U.S. says it will lower reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%

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The U.S. reciprocal tariff on imports from India is reduced from 25% to 18%.

Source summary
The United States and India announced a framework for a trade agreement in a Joint Statement after a call between President Trump and Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The U.S. removed an additional 25% tariff on Indian imports by Executive Order and lowered the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18%. India committed to reduce or eliminate tariffs on many U.S. industrial and agricultural goods, remove its digital services tax, and to purchase over $500 billion in U.S. products, while both countries agreed to negotiate rules of origin, address non-tariff barriers, and cooperate on economic security measures and export controls.
6 days
Next scheduled update: Feb 20, 2026
6 days

Timeline

  1. Scheduled follow-up · Aug 01, 2026
  2. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 31, 2026
  3. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 15, 2026
  4. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 12, 2026
  5. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 11, 2026
  6. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 02, 2026
  7. Scheduled follow-up · Mar 01, 2026
  8. Scheduled follow-up · Feb 20, 2026
  9. Completion due · Feb 20, 2026
  10. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 05:38 PMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India's imports from 25% to 18%. Progress evidence: A White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026, states that after India agreed to address trade barriers and halt Russian oil purchases, the United States will reduce the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of an interim framework for broader Bilateral Trade Agreement negotiations. The document also notes an Executive Order removing the additional 25% tariff tied to Russian oil purchases. Completion status: The White House framing indicates the tariff reduction is enacted as part of the announced framework and related actions. Reliability note: The primary source is the official White House fact sheet; Reuters independently covered the surrounding actions on February 2, 2026, providing corroboration but not the exact text of the tariff figure. Sources cited reflect the official policy announcement and contemporaneous reporting.
  11. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 03:23 PMcomplete
    Restatement of claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a framework for an Interim Agreement on reciprocal trade. This is presented in the White House materials as a concrete tariff adjustment tied to the broader U.S.–India trade framework. Progress and milestones: On February 6, 2026, the White House released a joint statement detailing an Interim Agreement framework and confirming an 18% reciprocal tariff rate on originating goods from India, under Executive Order 14257, with additional provisions to expand market access and address non-tariff barriers. The accompanying fact sheet reiterates the commitment to reduce the reciprocal tariff to 18% and to pursue a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA). These documents establish the promised change and outline accompanying terms (tariff reductions on various goods, rules of origin, and non-tariff barriers). Current status: The publicly released White House joint statement and fact sheet indicate that the 18% reciprocal tariff is the intended and referenced rate, with implementation expected promptly as part of the Interim Agreement framework. Reuters coverage corroborates the broader reduction in tariffs and emphasizes the 18% rate as part of the negotiated package, alongside commitments regarding Russia oil and broader trade measures. Taken together, these sources indicate the policy change has been publicly promised and is being implemented via official channels. Source reliability and caveats: The primary sources are official White House documents (fact sheet and joint statement), complemented by coverage from Reuters, a reputable wire service. While initial reporting emphasized the framework and milestones, the White House materials provide the clearest articulation of the 18% reciprocal tariff target and the intended path to finalizing the BTA. No credible sources indicate a reversal or withdrawal of these entitlements as of 2026-02-13.
  12. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 02:16 PMcomplete
    The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026 explicitly states that, in light of India’s commitments, the United States will reduce the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18%. This provides a direct confirmation of the stated tariff reduction as part of the announced trade framework. Evidence of progress and framing: The fact sheet describes a framework for an Interim Agreement and a broader bilateral trade negotiation path, including the removal of the additional 25% tariff via an Executive Order and the move toward a mutually beneficial bilateral trade agreement. It also enumerates key terms, such as tariff reductions on U.S. industrial goods and various agricultural products, and outlines next steps for implementing the framework. Completion status: The document indicates that the tariff reduction to 18% has been enacted in conjunction with the interim framework, and that authorities will promptly implement the framework and proceed toward a final BTA. Given the official nature of the White House publication and its explicit tariff figure, the completion condition stated in the prompt appears to be met. Source reliability and notes: The primary source is an official White House fact sheet, which is a high-quality, primary-government source for policy details. While the document lays out an interim arrangement with ongoing negotiations, the stated tariff reduction itself is presented as enacted rather than contingent on future, unspecified milestones.
  13. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 12:35 PMcomplete
    Claim recap: The White House stated that the United States would lower its reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a historic trade deal. The announcement is tied to India’s commitments to curb Russian oil purchases and broaden trade cooperation, with a framework for an Interim Agreement and broader BTA negotiations highlighted. Progress and evidence: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) explicitly says the reciprocal tariff will move from 25% to 18%. Reuters coverage (Feb 2–3, 2026) reports the administration announced an 18% rate in connection with India halting Russian oil purchases, and notes the absence of a formal proclamation at that moment, with follow-on implementing steps expected. Current status: Based on the White House document, the tariff change is intended to be implemented via executive action, and the February 2026 reporting indicates the policy is in the process of execution with the 18% rate framed as the new baseline for reciprocal trade with India. Milestones and dates: Key milestone is the executive order cited by the White House tying the 18% reciprocal rate to India’s commitments on Russian oil and broader trade reforms (February 2026). Reuters notes the absence of a formal Federal Register notice at the time, suggesting the completion depended on formal proclamations and administrative steps. Reliability and incentives: The sources are high-quality and directly reflect official U.S. government communications and major wire reporting. The incentive structure—linking tariff relief to India’s alignment on trade barriers and energy purchases—clarifies both policy aims and enforcement signals. Overall, evidence supports that the promised tariff reduction was being implemented as of early February 2026 and appears completed by mid-February, subject to formal proclamations.
  14. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 10:11 AMcomplete
    The claim is that the United States will lower its reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet issued February 9, 2026 explicitly states that India will see the reciprocal tariff reduced from 25% to 18% as part of the interim framework and broader trade negotiations. Reuters coverage around February 2–3, 2026 corroborates the move to an 18% rate in exchange for India’s commitments, citing the administration and providing context on the broader deal. Progress evidence shows that the administration announced a framework for an interim trade agreement and subsequently committed to the 18% reciprocal tariff rate in official material. The White House document details the reduction and outlines accompanying terms, including expanded market access for U.S. industrial goods and agricultural products, and a push to address non-tariff barriers. Media reporting confirms the public framing of the deal and the 18% rate as a centerpiece of that framing. As to completion status, the White House statement asserts that the 18% rate is in effect as part of the announced framework, and Reuters notes the absence of an immediate presidential proclamation at the time of reporting, implying a standard formalization process would follow. The available official and reputable reporting thus indicate the tariff reduction is intended and publicly proclaimed, with formal administrative steps typically continuing in the weeks after an interim agreement. Key dates and milestones include: February 2, 2026 — Trump Modi call announcing the framework and the plan to remove the 25% tariff; February 6–9, 2026 — public disclosures and fact sheets outlining the 18% reciprocal tariff and broader terms; February 12, 2026 — continued media corroboration of the policy change. The milestones emphasize a swift movement from framework to action, with a focus on reciprocal trade liberalization and expanded energy and technology cooperation. Reliability note: the core claim is supported by the White House fact sheet (primary source) and corroborated by Reuters (independent reporting of the policy move). While initial reports noted the absence of an immediate presidential proclamation, the official document confirms the intended policy outcome, and subsequent coverage reinforced that outcome as part of the announced framework. The sources are high quality and appropriate for assessing a government trade commitment.
  15. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 07:14 AMcomplete
    The claim is that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026, explicitly states that the reciprocal tariff will be reduced from 25% to 18% as part of the trade deal. Reuters reported that President Trump announced the 18% rate after a call with Indian Prime Minister Modi, confirming the framework for an interim agreement and the removal of the prior 25% punitive tariff tied to Russian oil purchases. Overall, independent coverage corroborates the move to an 18% reciprocal tariff, with formal confirmations from the White House and major outlets within days of the initial announcement.
  16. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 04:58 AMcomplete
    Summary of the claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House materials explicitly phrase the framework as applying an 18 percent reciprocal tariff on originating Indian goods, with additional steps to remove tariffs as the Interim Agreement progresses. The claim is grounded in official U.S. government communications released in February 2026 (fact sheet and joint statement). Evidence of progress: The White House fact sheet issued February 9, 2026, states that the United States will apply a reciprocal tariff rate of 18 percent under Executive Order 14257 on originating goods of India. A February 6, 2026 White House joint statement reiterates the 18% reciprocal tariff as part of the Interim Agreement framework and describes the broader to-be-finalized Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) negotiations. Reuters corroborated the framework and the U.S. intention to reduce/pivot tariffs in connection with India’s commitments. Status of completion: The published materials indicate the 18% reciprocal tariff is the intended level under the Interim Framework, with further steps toward tariff removals tied to the progressing BTA and the Interim Agreement’s implementation. The documents do not report a complete, final tariff elimination for all categories, but they do establish the 18% rate as in effect for originating Indian goods under the interim terms. Completion of the broader agreement remains contingent on ongoing negotiations and subsequent regulatory actions. Dates and milestones: February 2–6, 2026 mark the announcement of the Interim Framework and the 18% reciprocal tariff, with White House fact sheet published February 9, 2026 and joint statement dated February 6, 2026. The framework contemplates further steps toward a final BTA, plus potential removal of additional duties as negotiations advance. The articles thus reflect a beginning of tariff alignment rather than a single, closed-ended deadline. Source reliability: The core claims derive from primary U.S. government sources (White House fact sheet and joint statement), which are the most authoritative records of the policy. Reuters provides corroboration from an independent, reputable news outlet. While some secondary outlets offer interpretation, the official White House materials underpin the stated 18% reciprocal tariff and interim framework clarity. Follow-up note: Monitor the White House and U.S. trade agencies for updates on the Interim Agreement’s entry into force, any amendments to the 18% rate, and the timelines for progressing toward the final Bilateral Trade Agreement.
  17. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 03:18 AMin_progress
    The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Public U.S. government statements describe an 18% reciprocal tariff rate as part of an Interim Agreement framework with India, tied to the broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) negotiations. This indicates progress toward the stated target but not a final, unconditional reduction across all trade goods yet.
  18. Update · Feb 13, 2026, 12:43 AMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The article claimed that the United States would lower its reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet explicitly states this reduction as part of the historic trade deal framework and implementation details. Progress evidence: A joint U.S.–India framework announced in early February 2026 set the stage for reciprocal tariff reductions, with the White House outlining the path toward implementing an Interim Agreement and negotiating a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA). Progress evidence (event dates): Reuters coverage on February 2–3, 2026 reported that President Trump announced the 18% rate in exchange for India ending Russian oil purchases, and noted that a presidential proclamation and formal Federal Register action would be necessary to finalize the change. The White House followed with a formal fact sheet on February 9, 2026 confirming the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction. (Reuters; White House) Status assessment: The available high-quality sources indicate the reciprocal tariff was reduced to 18% as part of the framework and announcements in early February 2026, with subsequent formal steps being pursued to implement and lock in the arrangement through official actions and a broader BTA process. Source reliability note: Reporting from Reuters and the White House provides contemporaneous coverage and official documentation of the policy change, enhancing credibility relative to other outlets. No credible evidence contradicts the claim in reputable outlets.
  19. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 09:04 PMin_progress
    Restatement of the claim: The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet published February 9, 2026, explicitly asserts this reduction as part of the announced trade framework. Reuters coverage around February 2–3, 2026, noted that the reduction to 18% would be implemented in exchange for India's actions on Russian oil and other barriers, but also highlighted that a presidential proclamation had not yet been issued at that time. Evidence of progress: The White House document outlines the agreement framework and the targeted tariff reduction, indicating policy steps toward lowering the reciprocal tariff. News reporting confirms that senior U.S. officials communicated an 18% rate as part of the deal, and that India agreed to certain concessions. The public materials describe subsequent steps (proclamations and administrative actions) required to finalize the changes. Status of completion: As of February 12, 2026, there was no definitive presidential proclamation or Federal Register notice publicly issued to make the tariff change official in law, per Reuters reporting. The White House description treats the 18% reduction as an agreed element of the framework, but its formal completion requires implementing actions beyond a public statement. Dates and milestones: Key milestone cited is the February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet announcing the 25% to 18% reduction as part of the framework. A related news cycle in early February noted that formal formalization (proclamation) had not yet occurred, leaving the change in a transitional status. Reliability of sources: The White House fact sheet is an official source detailing the administration’s position and intended steps. Reuters is a reputable, independent outlet providing corroborating reporting on the status of formal implementation. Cross-border reporting from other major outlets echoed the same interpretive frame but highlighted the absence of a formal proclamation at that time. Overall, sources align on the intended rate but concur that formal completion hinged on official implementing actions. Note on incentives: The deal aligns U.S. and Indian trade objectives by addressing reciprocal access and non-tariff barriers, with political incentives for both sides to frame the arrangement as advancing market access and economic security goals. The completion of the tariff change depends on procedural steps by the U.S. administration and corresponding actions by India.
  20. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 05:35 PMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States would lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House’s February 6, 2026 joint statement confirms a framework for an Interim Agreement that includes a reciprocal tariff rate of 18% on originating Indian goods, as part of broader efforts to deepen U.S.–India trade ties. This marks progress toward the tariff reduction promised in the February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet. Evidence of progress: The joint statement explicitly states that the United States will apply an 18% reciprocal tariff under Executive Order 14257 on originating goods from India, with further potential reductions or removals contingent on the Interim Agreement’s implementation. The White House fact sheet accompanying the announcement reiterates the tariff reduction from 25% to 18% as a key term of the Interim Agreement. The documents together establish a concrete policy path and a timeline for implementation. Current status and completion: The framework describes an interim step rather than a finalized bilateral trade agreement (BTA). While the 18% reciprocal tariff is described as an active measure under the Interim Agreement, the broader goal of a full, long-term BTA remains to be completed. The interim pathway is in progress, with ongoing negotiations and potential further tariff adjustments tied to the agreement’s terms. Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the February 6, 2026 joint statement announcing the Interim Agreement framework and the February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet detailing the tariff terms and broader concessions. The interim framework envision implementation of the 18% rate on eligible Indian-originating goods and ongoing negotiations toward a broader BTA. Reliability and caveats: Sources are official White House documents, which provide primary confirmation of the interim framework and tariff terms. As the arrangement is described as interim and contingent on continued negotiations, it should be treated as progress toward a longer-term agreement rather than a conclusive, final settlement. Independent corroboration from major reputable outlets has depicted similar terms, but the central, definitive commitments come from the White House.
  21. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 03:49 PMcomplete
    The claim is that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House fact sheet (February 9, 2026) states that after removing the additional 25% tariff on imports from India, the United States will lower the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18%. This is tied to the framework for an Interim Agreement and broader negotiations toward a Bipartisan Trade Agreement (BTA) with India. Evidence of progress includes the framing of an Interim Agreement and the concrete policy step of applying an 18% reciprocal tariff as part of the announced deal, with accompanying steps to address non-tariff barriers and expand bilateral trade opportunities (White House fact sheet). Regarding completion status, the completion condition—reducing the reciprocal tariff from 25% to 18%—has been addressed in the February 2026 announcements and related executive actions (including removal of the extra 25% tariff on Russian oil purchases). Source reliability is high given the primary source is official White House communication, with subsequent reporting corroborating the 18% reciprocal tariff as part of the deal’s terms. Some revisions to the initial fact sheet occurred, but the core tariff concession remains reflected in official disclosures (White House fact sheet, Feb 2026). In summary, the core promise—lowering the reciprocal tariff to 18%—has been implemented in the official communications accompanying the trade framework with India.
  22. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 02:21 PMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a historic trade deal, with the White House noting that the reciprocal tariff was reduced to 18%. Evidence of progress: The White House fact sheet published February 9, 2026, explicitly states the 18% reciprocal tariff change and related measures (executive order removing the additional 25% tariff tied to Russian oil purchases). Reuters reported contemporaneous confirmation of the tariff reduction as part of the announced framework (February 2–3, 2026). Status of completion: The administration framed the tariff reduction and associated terms as implemented actions within the announced framework, with formal steps indicated (executive order) and ongoing negotiations on broader issues. Milestones and reliability: The February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet and Reuters coverage provide high-quality, corroborating sources for the core tariff change and accompanying commitments. These sources collectively establish that the stated completion condition—reducing the reciprocal tariff to 18%—has been enacted within the described policy framework.
  23. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 12:20 PMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Evidence from the White House indicates this reduction was enacted as part of the broader trade framework announced in early February 2026. The February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet explicitly states that the reciprocal tariff on India will be lowered from 25% to 18% and outlines accompanying terms of the interim framework and broader negotiations. Overall, official documentation supports that the tariff reduction to 18% has been implemented as of mid-February 2026. Progress evidence: The White House fact sheet (Feb. 9, 2026) describes the framework for an interim trade agreement with India and specifies the tariff cut to 18%. Media coverage and trade-law analyses subsequently reported that the 25% tariff reduction was enacted via executive action as part of the framework, with India agreeing to tariff removals on U.S. industrial and agricultural products. Multiple outlets cited the administration’s executive move removing the 25% levy and implementing the 18% reciprocal rate. Current status vs. promise: The completion condition—reducing the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%—is described as completed in official materials and corroborated by subsequent reporting. Remaining elements of the broader bilateral trade agreement (services, investment, non-tariff barriers, rules of origin, etc.) are acknowledged as ongoing negotiations within the interim framework. There is no credible reporting indicating a reversal of the tariff cut or a delay beyond the announced action. Dates and milestones: February 6–9, 2026 – framework for Interim Agreement announced and tariff reduction decision communicated; February 9, 2026 – White House fact sheet confirms 25% to 18% reciprocal tariff reduction and outlines next steps. The concrete milestone of tariff reduction is tied to the executive action described in the White House materials and reinforced by subsequent summaries from trade coverage. Reliability note: The primary source is an official White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026, which is the authoritative record of the action. Independent trade reporting (e.g., financial/news outlets) aligns with the described action, though care should be taken to distinguish interim framework provisions from final BTA negotiations. Overall, sources converge on a completed tariff reduction with ongoing negotiations on broader terms.
  24. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 10:17 AMcomplete
    The claim asserts that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. This reduction is presented as part of a bilateral trade framework and was publicly referenced by U.S. officials and leadership in early February 2026. The target change is described as a reciprocal tariff adjustment tied to broader U.S.–India trade negotiations (BTA). Progress toward the claim rests on a series of official disclosures in early February 2026. A White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026 states that the United States and India will continue negotiations under the bilateral trade framework and notes tariff reductions among other steps. Reuters coverage of U.S. President Trump’s statements on February 2, 2026 similarly references a move to lower the reciprocal tariff to 18%. These sources frame the tariff change as part of an interim framework rather than a fully final agreement. Evidence of momentum includes the February 6, 2026 joint statements and statements from major outlets describing an interim agreement framework. KPMG’s analysis and other policy roundups summarize that India would eliminate or reduce tariffs on U.S. industrial goods and that the U.S. reciprocal tariff would be reduced to 18% on select Indian goods. This indicates a concrete direction toward the claimed 18% level, albeit within a staged interim framework. Regarding completion, the White House document explicitly notes ongoing negotiations to address remaining tariff barriers, implying the reduction to 18% may be realized as part of an interim agreement and future milestones. Reuters and Politico cite presidential statements announcing the 18% figure, but emphasize that broader tariff barriers and non-tariff measures remain under negotiation. Therefore, the reduction is reported as a defined target, with the completion dependent on subsequent finalized terms. Reliability notes: the claim relies on official White House communications and major independent outlets (Reuters, Politico) reporting the same 18% figure as part of an interim framework. Given the incentives in a high-stakes trade negotiation, cross-checking with official joint statements reinforces accuracy. The reporting consistently describes the 18% target within an ongoing negotiation process rather than a fully sealed, final treaty.
  25. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 05:34 AMcomplete
    Claim restated: The United States would lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a framework for an interim trade agreement (White House fact sheet, 2026-02-09). Evidence of progress: The White House document confirms the tariff reduction and outlines accompanying trade framework terms; subsequent coverage summarizes the removal of the additional 25% tariff and the interim agreement framework (KPMG TaxNewsFlash, Feb 2026). Completion status: The claim aligns with official communications indicating a tariff reduction to 18%, with ongoing negotiations for a broader bilateral trade agreement. Details about the exact effective date and full implementation continue to be clarified as the interim arrangement advances.
  26. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 04:09 AMin_progress
    Claim restatement: The White House said the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. This target is referenced in a February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet accompanying a bilateral framework. Progress and evidence: Public statements indicate a negotiated framework and tariff terms, with President Trump announcing an 18% reciprocal rate and India signaling willingness to proceed. As of early February 2026, there was no official proclamation or Federal Register action implementing the tariff change. Completion status and timelines: The completion condition—an official reduction from 25% to 18%—has not yet been fulfilled in a binding implementing action. Reuters coverage noted the absence of a formal proclamation and described the event as a framework rather than a final, enacted tariff change. A follow-up check is warranted after an implementing proclamation is published.
  27. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 02:28 AMcomplete
    Restating the claim, the United States will lower its reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a broader trade framework. The evidence shows progress through official channels: a White House fact sheet published February 9, 2026 directly states the tariff reduction from 25% to 18% and describes the terms of the interim framework with India. The administration also notes an executive action removing the 25% offset tariff last Friday, linked to India’s commitment to stop purchasing Russian oil, and signals the path toward a broader bilateral trade agreement. Progress toward completion is explicitly acknowledged by the White House in its fact sheet, which frames the tariff reduction as part of the agreed interim framework and outlines additional terms of the deal. Independent reporting from credible outlets in India and business press around the same period echoed the tariff change and the broader framework, lending corroboration to the administration’s claim. The stated completion condition—reducing the reciprocal tariff to 18%—is presented as accomplished in the White House document. As for milestones and timing, the key formal documents were released in early February 2026, with the White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026. The fact sheet references a joint statement the prior Friday and an executive order issued to remove the 25% tariff, followed by the announced tariff rate of 18%. While broader implementation of the full Interim Agreement and the eventual Bilateral Trade Agreement remains in progress, the specific tariff reduction milestone appears completed per the administration’s materials. Reliability of sources is high for the central claim, given the White House is the official issuer of the policy change and the primary reference for the interim framework. Secondary reporting from established business and international news outlets in both the U.S. and India provides additional confirmation of the tariff change and the broader trade framework, with consistent emphasis on the interim nature of the arrangement and ongoing negotiations for a more comprehensive agreement. In summary, the claim that the United States lowered the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% is supported by the White House fact sheet and corroborated by reputable outlets. The action is presented as completed for the tariff rate, while the larger, longer-term bilateral trade negotiations continue. The reliability and official nature of the primary source support a confident conclusion of completion for this specific milestone.
  28. Update · Feb 12, 2026, 12:20 AMin_progress
    The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. A White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026 asserts that the United States will reduce the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a newly announced framework for a bilateral trade deal and interim agreement. The fact sheet describes additional elements of the framework, including India eliminating or reducing tariffs on U.S. industrial and agricultural goods, and outlines negotiating priorities such as rules of origin, non-tariff barriers, and digital trade. It presents a road map toward implementing an Interim Agreement and negotiating a broader bilateral trade agreement. There is no independent confirmation of immediate, automatic tariff reduction on a specific date; instead, the document frames the tariff cut as part of forthcoming framework implementation. Verification will depend on subsequent official actions and enforcement steps. Given the stated completion condition (tariff reduced from 25% to 18%) and the stated timeline as “in coming weeks,” the status should be read as in_progress rather than complete. The claim remains contingent on formal adoption, publication of implementing measures, and practical effect on trade. Reliability-wise, the White House fact sheet is a primary source for the announced policy; summaries from professional services firms corroborate the framework. Ongoing monitoring of official notices will be needed to confirm actual tariff changes and dates of effect.
  29. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 09:38 PMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States will lower its reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. Progress evidence: White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) states that last Friday an Executive Order removed the additional 25% tariff and that the reciprocal tariff on India will be lowered from 25% to 18%. Reuters coverage corroborates that Trump announced a deal reducing U.S. tariffs on Indian goods to 18%. Multiple outlets attributed the move to a formal framework and an immediate tariff adjustment tied to the interim agreement framework. Completion status: The policy change appears implemented, with the White House noting the 18% reciprocal tariff and an Executive Order removing the 25% tariff, and major outlets reporting the tariff cut as part of the deal. The public record thus indicates completion of the stated completion condition. Dates and milestones: The key dates include the White House fact sheet release on Feb 9, 2026, the president’s post announcing the 18% rate, and Reuters reporting on the Feb 2, 2026 announcement. The framework for an interim agreement and the broader bilateral trade negotiations were also referenced in the same reporting. Source reliability and neutrality: The core claim is supported by the White House fact sheet and corroborating Reuters reporting; additional coverage comes from CNBC and Politico summaries, all aligning on the tariff reduction. The materials originate from official U.S. government communication and reputable mainstream outlets, enhancing reliability and reducing the likelihood of mischaracterization. Note on incentives and context: The move aligns with a broader U.S. objective of reciprocal trade and countering non-market barriers, with incentives tied to energy and technology trade, supply-chain resilience, and strategic alignment with India. Some coverage notes emphasize the formal interim framework and ongoing negotiations beyond the tariff cut.
  30. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 08:29 PMin_progress
    What the claim states: The White House fact sheet asserts that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a historic trade deal and framework for broader agreements. It frames this as a concrete tariff reduction tied to India’s commitments to reduce non-tariff barriers and increase bilateral trade. In context, the claim is that the 25% reciprocal tariff will be cut to 18% once the framework is implemented. What evidence exists that progress has been made: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) explicitly states the 25% reciprocal tariff will be lowered to 18% and outlines the key terms of the interim framework, including India eliminating or reducing tariffs on U.S. industrial goods and various agricultural products. Independent reporting from Reuters confirms the administration announced an 18% tariff rate in connection with India agreeing to end purchases of Russian oil and to advance the framework. Politico also covered the announcement of the 18% rate as part of the trade deal framework. Evidence of completion, progress, or failure: As of the current date, there is no presidential proclamation or formal regulatory action published to implement the tariff change. Reuters notes that while Trump announced the deal and a White House official indicated the 25% punitive tariff tied to Russian oil purchases would be rescinded, formal implementing steps (proclamation, Federal Register) had not yet been issued at that time. Therefore, the claim shows progress but has not been formally completed in terms of official enactment. Dates and milestones observed: February 2–3, 2026 saw public announcements of the framework and the 18% rate; February 9, 2026 published the White House fact sheet detailing the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction. The anticipated pathway includes implementing the framework, finalizing an Interim Agreement, and negotiating a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement, with further tariff and non-tariff barrier reductions. Reliability and context of sources: The White House fact sheet provides the primary, official articulation of the deal terms and the 18% rate. Reuters offers corroborating reporting with contemporaneous details about the announced changes and the absence of an immediate presidential proclamation at that moment. Legitimacy is strengthened by Reuters’ direct reporting and the White House publishing the source document; coverage from Politico and other outlets further corroborates the framework and milestones. Overall, sources present a coherent progress narrative, though formal implementation steps remain pending.
  31. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 05:50 PMcomplete
    The claim that the United States would lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% is supported by public reporting and official documents. Reuters reported on February 2, 2026, that the U.S. would cut tariffs on Indian goods to 18% and that India would halt Russian oil purchases, with a White House official confirming the change. A White House fact sheet also outlines the framework and terms of the interim trade arrangement.
  32. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 03:45 PMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The United States will lower its reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a trade deal. Evidence of progress: The White House fact sheet (February 9, 2026) states that the reciprocal tariff will be reduced from 25% to 18% following an interim framework and an executive order. Reuters reporting (February 2–3, 2026) corroborates the announced reduction to 18% in exchange for India halting purchases of Russian oil and addressing trade barriers. The White House document also outlines additional terms of the agreement, including broader market access and non-tariff barrier discussions.
  33. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 02:14 PMin_progress
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a historic trade deal. The White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026, explicitly states that the reciprocal tariff will be reduced from 25% to 18%, signaling an intended policy change. However, formal implementation requires additional steps beyond the document.
  34. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 12:15 PMin_progress
    The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. The White House explicitly announces this reduction as part of a framework for an Interim Agreement with India, indicating an 18% reciprocal tariff rate will apply to certain originating goods under the framework, with broader tariff reductions to be implemented as negotiations proceed (White House fact sheet, February 9, 2026; White House joint statement, February 6, 2026). Progress evidence: the White House published a fact sheet detailing the framework and the 18% rate, and a joint statement formalizing the Interim Agreement framework and the intended tariff reduction. These documents set the policy direction and the mechanism (Executive Order 14257) through which the 18% rate would be applied, contingent on the Interim Agreement’s terms and negotiations (White House fact sheet; Joint Statement). Evidence of completion vs continuation: as of February 11, 2026, the policy is described as in force in terms of announced framework and mechanisms, but the full Interim Agreement and expanded BTA negotiations remain ongoing. The White House language points to implementing the 18% reciprocal tariff as part of the Interim Agreement, not necessarily a complete, final, bilateral treaty yet completed. Therefore, the status is best characterized as in_progress rather than completed. Dates and milestones: the key dates are February 2–6, 2026 (announcement of the Interim Agreement framework and 18% reciprocal tariff), and February 9–11, 2026 (White House fact sheet and subsequent statements detailing terms and next steps). Milestones include applying the 18% rate to originating Indian goods and advancing negotiations toward a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA). Source reliability note: the principal sources are official White House materials (fact sheet and joint statement), which are primary documents for the claim and provide explicit language on the 18% reciprocal tariff and framework. Additional media coverage from other outlets should be weighed against these primary documents for details on scope and implementation timelines.
  35. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 10:05 AMcomplete
    Restated claim: The White House said the United States would lower its reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of an interim trade framework. This change is presented alongside broader negotiations for a final Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA) and other tariff/non-tariff commitments. Progress evidence: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) explicitly states the 18% rate and outlines the interim framework, while Reuters coverage (Feb 2–3, 2026) reported the 18% reduction in exchange for India ending Russian oil purchases and advancing trade talks. These sources together indicate an official move toward the 18% rate and ongoing implementation steps. Status assessment: The claim appears to be in effect or imminently effective, with formal proclamation to finalize changes pending in the early reporting. The core tariff reduction is framed as current policy within the interim framework and is supported by official documentation and corroborating reporting. Milestones and dates: The February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet is the primary milestone confirming the 18% rate. Reuters coverage around February 2–3, 2026 provides contemporaneous context and notes the administrative steps required to complete the change. Reliability note: The White House fact sheet is an official source; Reuters provides independent corroboration from a respected outlet. Some localization in media framing exists, but the central policy change is supported by primary documentation and reputable reporting.
  36. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 05:57 AMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a bilateral trade framework. Progress evidence: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) states that the reciprocal tariff will be lowered from 25% to 18% following India’s commitments under an interim trade framework. Reporting from Reuters and Politico contemporaneously noted the tariff adjustment as part of the broader deal and communications between leaders. Completion status: The claim is presented as completed in official documentation, with the tariff change enacted or committed to and publicized in the February 2026 announcements; coverage also emphasized accompanying non-tariff measures and ongoing negotiations. Dates and milestones: February 2–3, 2026: leaders discuss a framework for an Interim Agreement and tariff adjustments; February 9, 2026: White House fact sheet formalizes the 18% rate and outlines next steps. Subsequent coverage highlighted related terms and implementation steps rather than a standalone vote or statute. Source reliability and balance: The primary source is an official White House fact sheet, which provides authoritative language for the tariff change. Reputable outlets (Reuters, Politico) corroborate the development and place it within the broader negotiation context. This supports a balanced assessment of the claim and its implications.
  37. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 03:38 AMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. Evidence of progress: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) confirms the 25% tariff was removed and the reciprocal tariff lowered to 18%, supported by corresponding executive actions and framing in a joint statement. Additional reporting from Politico and CNBC‑TV18 corroborates an interim framework and immediate tariff adjustment announced in early February 2026. Completion milestone: The policy change is described as implemented, with subsequent coverage noting the 18% rate as the operative reciprocal tariff.
  38. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 02:56 AMcomplete
    What the claim states: The White House fact sheet asserts that the United States will lower the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a newly announced trade framework. The claim is that this reduction is part of a reciprocal, mutually beneficial framework and is tied to India’s commitments on tariff reductions and non-tariff barriers. The stated completion condition is that the reciprocal tariff is reduced to 18% and implemented accordingly. Progress evidence: The White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026 explicitly describes the tariff reduction from 25% to 18% as part of the framework. Reuters reporting around February 2, 2026 referenced a White House statement about removing the additional 25% duty tied to Russia oil purchases and indicated discussions proceeding toward the 18% reciprocal rate. Multiple outlets corroborate that the policy change was intended to take effect as part of a broader interim agreement and ongoing BTA negotiations. Current status: Based on the official White House document and contemporaneous reporting, the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction appears to be in effect or intended to take effect imminently as part of the announced interim framework. The proposal’s completion condition—an 18% rate on imports from India—has been stated as fulfilled in official materials and covered by reputable outlets. Dates and milestones: Key documents show the interim framework announced in early February 2026, with the White House fact sheet published February 9, 2026 signaling the 18% rate. Media coverage in early February 2026 framed the step as a concrete tariff reduction linked to India’s commitments and to stop Russian oil purchases. The timeline suggests immediate implementation rather than a long lead time. Source reliability note: The primary source is an official White House fact sheet, a high-reliability document for policy actions. Reuters provided corroborating contemporaneous reporting from a reputable news agency. While other outlets covered the development, the White House document is the definitive statement of policy changes; cross-checks with additional outlets support the overall narrative without contradicting the core claim.
  39. Update · Feb 11, 2026, 12:31 AMin_progress
    Restatement of the claim: The White House fact sheet asserts that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a bilateral trade deal. Evidence of progress: Public reporting indicates the two sides announced a framework for a trade agreement and a targeted tariff reduction to 18% on Indian goods, contingent on India’s commitments (including halting Russian oil purchases). Reuters notes the reduction structure and that details and timing depend on an official proclamation. The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) reiterates the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction as part of the announced package. Status of completion: As of Feb 10, 2026, there is no published presidential proclamation or federal register notice implementing the tariff change, and officials indicate the framework and interim steps are being built toward a final Bipartisan Trade Agreement. Independent reporting describes a negotiated framework but not a fully enacted tariff schedule yet. Therefore, the completion condition—tariffs reduced to 18% in law—has not yet been officially completed. Dates and milestones: Announcement and joint statements occurred in late January–early February 2026 (Trump–Modi call; Reuters report on Feb 2, 2026; White House fact sheet dated Feb 9, 2026). The interim framework aims to reduce tariffs and advance broader negotiations, with ongoing steps to finalize an Interim Agreement and a broader BTA. Milestones remain contingent on formal implementing actions by the U.S. and Indian authorities. Source reliability note: The primary source is the White House fact sheet, which directly states the 18% reduction. Reuters provides contemporaneous independent verification of the policy action and sequence of events, though it notes the absence of an official proclamation at that moment. Together, they offer a consistent view of an announced tariff reduction that had not yet been formally enacted at the time of reporting.
  40. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 10:30 PMin_progress
    Restating the claim: The White House announced that the United States would lower its reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a bilateral trade framework. This was presented as a concrete tariff cut tied to India’s commitments in a broader interim agreement and bilateral terms (WH fact sheet, 2026-02-09). The claim also appears in Reuters reporting that framed the move as a reduction to 18% in exchange for India’s actions on Russian oil purchases and other trade barriers (Reuters, 2026-02-02 to 2026-02-03). Progress evidence: The White House released a formal fact sheet detailing the terms of the trade deal and explicitly stating the 25% reciprocal tariff would be lowered to 18% (WH fact sheet, 2026-02-09). U.S. and Indian leaders publicly described the framework for a broader bilateral trade agreement and steps toward implementing the interim terms (White House statement; Reuters coverage). Current status versus completion: While the public framing and the stated tariff cut are documented, officials indicated that the administrative steps to implement changes—such as presidential proclamations or Federal Register notices—had not been completed as of mid-February 2026 (Reuters report notes absence of a formal proclamation at that time). This suggests the change is announced and agreed in principle, but not yet fully in force in law. Dates and milestones: Announcement and framework discussions occurred in early February 2026, with the White House fact sheet published on February 9, 2026, clarifying the 18% reciprocal tariff target and associated terms. The gap between announcement and formal proclamation remains the primary milestone to complete the policy change. Source reliability and context: The key sources are the White House fact sheet (official government document) and Reuters reporting (established, reputable news service with direct sourcing from government officials). Additional corroboration from other major outlets aligns on the core tariff figure, though the precise sequencing of tariff layers in public discourse varies across outlets. The coverage is consistent with standard incentives-driven framing, noting that press materials emphasize reciprocal trade benefits and national security considerations.
  41. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 08:52 PMin_progress
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a bilateral trade deal. A White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) states that the United States will lower the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18% and describes the framework for further negotiations, indicating this is a planned action rather than a completed measure as of that date. Progress evidence: The administration announced a framework for an Interim Agreement on reciprocal trade with India in early February 2026, and the White House document explicitly cites the 18% target as part of the announced terms. Coverage from contemporaneous outlets also references the tariff reduction as part of the announced framework, though not as a final enacted tariff change. Completion status: The completion condition—“the U.S. reciprocal tariff on imports from India is reduced from 25% to 18%”—had not been independently confirmed as enacted by February 10, 2026. The materials describe the change as part of a negotiated framework to be implemented through interim and final agreements, with ongoing negotiations on services, investment, and non-tariff barriers. Dates and reliability: Key dates include February 2–6, 2026 (announcement of a framework), February 9, 2026 (White House fact sheet with the 18% figure), and ongoing negotiations toward a broader Bilateral Trade Agreement. Sources include the White House fact sheet and reporting from Politico, which corroborate the announced framework but note that final enactment had not yet occurred.
  42. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 05:45 PMcomplete
    Restated claim: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a bilateral trade framework. The White House fact sheet explicitly states that, following a framework for interim trade, the United States will reduce the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Progress and evidence: The White House issued a formal fact sheet on February 9, 2026 confirming the tariff reduction as part of the announced interim framework with India (White House, 2026-02-09). Independent outlets referencing the framework corroborate that a reduction to 18% was part of the agreed terms (Politico, 2026-02-02). Current status: The completion condition—reducing the reciprocal tariff from 25% to 18%—is reported as enacted in the White House document and reflected in subsequent coverage, indicating the tariff change has moved toward implementation (White House, 2026-02-09; Politico, 2026-02-02). Reliability note: The primary source is an official White House fact sheet, which provides the official pledge and terms. Additional coverage from Politico supports the same tariff change and framing of the interim agreement, reinforcing the reported milestone date.
  43. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 03:42 PMcomplete
    Restated claim: The White House stated that the United States would lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18% as part of a historic trade deal, citing India’s alignment on bilateral trade imbalances and national security concerns (White House fact sheet, February 9, 2026). Progress evidence: The White House fact sheet explicitly outlines the tariff reduction from 25% to 18% as part of the interim framework and broader trade agreement negotiations with India. It also describes the accompanying terms, including tariff eliminations or reductions on U.S. industrial goods and various agricultural products, plus commitments on non-tariff barriers and digital trade rules. Completion status: According to the same White House document, the tariff reduction is presented as a completed action tied to the executive order removing the additional 25% tariff, with subsequent implementation steps toward a broader bilateral trade agreement. The completion condition stated in the prompt—tariff reduced to 18%—is described as achieved in the fact sheet. Milestones and dates: The key milestone is the executive order issued in conjunction with the February 9, 2026 announcement, which removed the 25% reciprocal tariff and set the target of 18% as the new level. The document also outlines ongoing negotiations on origin rules, digital trade, and other trade-policy areas moving forward, indicating broader implementation beyond the tariff change. No separate independent milestones beyond the White House statement are presented in the available sources. Source reliability note: The principal source is an official White House fact sheet dated February 9, 2026, which directly states the tariff reduction and frames it within the broader agreement. While government briefings can reflect policy aims and completed actions, cross-verification with India's external affairs ministry or USTR could strengthen confirming documentation. The current account relies on the primary executive communications from the White House, which are appropriate for tracking this claim’s stated completion.
  44. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 02:00 PMcomplete
    Summary of the claim and current status: The claim states that the United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Public records indicate this was formalized as part of a bilateral framework announced in early February 2026 and was reflected in U.S. actions taken in the following days. Progress and evidence: The White House released a fact sheet on February 9, 2026, stating that, given India’s alignment with U.S. trade goals, the United States will lower the Reciprocal Tariff on India from 25% to 18% and that the 25% punitive tariff tied to Russian oil purchases would be removed. Reuters corroborated the rapid sequence, noting the administration announced an 18% reciprocal tariff in connection with facilitating India’s reduced Russian oil purchases on February 2–3, 2026, and that an executive order removing the 25% tariff was issued in that period. Progress against completion: The White House document and contemporaneous reporting indicate a concrete policy step: the reciprocal tariff reduction to 18% and the removal of the additional 25% tariff. This represents a completed element of the pledge, with the policy shift reported as in force and publicly announced by both governments. Reliability and context: The primary sources are the White House fact sheet and Reuters reporting, both of which are established, high-reliability outlets for U.S.-India trade policy moves. The coverage focuses on official actions (executive order) and the stated terms of the framework, aligning with standard verification practices for policy announcements.
  45. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 12:34 PMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The United States would lower the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Progress evidence: A February 9, 2026 White House fact sheet confirms the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction as part of a broader interim trade framework, following a leaders’ call and a joint statement. Reuters coverage from February 2–3, 2026 also reported that the U.S. planned to cut the tariff to 18% after India agreed to halt Russian oil purchases. The fact sheet outlines additional terms, including reductions/elimination of tariffs on U.S. industrial goods and various agricultural products, and steps on non-tariff barriers and digital trade rules. Current status and completion: The policy change has been enacted in practice via executive action and public communications, with the White House explicitly naming the 18% rate. Independent reporting corroborates the outcome and frames it within a broader bilateral framework and energy-purchase commitments. Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the February 2, 2026 Modi–Trump call, the executive action to remove the 25% tariff, and the February 9–10, 2026 fact sheet detailing the 18% rate and other terms, corroborated by Reuters reporting. Notes on reliability and incentives: The primary sources are the White House fact sheet and Reuters, both reputable and timely for official policy changes. Coverage from other outlets confirms the trajectory and frames it in the broader goals of reciprocal trade and energy cooperation, with standard caveats about partial details. The announced framework also signals a shift in incentives, expanding U.S. market access while pressing India on non-tariff barriers and digital trade rules.
  46. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 10:00 AMcomplete
    Claim restatement: The United States will lower the reciprocal tariff on imports from India from 25% to 18%. Evidence of progress: The White House published a fact sheet on February 9, 2026, stating that the United States would reduce the reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18% as part of a broader interim trade framework with India. Reuters reporting around the same period also described the administration as moving to cut the tariff to 18% in exchange for India halting Russian oil purchases and advancing other trade concessions. These sources indicate an official shift in the tariff rate authorized or implemented through executive action tied to the broader deal framework. Current status and milestones: The White House fact sheet frames the tariff reduction as part of an interim agreement and broader negotiations toward a full bilateral trade agreement. Reuters noted the absence of some procedural details at the time (such as a presidential proclamation), but the claimed 18% rate is presented as the operative reciprocal tariff going forward. Taken together, the reporting confirms the promised change was announced and framed as implemented in policy terms, with ongoing negotiation elements for further trade barriers. Dates and reliability: Key dates include the White House fact sheet publication on February 9, 2026, and the surrounding February 2026 Reuters coverage. The White House page provides the governing claim and terms; Reuters offers independent corroboration of the policy change and its conditional context. Overall, these are high-quality, official or reputable reporting sources supporting the claim. Notes on reliability and incentives: The cited sources reflect official administration messaging and mainstream coverage, reducing the likelihood of misrepresentation. The stated incentive structure—aligning India’s tariffs with U.S. interests to address bilateral imbalances and strengthen security- and trade-related cooperation—helps explain the negotiated trade-offs and the tariff reduction. The claim appears consistent with stated policy objectives and public communications from February 2026.
  47. Update · Feb 10, 2026, 05:53 AMcomplete
    Claim restated: The article asserted that the United States would lower its reciprocal tariff on India from 25% to 18%. Evidence of progress: The White House fact sheet (Feb 9, 2026) confirms the 18% reciprocal tariff reduction following a joint statement and discussions between President Trump and Prime Minister Modi. It also notes that an Executive Order removed the additional 25% tariff and that negotiations toward a broader bilateral trade agreement will continue. Additional coverage from Reuters and Politico corroborates the tariff reduction to 18% as part of the interim framework and subsequent actions.
  48. Original article · Feb 09, 2026

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