
The US Supreme Court delivered a major blow to President Donald Trump’s trade agenda on Friday, striking down most of his sweeping “emergency” tariffs and jolting a policy fight that had hung over markets for months.
The ruling turns a long-running court challenge into a live economic event, forcing companies, lawyers and trading partners to re-check what duties apply, and whether billions in collected tariffs could now have to be paid back.
For investors, it also reopens a question that tariffs had muddied: how quickly import costs might ease, and what that means for inflation and growth.
What the court actually changed
The Supreme Court ruled that Trump exceeded his authority by using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose broad tariffs, invalidating tariffs that rested on that emergency-law foundation.
The decision does not erase every Trump tariff, but it invalidates those implemented using the emergency statute.
The core constitutional message was power, not pricing.
In plain terms, the court signaled that Congress holds the tariff-setting authority, and the White House cannot use a sanctions-style emergency law as a shortcut to rewrite trade policy at scale.
That matters because IEEPA has historically been used for sanctions and national security tools, and the legal fight turned on whether it can be stretched into a de facto tariff blank check.
The decision forces a reset in how big, fast tariff changes get made.
If the administration wants tariffs of this breadth again, it will likely need either explicit congressional action or a pivot to other trade statutes that are narrower, slower, and more procedurally demanding than an emergency declaration.
Markets, refunds, and the next fight
Markets had been bracing for a headline-driven jolt, and a “strike down” outcome was widely seen as supportive for stocks sensitive to import costs such as retail, consumer goods and electronics.
The bigger practical question now is money: how much tariff revenue is at risk, and who gets it back.
Reuters reported Friday that more than $175 billion in tariff collections could be at risk of refunds if the Supreme Court ruled against Trump’s broad emergency tariffs, citing estimates from Penn-Wharton Budget Model economists.
That figure captures why the decision is not just political as it has real cash-flow implications for importers and for the government’s revenue math.
The refund mechanics are also messy.
The US Customs and Border Protection had set deadlines tied to an electronic refund process, anticipating the possibility that importers could seek repayments if the IEEPA tariffs were found unlawful.
The Court of International Trade could have authority to order refunds while managing claims within a statute-of-limitations window.
Until courts and agencies issue implementation guidance, many companies will be asking the same urgent question: what tariff rate applies to goods landing next week, and what paperwork is needed to preserve refund rights.
The ruling also doesn’t end the tariff era, it narrows one pathway.
Businesses should expect the administration to explore alternative legal tools, while investors weigh a near-term reduction in trade-cost pressure against the possibility of a “replacement tariff” strategy that keeps uncertainty in play.
https://invezz.com/news/2026/02/20/supreme-court-overturns-trump-tariffs-175b-in-refunds-loom/

