President Trump used a Tuesday television interview to encourage major corporations to forgo seeking refunds on tariffs that the Supreme Court ruled were unlawfully imposed, signaling that he would take note of which companies chose to walk away from money they were legally owed. The remarks came in response to a question about whether large importers, including some of the country’s biggest technology and retail companies, planned to request repayments now that the tariffs in question have been struck down.
Trump described the decision not to seek a refund as a smart one, framing corporate forbearance as a kind of loyalty that he would remember. The comments drew immediate attention given the scale of what is at stake. The potential refund pool could total more than 160 billion dollars, which would make it the largest repayment obligation in American government history.
The Supreme Court ruling and what followed
In February, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump had exceeded his authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act when he imposed so-called reciprocal tariffs on imports from nearly every country. The ruling invalidated a broad category of tariffs that had been collected from importers across virtually every sector of the American economy.
Following the decision, the administration imposed a temporary 10 percent tariff using a separate legal authority, set to expire in July. Administration officials have been working to find pathways to restore comparable tariff revenue through other mechanisms. Trump suggested in the Tuesday interview that the end result would be equivalent or greater to what was originally collected, though he acknowledged the process was more complex than the original approach.
The refund process and corporate responses
A day before Trump’s remarks, United States Customs and Border Protection launched an online portal through which importers can formally file refund requests. The process, while now officially open, remains complicated and subject to ongoing uncertainty about how the administration will handle the volume and pace of claims.
Several major corporations, including large retail and logistics companies, have filed lawsuits in the Court of International Trade as a precautionary measure to preserve their legal right to refunds in the event the administration attempts to challenge or delay the repayment process. The filings reflect concern that simply waiting for the administrative process to play out may not be sufficient protection.
At least one major courier company announced publicly that it would pass refunds along to customers who had originally paid tariffs through its services, but only after receiving the funds from the government. The company indicated it had established an internal process to identify and compensate affected customers without requiring them to contact the company directly.
The political and legal tension ahead
Trump’s public appeal to corporations to skip their refund claims puts companies in a position that is both legally and politically complicated. On one hand, the Supreme Court has clearly established that the tariffs were unlawfully collected, giving importers a valid legal claim to reimbursement. On the other hand, the president’s remarks introduce the prospect of consequences, however undefined, for companies that choose to pursue what the courts have indicated they are owed.
The tension between legal entitlement and political relationship management is not a new dynamic in the relationship between the White House and major corporations, but the scale of the potential payouts makes this particular moment unusually high-stakes for both sides.

