How much tariff revenue did U.S. Customs and Border Protection report for calendar-year 2025 in its final Treasury statements?

Checked on January 20, 2026
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Executive summary

The sources provided do not contain a single, unambiguous “final Treasury statement” line that reports U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s tariff receipts for the calendar year 2025; reporting and agency statements instead mix fiscal‑year totals, partial calendar‑year tallies, and agency press claims. The clearest official figure in the reporting tied to Treasury’s final Monthly Treasury Statement refers to customs duties for fiscal year 2025 — $195 billion — while CBP’s own media release and other analyses offer different, overlapping totals for portions of calendar 2025 and FY2025 [1] [2] [3].

1. What the Treasury’s “final” statement actually reports (and what it does not)

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget cites the Treasury Department’s final Monthly Treasury Statement for fiscal year 2025 and reports $195 billion in customs duties collected in FY2025, a figure presented as the final fiscal‑year receipt total in that statement [1]. That Treasury monthly/final reporting is framed around fiscal years (October–September), not the calendar year January–December, and the materials supplied do not include a single Treasury document in the packet that explicitly states a finalized calendar‑year 2025 customs total attributable to CBP deposits [4] [5].

2. How CBP and independent analysts present different calendar or partial‑year numbers

CBP’s own press release states that “between Jan. 20 and Dec. 15, 2025” it collected more than $200 billion in tariffs, a CBP‑issued tally that covers most but not all of calendar 2025 and is framed as a departmental claim rather than a consolidated Treasury final statement figure [2]. Independent trackers and think tanks cite other totals tied to fiscal windows or estimates: the American Action Forum notes a FY2025 customs take of $216.7 billion (which differs from the $195 billion fiscal figure reported by CRFB), and the Penn Wharton Budget Model estimates tariff changes raised about $124.5 billion from January through September 2025 — underscoring how methodology, timing, and which receipts (gross vs. net, rebates/refunds excluded) change reported totals [3] [6].

3. Why numbers diverge: timing, gross vs. net, and agency framing

Analysts and reporters repeatedly flag timing lags and accounting differences: Treasury’s receipts can lag tariff implementation, importers can delay payments through CBP programs, and Treasury monthly statements may include “Customs and Certain Excise Taxes” deposits that require adjustments to produce a net tariff number; those adjustments explain why daily or CBP press tallies and final Treasury monthly totals can diverge [7] [8]. Reuters and CBO coverage illustrate the same pattern in practice: Reuters reported record‑level customs duty collections in fiscal intervals (e.g., $113.3 billion gross in the first nine months of FY2025) while the CBO highlighted Treasury’s through‑July total of $136 billion in duties — all figures tied to fiscal reporting windows or partial calendar periods rather than a single Treasury “calendar‑year final” line [9] [8].

4. Bottom line and the reporting limitation

Given the documents and reporting provided, the nearest definitive Treasury‑sourced final figure explicitly cited is $195 billion in customs duties for fiscal year 2025 as presented in the final Monthly Treasury Statement and reported by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget [1]. The available sources do not contain a clear, singular “final Treasury statement” total for calendar‑year 2025 labeled as such; instead, CBP’s own claim of “more than $200 billion” covering Jan. 20–Dec. 15, 2025, and other FY or partial‑year estimates coexist in the record [2] [3]. Therefore, any definitive answer for calendar‑year 2025 as published by Treasury is not present in the provided materials, and reconciling to a single calendar‑year number would require either Treasury’s explicit calendar‑year reconciliation or CBP/Treasury to publish a combined calendar‑year final statement [4] [2].

Want to dive deeper?
What does the Monthly Treasury Statement list under 'Customs and Certain Excise Taxes' for January–December 2025 when reconciled to CBP deposits?
How do Treasury and CBP reconcile gross tariff receipts and net tariff revenue (after refunds/rebates) on final reports?
What have auditors or GAO found about the accuracy of CBP’s tariff revenue reporting and its alignment with Treasury statements?