A Not-So-Fun New Way to Spend More on Groceries: Tariffs
As if eggs weren鈥檛 expensive enough.
Article published: January 05, 2026
Chances are, you鈥檝e gotten used to sticker shock at the grocery checkout. Maybe you鈥檝e even progressed through shock to anger and reached acceptance.
But lately, are you feeling that things are getting even more expensive again, even as inflation has supposedly come down? It鈥檚 not your imagination. Tariffs are likely adding on to existing inflation pressures on many goods, including some groceries.
Tariffs are basically taxes on imported goods. They鈥檙e meant to protect domestic industries, but they also make foreign products more expensive. So if you鈥檙e buying imported food, clothes or electronics, you鈥檙e likely paying more than you used to.
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HOW MUCH DO TARIFFS MATTER?
Tariffs are charged at the same rate for everyone. But they don鈥檛 affect everyone equally. In economic terms, they鈥檙e regressive.
First of all: If you鈥檙e Beyonc茅, a 10% price hike on eggs or coffee is annoying but manageable. If you鈥檙e not Beyonc茅, those same price hikes hit a lot harder.
But here鈥檚 the thing 鈥 on top of that, Beyonc茅 isn鈥檛 buying a whole lot of stuff that has tariffs applied to it (probably). Whereas lower-income houses spend the majority of their money on things that come with a tariff markup.
That鈥檚 because tariffs are applied to goods, not services. And the more money a household makes, the more of their income they鈥檙e likely to spend on services. Things like:
- Private school
- House cleaners and lawn care
- Insurance
- Salon visits
- Travel and entertainment
These things, of course, can鈥檛 be 鈥渋mported.鈥 The bottom line is that tariffs hit your grocery cart and back-to-school clothes shopping, not your Ticketmaster cart.
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Consumer Price Index Change (November 2022-November 2025)

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics as of Nov. 30, 2025
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WHAT鈥橲 AHEAD FOR TARIFFS AND INFLATION?
As we head into 2026, inflation is hovering around 3%. Not terrible, but uncomfortable.
Tariffs can push prices up, but whether this turns into a full-blown inflation wave depends not only on future trade policy but also on consumer psychology. If people start expecting prices to rise, they change their behavior 鈥 and that expectation alone can help sustain inflation.
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THE TAKEAWAY: KNOW YOUR BASKET
Everyone experiences inflation differently because everyone buys a different 鈥渂asket鈥 of goods. If your basket is full of imported items, you鈥檙e likely feeling the effects of tariffs more than someone whose basket is full of domestic services.
It鈥檚 impossible to know what鈥檚 ahead for tariffs or inflation, but prices are likely to stay elevated 鈥 deflation rarely happens 鈥 especially for some of us. As painful as they may be, we need to make sure we account for them in our budgets.
This material was prepared for educational purposes only. Although the information has been gathered from sources believed to be reliable, we do not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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