Trump Threatens 100% Tariffs On Europe Over Digital Services Taxes


President Donald Trump threatened 100% tariffs on countries that impose digital services taxes on American companies, escalating a long-running dispute over how Europe taxes revenue earned by major U.S. technology platforms.

The 100% tariff threat targets countries that tax digital services revenue from companies such as Google, Meta, Amazon and Apple. Trump said any country that moves forward with such a tax would face tariffs on goods sent to the United States, and that the penalty would override existing trade deals.

The warning is aimed mainly at Europe, where several countries already have or have discussed digital services taxes. France applies a 3% levy on revenue from certain digital services, while the U.K. has had a 2% digital services tax since 2020. Italy, Spain, Austria, Portugal, Denmark and other European markets have also been part of the wider digital-tax debate.

Trump’s position is that those levies unfairly target American firms because U.S. companies dominate global search, social media, app stores, advertising technology and online marketplace activity. European governments have argued that large digital platforms generate revenue from local users even when profits are booked elsewhere.

EU Says Digital Taxes Are Not Discriminatory

The European Commission pushed back against the threat and defended its right to regulate and tax economic activity. Commission spokesperson Olof Gill said digital taxes are “non-discriminatory” and apply to large companies regardless of origin, while warning that the EU would respond to unjustified measures.

The timing is sensitive because EU governments just adopted legislation to remove import duties on many U.S. goods, fulfilling their side of a trade agreement with Washington. The EU tariff legislation removes duties on U.S. industrial goods, grants preferential access to some U.S. farm products and extends duty-free treatment for U.S. lobster.

That deal was meant to reduce the risk of renewed transatlantic trade conflict before Trump’s July 4 deadline. The digital tax dispute now threatens to reopen the fight almost immediately, because the earlier trade arrangement did not settle how Europe taxes American technology companies.

A 100% tariff would be far more aggressive than the 15% cap on most EU exports under the broader trade framework. It would also raise questions over implementation, legal authority and retaliation, especially after earlier Trump tariff fights already collided with courts and markets.

Trade War Risk Returns After Tariff Relief

The new threat puts consumers, exporters and tech companies back in the middle of a transatlantic standoff. Tariffs can raise import costs, squeeze margins or push prices higher if companies pass the extra cost through to customers.

For Europe, the dispute also cuts into a larger revenue debate. Governments are searching for ways to tax digital activity, fund public budgets and regulate dominant technology platforms while avoiding direct retaliation from Washington. The EU has already been exploring new revenue tools across digital and financial markets, including a proposed crypto trading tax as part of its next long-term budget debate.

For the United States, the digital tax fight gives Trump another tariff lever to defend U.S. technology companies abroad. It also risks turning a narrow tax dispute into a wider trade confrontation with allies that had just moved to lower barriers for American goods.

No new tariff has been implemented yet. Trump’s threat now sits against existing digital services taxes in Europe, the EU’s newly adopted tariff concessions for U.S. goods and a warning from Brussels that unilateral U.S. action would trigger a European response.