNBC personal finance coverage

Rising health-care costs are another issue threatening to cause significant strain.

Millions of Americans are bracing for a sharp increase in their health insurance premiums next year as expiring enhanced premium tax credits trigger a so-called subsidy cliff. Those enhanced subsidies, which bring insurance premiums down, are also at the center of the political fight around the federal government shutdown.

Although checks “would be a popular policy,” said Stephen Kates, a financial analyst at Bankrate, “direct deposit payments are unlikely to happen without Congress being on board.”

With a partisan battle underway, congressional approval would be especially difficult, he said, “That’s another wrinkle here.”

However, if the political tide changes, that could be a different story.

“We do not see stimulus checks in the near future, but could see greater Congressional interest as we approach the midterm elections, especially if we see weakness among consumers,” Raymond James Washington policy analyst Ed Mills wrote in a Nov. 9 research note.

Unintended consequences of rebate checks

Economists have also warned that direct payments could cause inflation to flare up again.

Pandemic-era fiscal stimulus contributed to an increase in inflation of about 2.6 percentage points in the U.S., according to 2023 research from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

“Money is money, and when more money comes into the economy to chase the same amount of goods and services, it’s going to be inflationary,” Kates said. 

Since the president first introduced widespread tariffs in April, inflation has hovered above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target but remains relatively stable, largely because companies built up inventories and were able to absorb some of the impact.

Going forward, economists say the Trump administration’s tariff agenda could raise consumer prices more in the months ahead.

“We still have elevated inflation over 3% based on our last reading,” Kates said. Any direct payments “would exacerbate that.”

‘The numbers that make this strange’

The idea of sending tariff rebate checks is not new. In late July, Trump said the administration was “thinking about a little rebate” for Americans from tariff revenue.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., then introduced the American Worker Rebate Act of 2025, which pitched a rebate check funded with tariff revenue as soon as this year. The Senate referred that bill to the Committee on Finance, where it remains.

According to the Treasury Department’s September report, the U.S. collected roughly $195 billion in customs duties so far in 2025, more than doubling last year’s total.

“If you pay $2,000 to 100 million Americans, you end up at $200 billion,” said Tomas Philipson, a professor of public policy studies at the University of Chicago and former acting chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. That would be less than one-third of the people living in the U.S., Philipson said; “if [Trump] includes 200 million Americans, we are up to $400 billion.”

A separate analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimated the payments could cost as much as $600 billion, assuming the dividends are designed like Covid-era checks.

“They are going to pay back more than the tariff revenue,” Philipson said. “Those are the numbers that make this strange.”

Meanwhile, the White House has contended that U.S. trading partners have shouldered the brunt of Trump’s tariff policies, not consumers, he added. “They are kind of saying all this revenue is going to be sent back to Americans. I have a hard time understanding why, if foreigners are paying these tariffs,” Philipson said.

Supreme Court hears challenge to Trump administration's tariff policy

Further, the fate of Trump’s tariff policy is currently being argued before the Supreme Court, and any ruling is likely months away. Depending on that outcome, the Trump administration could have to refund the tariffs already paid to the entities that paid them.

In that case, there would be no revenue to be sent to taxpayers, according to Columbia’s House. 

“If the Supreme Court rules against the tariffs, the tariffs then need to be repaid,” House said, “so all that money is potentially going back to the businesses that imported goods, and any of the money that would be financing this broader rebate wouldn’t be there.”

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