Jaguar Land Rover Halting U.S. Shipments As It Assesses Tariff Impacts

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Jaguar Land Rover was already in one of the more precarious positions in its history before Donald Trump took office as president, but the recent tariff announcements could throw a wrench in the gears of its recovery plans. The automaker, which moved just 430,000 vehicles globally last year, said it would pause shipments to the U.S. while it works through the impacts on its business operations.


The automaker said the pause would be temporary and emphasized the importance of American car buyers to its future, with a spokesperson saying, “The USA is an important market for JLR’s luxury brands. We are enacting our short-term actions, including a shipment pause in April, as we develop our mid- to longer-term plans.”


While still based in Britain, Jaguar Land Rover is owned by Tata Motors, an Indian company, and relies on global imports to produce vehicles. Trump’s new tariff policy includes a 25-percent duty on imported models, threatening to make the company’s already expensive U.S. imports even pricier.

JLR had already slashed most of its vehicle lineup in the U.S. and introduced a new design language as part of a significant turnaround effort, so it was likely that imports would have slowed this year anyway. Despite that, JLR still has a couple of months’ worth of inventory in the country that is not impacted by the tariffs, but that could extend a bit further at its current sales pace.


[Images: Jaguar Land Rover]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • Michael S6 Michael S6 on Apr 07, 2025

    Tariffs will put a nail in the coffin in most marginal car companies including Jaguar. Stellantis is already on the ropes. Trump's idiotic tariffs will cause a major recession and car companies will be closing down US factories, not opening new ones.

  • So well see less of them being towed? or hood up on the side of the road with confused stock-bros looking around in a daze ?

  • Andarris Here in the Toronto area I haven't seen a 2006-2012 with intact rocker pannels for over two years now. I presume everywhere around the Great Lakes is the same ? They were super cheap dhring the first two years of the pandemic - could get one with less than 85K for around $6500 certified or a little higher mileage for $5000. Glad I skipped it, even in 2021 some of the 10's &11's were displaying corosion like you'd see on a 7 year older Impala, Camry or Accord. Also the mid-model switch to EPS made me balk at the few clean ones I found.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh I do not ever have delays. I only fly out of PDX or EUG to LAS or OAK and OGG then back .. have never been delayed in the last ?30-ish? trips to vegas/disneyland/maui/cruise ship vacations.... EUG has contract tsa so we never have any TSA delays. unsure which airports have PRIVATE contract TSA that is UNAFFECTED by the deadlock that i HOPE NEVER EVER END.
  • Big Al from Oz gidday mites how are yall feelin today? Want to have a barbie? We are right here gettin dee fire ready
  • Michael S6 The 3 Amigos better hope that the oil spike is short lived as 4-5 dollar a gallon gas would put a damper on their cash cows especially "Ford's strategic shift" of killing off the escape/Lincoln cousin. Most other automakers have a full line of vehicles with much better full economy. GM is sucking air and its Cadillac devision is mostly EV and geriatric line up of ICE cars and SUV's that were supposed to be phased out this year. The expensive gas may push shoppers toward EV but GM's horrible EV reliability is a barrier.
  • Tane94 I read the GM press release about first quarter sales 2026 vs 2025 and Buick is getting its butt kicked:Buick Total* 41,654 61,822 -32.6 The future is bleak for Buick.
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