President Donald Trump signed off on a 25% tariff Wednesday targeting select high-end artificial intelligence chips from companies like Nvidia Corp (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD). The move follows a nine-month investigation and represents the latest salvo in the administration's push to reshape global semiconductor supply chains.
The National Security Argument
The White House invoked Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, the same authority used for steel and aluminum tariffs in Trump's first term. The investigation concluded that America's reliance on foreign chip manufacturing creates unacceptable economic and security vulnerabilities.
According to the presidential proclamation, the United States currently manufactures only about 10 percent of the chips it needs domestically. That heavy dependence on foreign supply chains, particularly in Taiwan, constitutes what the administration called "significant economic and national security risk."
The tariffs specifically target advanced processors like Nvidia's H200 AI chip and AMD's MI325X. The goal is straightforward: push chipmakers to expand domestic production and reduce reliance on manufacturing hubs overseas. Reports from November 2025 indicated the administration has been pressuring Taiwan to increase semiconductor investments in the U.S. and expand training programs for American chipmaking workers.
Exemptions Keep the AI Ecosystem Running
Despite the headline-grabbing tariff rate, the White House emphasized that these duties are narrowly targeted. A fact sheet stressed that the tariffs won't disrupt the broader U.S. artificial intelligence ecosystem.
The exemptions are substantial. Chips or devices imported for U.S. data centers get a pass. So do those used by startups, non-data-center consumer products, civil industrial applications, and public sector uses. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also has broad authority to grant additional exemptions, giving the administration considerable flexibility in implementation.
In other words, the tariffs are designed more as pressure on foreign manufacturing than as a barrier to American AI development.




