Don’t Expect a Refund for Your Tariff-Inflated Expenses
With Donald Trump’s tariffs being ruled illegal, the government may be on the hook for up to $170 billion in refunds. Because Amazon helped conceal how much tariffs raised consumer prices, it will be easier for companies to hoard refunds for themselves.

Because Amazon and other large companies didn’t provide economy-wide tariff transparency in their pricing, Americans had little visibility into exactly how much price increases were directly related to tariffs. (Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo / AFP via Getty Images)
Now that Donald Trump’s tariffs have been ruled illegal, the government may be on the hook for up to $170 billion of refunds of levies that were unduly collected. Consumers might have been in a position to have some sense of how much of those refunds they are personally owed. But President Donald Trump and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos decided to keep that information concealed, which now makes it easier for any tariff refunds to be kept out of your hands and instead turned into a corporate bailout.
Recall that in late April 2025, Punchbowl reported that Amazon “will soon show how much Trump’s tariffs are adding to the price of each product, according to a person familiar with the plan. The shopping site will display how much of an item’s cost is derived from tariffs — right next to the product’s total listed price.”
One revelation from the story was that tariff transparency was entirely possible — it wouldn’t require some magical rocket science to simply let people know how much of the levies were being baked into prices. And because Amazon is the world’s largest retailer, its transparency initiative would have given individual consumers granular data about how much in tariffs they were paying when purchasing items on Amazon.