Colombia-Ecuador tariff war escalates: 100% duties collapse border trade

In the latest escalation of the Colombia-Ecuador trade dispute—following initial 30% tariffs in February—Ecuador's 100% tariff on Colombian products took effect May 1, after Colombia imposed 35%, 50%, and 75% tariffs on 190 Ecuadorian products. Border business groups report trade collapse and smuggling risks amid narcotrafficking accusations.

Ecuadorian President Daniel Noboa announced the 100% tariff, effective Friday May 1, without specifying products. It responds to complaints since February about Colombia's narcotrafficking controls along the 586-km border and a trade deficit—Ecuador claims a $62.9 million surplus from February to March 2026, versus a $146 million deficit prior.

President Gustavo Petro rejected the claims and imposed graduated tariffs Thursday (35-75% on ~190 products) until Ecuador relents. Trade Minister Diana Marcela Morales called it 'structured, adequate, and differentiated to minimize impact.'

Trade has plummeted: Carchi Heavy Transport Association head Carlos Bastidas decried it as 'a whim' by both presidents; Rumichaca Bridge crossings dropped from 150 trucks to five Friday. Ipiales Chamber of Commerce's Iván Flórez said it 'practically closes exports.'

Colombia suspended energy exports to drought-hit Ecuador and deployed 15,000 troops to the border. Both sides anticipate job losses and smuggling surges.

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Illustration depicting Colombia-Ecuador border standoff amid 100% tariff hikes on imports.
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Colombia to raise tariffs on Ecuadorian imports to 100%

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Colombia's Minister of Commerce, Industry and Tourism, Diana Marcela Morales Rojas, rejected Ecuador's trade measures and announced that the country will raise tariffs on imports from Ecuador to 100%. The move responds to Ecuador's announced increase of its tariff on Colombian products to 100%, citing border security issues. Business leaders from both nations called for presidential dialogue to avert economic harm.

The Colombian government retaliated against Ecuador's 100% tariff hike on Colombian products by imposing the same on over 70 Ecuadorian tariff subheadings. Trade Minister Diana Morales amended Decree 170 after unsuccessful diplomatic efforts. Colombian exports to Ecuador dropped 35% in February to US$109.3 million.

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In the ongoing Colombia-Ecuador tariff dispute, Colombia's Ministry of Commerce issued Decree 0455 on April 28, 2026, imposing tariffs of 35%, 50%, or 75% on 191 products from Ecuador—up from prior 30% measures—to counter Ecuador's 100% 'security tariffs.' Zero tariffs remain on essential inputs without substitutes. The decree awaits publication in the Official Gazette on April 30 for immediate effect.

Several Colombian business groups denounced blockades on the Cali-Buenaventura road that have now lasted four days and affect foreign trade at the main Pacific port.

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President Gustavo Petro attributed the 171.3% increase in electric vehicle sales in the first quarter of 2026 to his gasoline vehicle tariff policy. In an X post, he hailed the outcome as progress in decarbonization and relief for air pollution-related mortality in cities like Bogotá and Medellín.

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