A high-stakes countdown has begun after US President Donald Trump agreed to delay imposing 50% tariffs on European Union goods until July 9, following a direct appeal from European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. The five-week extension provides a critical window for negotiators to bridge substantial differences after Trump had claimed talks were stalled and accelerated his implementation timeline.
European leaders have responded with cautious optimism, with French President Emmanuel Macron expressing hope for progress toward “the lowest possible tariffs” and Ireland’s Foreign Minister Simon Harris emphasizing that there is “no time to waste” to find a mutually beneficial solution. The European Commission has confirmed that its “zero-for-zero” offer to eliminate tariffs on cars and industrial goods remains available as a starting point for substantive negotiations.
The economic stakes could hardly be higher, with the trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies hanging in the balance. Trump remains focused on addressing the US trade deficit in goods with the EU, which reached $211 billion in 2024, while European officials note the US enjoys a $116 billion surplus in services. If no agreement is reached, the EU’s suspended retaliatory tariffs on $22.5 billion of US goods will automatically trigger on July 14, with plans for an additional round affecting $101 billion of US products in development—potentially targeting sensitive sectors like bourbon, automotive, and even US tech firms or banks.