Bank of America: US-Made iPhones Would Face 90% Cost Surge

Moving iPhone production from China to the United States could increase manufacturing costs by up to 90%, analysts at Bank of America warned on Wednesday (via Bloomberg).

Apple iPhone 16 family lineup
According to BofA analysts led by Wamsi Mohan, shifting iPhone assembly to America is technically possible, however it would dramatically increase production expenses and create logistical complications.

"iPhone cost can increase 25% purely on higher labor cost in the U.S.," the analysts wrote in a note to clients. They explained that even if Apple finds domestic workers for final assembly, a "significant portion" of iPhone components would still need to be manufactured in China and imported to the States.

Assuming Apple faces reciprocal tariffs on those imported components, the total manufacturing cost could rise by 90% or more, the analysts estimated.

The analysis follows statements from President Trump earlier this week calling Apple's manufacturing in China "unsustainable." According to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, Trump "absolutely" believes Apple could manufacture iPhones in the United States. During a recent media briefing, Leavitt said the President believes "we have the labor, we have the workforce, we have the resources to do it."

Trump's aggressive trade policies singled out China on Wednesday, pausing reciprocal tariffs on 185 countries for 90 days but increasing duties on Chinese imports to 125%. In response, China has imposed 84% retaliatory levies on American goods. It's becoming increasingly difficult to assess where the stand-off goes from here.

Uncertainty caused by the trade war has battered Apple's stock, which has fallen 14% since Trump's April 2 tariff announcement, erasing approximately $479 billion in market capitalization. Despite a recent 10% rebound, Apple shares remain down 23% year-to-date.

For Apple to make U.S. assembly economically viable, Mohan suggests the company would need tariff waivers on components and subassemblies manufactured outside the country. However, he doesn't believe this is likely to happen.

"Unless it becomes clear as to how permanent the new tariffs are, we do not expect Apple to take the step of moving manufacturing into the U.S.," Mohan stated. Instead, he anticipates Apple will "continue to diversify its supply chain, and also increase production of iPhones in other countries such as India."

Apple has not officially commented on how it plans to address the current tariff situation. Apple will need to pay the 125% tariff on all goods coming to the United States from China, but it can import devices from other countries like India, Taiwan, and Vietnam at the lower 10% rate.

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Top Rated Comments

klasma Avatar
21 weeks ago

Trump really wants free economic trade.
Does he? The EU proposed a zero-tariffs free-trade agreement in February, which he rejected.
Score: 55 Votes (Like | Disagree)
EugW Avatar
21 weeks ago

Trump really wants free economic trade.

Does he? The EU proposed a zero-tariffs free-trade agreement in February, which he rejected.
All Trump wants is to be the centre of attention. He doesn’t seem to care about anything else, aside from porn stars.
Score: 50 Votes (Like | Disagree)
klasma Avatar
21 weeks ago
They could launch a domestically-assembled iPhone Pro Maga for $2500 or so.
Score: 40 Votes (Like | Disagree)
slb Avatar
21 weeks ago

He already put a 90 day pause for ALL COUNTRIES except China. This economic war is only against china….. it’s the final and only boss. Trump really wants free economic trade.
That's ridiculous. What actually happened is that he retreated from his tariff plans because of a sharp bond sell-off that could have been catastrophic. He was tough-talking all this time and insisting he wouldn't change his policies, but that potential disaster was enough to send him away with his tail between his legs after costing the market trillions of dollars for no good reason. It's a humbling defeat after all that bravado.
Score: 39 Votes (Like | Disagree)
User 6502 Avatar
21 weeks ago

Gallon is down
Groceries are down

I don’t give a f about corpors and Wall Street traders. I really hope they will keep loosing even more money…… but guess what. WS is on the rise again today.
I didn’t realise the gallon went down. Is it now less than 3.8 litres? How much did it go down to? 3 litres? 2?
Score: 38 Votes (Like | Disagree)
slb Avatar
21 weeks ago

this is a pointless article. Tariff will not happen at the end of the day. Book it.
Unfortunately, Trump has already inflicted tremendous damage in a short period of time due to the uncertainty and chaos. Good lord, we're not even six months in.
Score: 31 Votes (Like | Disagree)