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Current Tariff: 19%

US-Malaysia Trade Analysis

Country
Malaysia
US Import Rank
#15
Import Value
$52.5 billion
Trade Agreement
Agreement on Reciprocal Trade

Last Updated:

Quick Facts

MetricValue
US Import Rank#15
2024 Import Value$52.5 billion
% of US Imports1.6%
2024 Tariff Rate~2.2% average
Current Tariff Rate19%
Trade AgreementAgreement on Reciprocal Trade
US Trade Balance-$24.8 billion deficit

Trade Framework

Previous Status

  • No bilateral FTA with US
  • Traded under WTO MFN rules
  • Part of CPTPP (which US left in 2017)

Agreement on Reciprocal Trade (October 2025)

Signed: October 2025

Key Terms:

AreaCommitment
US tariff rate19%
Exemptions1,711 product lines ($5.2B)
Malaysia tariffs on USSignificant reductions
Investment$150B commitment

2024 Baseline Tariff Structure

Product Category2024 RateNotes
Most goods~2.2%MFN rates
SemiconductorsLowCritical supply chain
ElectronicsLowMajor export
Palm oilLowKey commodity
RubberLowImportant export

2025 Tariff Changes

Timeline

Apr 2, 2025     "Liberation Day" - 24% reciprocal tariff announced
Apr 9, 2025     90-day pause, reduced to 10%
Jul 31, 2025    Trade deal announced - 19% rate
Oct 2025        Agreement formalized with exemptions

Current Tariff Structure (January 2026)

Product CategoryCurrent RateNotes
General goods19%Agreement rate
SemiconductorsExemptUnder review
Palm oil0%Exempt
Natural rubber0%Exempt
Aircraft components0%Exempt
Generic pharmaceuticals0%Exempt
Critical minerals0%Exempt
Steel50%Section 232
Aluminum50%Section 232
Rubber gloves19%NOT exempt

Exemptions (1,711 Product Lines, $5.2 billion)

Exempt Products

CategoryStatus
Palm oil and derivatives0%
Natural rubber0%
Aircraft components0%
Generic pharmaceuticals0%
Critical minerals0%
SemiconductorsExempt (under review)

NOT Exempt

ProductTariffNotes
Rubber gloves19%Despite lobbying
Embedded electronics19%Some categories
General manufactured goods19%Standard rate

Rubber Glove Disappointment

Malaysia is the world’s largest rubber glove producer, but:

  • Requested exemption denied
  • 19% tariff applies
  • Industry concerns about competitiveness

Economic Effects

Resilient Performance

Despite tariff increases, Malaysia showed economic resilience:

Metric2025 Performance
GDP growth4.9% (beat 4% forecast)
Q3 2025 growth5.2%

Sector Adaptation

FactorDetail
Semiconductor demandStrong globally
Electronics exportsAI-driven growth
DiversificationMultiple markets

Key Products Affected

Semiconductors (RM60.6 billion)

StatusDetail
TariffExempt (under review)
ImportanceLargest export category
Global roleMajor test and packaging hub

Major Players in Malaysia:

  • Intel
  • AMD
  • Infineon
  • Texas Instruments

Electronics

Product TypeStatus
SemiconductorsExempt
Embedded products19%
Consumer electronics19%

Palm Oil

StatusDetail
Tariff0% (exempt)
Malaysia share of global production~28%
Key derivative productsBiodiesel, food ingredients

Rubber Products

ProductStatus
Natural rubber0% (exempt)
Rubber gloves19% (not exempt)
Industrial rubber19%

Medical Gloves

IssueDetail
Malaysia’s share~65% of global supply
COVID importanceCritical PPE supplier
Tariff19% (not exempt)
Industry concernCompetitiveness vs. other suppliers

Malaysia’s Investment Commitments

$150 Billion Package

SectorInvestment
SemiconductorsSignificant portion
AerospaceExpansion
Data centersNew facilities

Energy Purchases

CommitmentDetail
LNG5 million tonnes/year
Value~$3.4 billion/year
SourceUS LNG exports

Aircraft Orders

CommitmentDetail
Aircraft30 + option for 30 more
ManufacturerBoeing
ValueBillions

Malaysia’s Strategic Position

Semiconductor Hub

Malaysia is crucial to global chip supply chain:

RoleDetail
Chip packagingGlobal leader
TestingMajor hub
Back-end processing13% of global
Key companiesIntel, AMD, Infineon

Palm Oil Dominance

MetricDetail
Global production share~28%
Export destinationGlobal
Exemption importanceCritical for economy

ASEAN Position

FactorDetail
LocationStrategic hub
InfrastructureWell-developed
Investment climateFavorable
CompetitionVietnam, Thailand

Comparison with Regional Peers

CountryTariff RateKey Difference
Malaysia19%Palm oil exempt
Vietnam20%1% higher
Thailand19%Same rate
IndonesiaHigherNo deal yet

Malaysia secured a rate comparable to regional competitors.


Significant Events

DateEventImpact
Apr 2, 202524% tariff announcedConcern
Apr 9, 202590-day pauseRelief
Jul 31, 202519% deal announcedStability
Oct 2025Agreement formalizedExemptions confirmed

Current Status (January 2026)

What’s in Effect

  • 19% tariff on most goods
  • 0% on palm oil, rubber, aircraft, pharma, minerals
  • Semiconductors exempt (under review)
  • 50% on steel/aluminum

Investment Progress

  • $150B commitment announced
  • LNG contracts being finalized
  • Semiconductor expansion continuing

Outstanding Issues

  • Rubber gloves at 19% (industry concern)
  • Semiconductor exemption under review
  • Competition from Vietnam/Thailand

Outlook

Malaysia secured a solid deal with significant exemptions for its key exports (palm oil, semiconductors, natural rubber). The 19% general rate is comparable to regional competitors. The semiconductor exemption is crucial given Malaysia’s role in the global chip supply chain. The main disappointment is the rubber glove industry, which faces the full 19% tariff despite Malaysia’s dominant global position.


Sources