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TARIFF REPERCUSSION. Customers and influencers try a new Korean
perfume during a workshop at Senti Senti in New York on July 25, 2025.
Asian skin care has been a booming global business for more than a
decade, with consumers in Europe, North and South America, and
increasingly the Middle East, snapping up creams, serums, and balms from
South Korea, Japan, and China. In the United States and elsewhere,
Korean cosmetics, or K-beauty for short, have dominated the trend. (AP
Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Customers check out Asian beauty products at Senti
Senti in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #8 (August 4, 2025), page 7.
Tariffs on South Korea’s products threaten the
"K-beauty" boom in the U.S.
By Mae Anderson
The Associated Press
NEW YORK — When Amrita Bhasin, 24, learned that products from South
Korea might be subject to a new tax when they entered the United States,
she decided to stock up on the sheet masks from Korean brands like
U-Need and MediHeal she uses a few times a week.
"I did a recent haul to stockpile," she said. "I bought 50 in bulk,
which should last me a few months."
Asian skin care has been a booming global business for more than a
decade, with consumers in Europe, North and South America, and
increasingly the Middle East, snapping up creams, serums, and balms from
South Korea, Japan, and China.
In the United States and elsewhere, Korean cosmetics, or K-beauty for
short, have dominated the trend. A craze for all-in-one "BB creams" — a
combination of moisturizer, foundation, and sunscreen — morphed into a
fascination with 10-step rituals and ingredients like snail mucin,
heartleaf, and rice water.
Vehicles and electronics may be South Korea’s top exports to the U.S.
by value, but the country shipped more skin care and cosmetics to the
U.S. than any other last year, according to data from market research
company Euromonitor. France, with storied beauty brands like L’Oreal and
Chanel, was second, Euromonitor said.
Statistics compiled by the U.S. International Trade Commission, an
independent federal agency, show the U.S. imported $1.7 billion worth of
South Korean cosmetics in 2024, a 54% increase from a year earlier.
"Korean beauty products not only add a lot of variety and choice for
Americans, they really embraced them because they were offering
something different for American consumers," Mary Lovely, a senior
fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said.
Along with media offerings such as Parasite and "Squid Games,"
and the popularity of K-pop bands like BTS, K-beauty has helped boost
South Korea’s profile globally, she said.
"It’s all part and parcel really of the same thing," Lovely said.
"And it can’t be completely stopped by a 25% tariff, but it’s hard to
see how it won’t influence how much is sold in the U.S. And I think what
we’re hearing from producers is that it also really decreases the number
of products they want to offer in this market."
Senti Senti, a retailer that sells international beauty products at
two New York boutiques and through an e-commerce site, saw a bit of
"panic buying" by customers when Trump first imposed punitive tariffs on
goods from specific countries, manager Winnie Zhong said.
The rush slowed down after the president paused the new duties for 90
days and hadn’t picked up again, Zhong said, even with Trump saying on
July 7 that a 25% tax on imports from Japan and South Korea would be
going into effect on August 1.
Japan, the Philippines, and Indonesia subsequently reached agreements
with the Trump administration that lowered the tariff rates their
exported goods faced — in Japan’s case, from 25% to 15% — still higher
than the current baseline of 10% tariff.
Days before the deadline, South Korea reportedly reached an agreement
for a 15% import tax, despite having a free trade agreement since 2012
that allowed cosmetics and most other consumer goods to enter the U.S.
tax-free.
Since the first store owned by Senti Senti opened 16 years ago,
beauty products from Japan and South Korea became more of a focus and
now account for 90% of the stock. The business hadn’t had to pass on any
tariff-related costs to customers yet, but that wouldn’t be possible if
the products were to become subject to a 25% import tax, Zhong said.
"I’m not really sure where the direction of K-beauty will go to with
the tariffs in place, because one of the things with K-beauty or Asian
beauty is that it’s supposed to be accessible pricing," she said.
Devoted fans of Asian cosmetics will often buy direct from Asia and
wait weeks for their packages to arrive because the products typically
cost less than they do in American stores. Rather than stocking up on
their favorite sunscreens, lip tints, and toners, some shoppers took a
pause due to the tariff uncertainty.
Los Angeles resident Jen Chae, a content creator with over 1.2
million YouTube subscribers, has explored Korean and Japanese beauty
products and became personally intrigued by Chinese beauty brands over
the last year.
When the tariffs were first announced, Chae temporarily paused
ordering from sites such as YesStyle.com, a shopping platform owned by
an e-commerce company based in Hong Kong. She did not know if she would
have to pay customs duties on the products she bought or the ones brands
sent to her as a creator.
"I wasn’t sure if those would automatically charge the entire package
with a blanket tariff cost, or if it was just on certain items," Chae
said. On its website, YesStyle says it will give customers store credit
to reimburse them for import charges.
At Ohlolly, an online store focused on Korean products, owners Sue
Greene and Herra Namhie are taking a similar pause.
They purchase direct from South Korea and from licensed wholesalers
in the U.S., and store their inventory in a warehouse in Ontario,
California. After years of no duties, a 25% import tax would create a
"huge increase in costs to us," Namhie said.
She and Greene made two recent orders to replenish their stock when
the tariffs were at 10%. But they have put further restocks on hold
"because I don’t think we can handle 25%," Namhie said. They’d have to
raise prices, and then shoppers might go elsewhere.
The business owners and sisters are holding out on hope the U.S. and
Korea settle on a lower tariff or carve out exceptions for smaller
ticket items like beauty products. But they only have two to four months
of inventory in their warehouse. They say that in a month they’ll have
to make a decision on what products to order, what to discontinue, and
what prices will have to increase.
Rachel Weingarten, a former makeup artist who writes a daily beauty
newsletter called "Hello Gorgeous!," said while she’s devoted to
K-beauty products like lip masks and toner pads, she doesn’t think
stockpiling is a sound practice.
"Maybe one or two products, but natural oils, vulnerable packaging,
and expiration dates mean that your products could go rancid before you
can get to them," she said.
Weingarten said she’ll still buy Korean products if prices go up, but
that the beauty world is bigger than one country. "I’d still indulge in
my favorites, but am always looking for great products in general," she
said.
Bhasin, in Menlo Park, California, plans to keep buying her face
masks too, even if the price goes up, because she likes the quality of
Korean masks.
"If prices will go up, I will not shift to U.S. products," she said.
"For face masks, I feel there are not a ton of solid and reliable
substitutes in the U.S."
AP audience engagement editor Karena Phan in Los Angeles contributed
to this report.
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