Italian Pasta Faces 107% Tariff Under Trump Administration/ TezzBuzz/ WASHINGTON/ J. Mansour/ morning Edition/ President Trump’s administration is proposing a massive 107% tariff on Italian pasta, alarming producers and importers alike. Italy’s government and pasta makers warn the move could devastate exports. Critics call the measure excessive and politically driven.
PHILADELPHIA — In a move stirring anxiety from Rome to restaurants across the United States, the Trump administration has proposed imposing a staggering 107% tariff on imported Italian pasta. The proposed hike — the result of a trade enforcement review — would effectively double the price of many Italian pasta products in the U.S., putting traditional staples like spaghetti, rigatoni, and tortellini at the heart of a transatlantic trade dispute.
The tariff stems from a U.S. Commerce Department anti-dumping investigation launched in 2024. The department claims Italian producers were selling pasta in the American market below fair value, undercutting U.S. brands like Ronzoni and Prince, and harming domestic manufacturers. If finalized, the tariff would stack on top of an existing 15% duty on European exports, bringing the effective rate to 107%.
Italian pasta makers, many of them family-owned operations, say such duties would devastate exports to their second-largest market — the United States — and could mark a serious blow to the €4 billion ($4.65 billion) global pasta industry, of which the U.S. accounts for roughly 15%.
Reactions in Italy have ranged from disbelief to diplomatic outrage. Agriculture Minister Francesco Lollobrigida addressed lawmakers to confirm that Italy is working with the European Commission to counter the proposed tariffs.
EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic called the duty “unacceptable,” stressing that the United States has not provided adequate evidence to justify the sanctions. Italian executives argue that the prices of their pasta in the U.S. are already higher than domestic brands, undermining any claim of price dumping.
The investigation was launched after complaints from U.S.-based companies, including Missouri’s 8th Avenue Food & Provisions (maker of Ronzoni) and Illinois’s Winland Foods (maker of Prince, Mueller’s, and Wacky Mac). These companies allege unfair competition, prompting the Commerce Department to zero in on two of Italy’s largest pasta exporters: La Molisana and Garofalo.
According to the Department, both companies failed to provide accurate or complete documentation during the review, which it says hindered its ability to assess fair trade practices. As a result, it assigned them a punitive 92% tariff — extended to 11 other companies based on assumptions of similar behavior.
La Molisana declined comment; Garofalo did not respond to requests.
The new tariffs would apply retroactively to pasta imports going back a year from June 2024 and could affect 16% of total Italian pasta imports. A final decision from the Commerce Department is expected by January 2, with the possibility of a 60-day extension.
The ripple effect is being felt across U.S. cities with deep Italian roots. In Philadelphia, Sal Auriemma of Claudio Specialty Foods, a fixture in the Italian Market for over 60 years, is baffled.
Others agree. Robert Tramonte, owner of The Italian Store in Arlington, Virginia, called his suppliers as soon as the news broke. He was relieved to hear there was enough inventory to last until Easter — for now.
Barilla, Italy’s most famous pasta brand in the U.S., would be largely unaffected — it operates major production plants stateside. But for boutique producers like Rummo Pasta, the tariffs could be existential.
Rummo, based in Benevento, Italy — a historic town northeast of Naples — has been producing pasta since 1846. CEO Cosimo Rummo is frustrated and furious.
Rummo’s exports to the U.S. are worth €20 million annually. He said producing pasta in the U.S. is not an option, rejecting the model followed by some competitors. “We’re proud of our heritage. Our pasta is made in Italy. That’s our identity.”
While the tariff won’t spark a pasta shortage in American supermarkets, it will likely shift consumer behavior. Premium Italian products may become niche items for high-end buyers. Mid-range consumers may turn to U.S.-made alternatives — some of which, critics argue, lack the same authenticity.
And for Italian politicians, it’s more than just commerce. Pasta is Italy’s soul on a plate.
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