New U.S. tariffs are about to turn Christmas 2024 into a real-life Grinch story. The average family’s holiday wishlist will balloon from $1,733 to $2,273, while gaming consoles and tablets could jump by hundreds of dollars. With China manufacturing 90% of U.S. Christmas decorations and 80% of toys, widespread shortages loom. Businesses are panicking, warning of price hikes up to 75%. The full impact of these tariffs might make Santa’s nice list look downright naughty.

How much will Christmas cost in 2025?
A lot more than anyone expected.
With new tariffs set to hit U.S. consumers like a sledgehammer, that magical holiday morning might feel more like a kick in the wallet.
The numbers are downright scary – a typical Christmas wishlist that costs $1,733 today could skyrocket to $2,273 after tariffs take effect.
Brace yourself: Holiday shopping in 2025 will hit wallets hard as tariffs push costs up by over $500 per family.
The pain won’t be limited to just a few items under the tree. Clothing prices are predicted to surge 17% under the new tariffs.
Nearly everything festive is about to get more expensive.
China currently manufactures about 90% of American Christmas decorations and 80% of toys sold in the U.S.
Holiday decor affected 74% of surveyed businesses with devastating impacts.
Those cheerful holiday accents, decorations, and toys? They’re all taking a massive price hike.
Even basic gifts like gaming consoles could jump from $617 to $863.
Tablets? Try $648 instead of $447.
The situation is particularly grim for America’s gift industry.
A whopping 88% of businesses say these tariffs will substantially impact their operations.
Some are planning price increases between 11-20%, while others are looking at hikes of up to 75% or more.
And here’s a real holiday cheerbreaker – many toy retailers can’t even place orders because they can’t stomach the 145% tariff on Chinese imports.
The supply chain outlook isn’t any merrier.
International trade policies have historically shown that such aggressive tariffs can significantly disrupt global supply chains.
Warehouse supplies imported before the tariffs will run dry within 30-90 days.
Some business leaders are being dramatic enough to warn that “there will be no Christmas” without tariff reduction.
While that might be an overstatement, the threat of toy shortages similar to 2021 looms large.
Despite presidential assurances that “China will probably eat those tariffs,” experts aren’t buying it.
The average household is looking at consumer losses equivalent to $3,800 in 2024, and the U.S. price level is expected to rise by 2.3% in the short term.