The U.S. Supreme Court could rule as early as Friday on whether President Donald Trump’s emergency tariffs are legal — and if the answer is no, the financial fallout would be staggering. Economists at the Penn-Wharton Budget Model estimate that more than $175 billion in tariff collections would need to be refunded to importers, a figure that exceeds the combined annual budgets of the Department of Transportation and the Department of Justice.
That is not a rounding error. That is a potential fiscal event with no recent precedent.
Where the $175 billion figure comes from
The estimate was produced by Penn-Wharton Budget Model, a nonpartisan fiscal research group at the University of Pennsylvania, using a forecasting model that cross-references import data across roughly 11,000 product categories and 233 countries. The model tracks tariffs imposed specifically under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act — the legal authority Trump invoked to impose broad emergency duties beginning in February 2025.
Running that model through Thursday, the total collected under IEEPA-based tariffs comes to approximately $179 billion, with around $500 million being collected daily under the current rate structure. A separate calculation using historical customs assessment data produced a nearly identical figure of $175 billion to $176 billion, giving the estimate a degree of consistency across two different methodologies.
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency last published its own IEEPA assessment data in December, which at that point showed $133.5 billion at risk. The gap between that figure and the current estimate reflects continued collections in the weeks since.
What a refund process would actually look like
If the Supreme Court strikes down the IEEPA tariffs, importers would be entitled to seek refunds from Customs and Border Protection on duties paid over the past year. That process would not be simple or fast. Thousands of companies across hundreds of product categories would be filing claims simultaneously, creating an administrative backlog with significant operational and cash flow implications for the agency.
The Treasury has indicated it maintains sufficient cash reserves to cover potential refunds, pointing to planned cash balances of $850 billion at the end of March and $900 billion at the end of June. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent expressed confidence that the court would ultimately uphold the tariffs, but the contingency planning language suggests the possibility of a ruling against them is being taken seriously at the highest levels of the administration.
The tariff revenue that is now at stake
Trump has consistently highlighted tariff revenue as a central benefit of his trade policy. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated the full tariff program would generate approximately $300 billion annually over the next decade. IEEPA-based tariffs represent a significant portion of that total — roughly $180 billion collected in just over a year — which means a court ruling against them would not only require refunds but would also eliminate a major ongoing revenue stream unless the administration moved quickly to alternative legal authorities.
Trump administration officials have indicated they would shift to other tariff authorities to restore the duties if IEEPA is ruled illegal, though the timeline and legal basis for doing so under alternative statutes has not been detailed publicly.
Why this ruling matters beyond the money
The legal question at the center of the case is whether the president has the authority to impose broad emergency tariffs under IEEPA without specific congressional authorization. A ruling against that authority would not only affect the current tariff program — it would set a precedent limiting how future administrations can use emergency economic powers in trade policy, narrowing a tool that has been invoked with increasing frequency.
The financial stakes are significant. The constitutional stakes are potentially larger. A decision is expected imminently.

