The UK government is in talks with the U.S. over the ‘best possible deal’ for British firms amid the higher tariffs threat.
High-level talks with the U.S. administration over the threat of increased tariffs are under way as the business leaders said they expected the UK to “double down” on the existing Economic Prosperity Deal (EPD)—announced by Donald Trump and Keir Starmer in May last year—rather than walk away.
Trump’s deals with about 20 countries, including the UK, the EU, Switzerland, Japan, Lesotho, and others, were put in doubt on Friday after the US Supreme Court ruled that the president’s existing “reciprocal” tariffs were illegal.
The ruling infuriated Trump, who on Saturday, February 21, 2026, announced a 15% global tariff on all foreign imports under the 1974 Trade Act, a different legal framework to the one investigated by the US Supreme Court.
It would potentially mean a 5% increase in the existing 10% tariff for UK exporters and a possible rise for EU exporters, too, as the 15% deal it secured was “inclusive” of previous tariffs and the new tariff is not.
The UK education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, admitted on Sunday that UK businesses faced “uncertainty” after the latest developments but insisted in an interview on Sky News that the UK expected its “preferential” trade arrangements with the US to continue.
“We, through the work that the prime minister has been leading in engaging with the US government and with President Trump, would hope and expect that to continue, but these discussions are ongoing,” she said.
“This is an evolving situation. But, of course, we want to get the best possible deal for British businesses. I understand the uncertainty it does cause for them, but they can be assured that we will always be working to make sure they get everything that they need.”
The German MEP Bernd Lange, the chair of the International Trade Committee at the European Parliament, suggested a planned vote on the US deal this week would now be postponed.
The EU-US deal has been implemented in the US but not yet in the EU, where it needs parliamentary approval.
“Pure tariff chaos from the US administration. No one can make sense of it anymore—only open questions and growing uncertainty for the EU and other US trading partners,” Lange wrote in a post on X on Sunday.
William Bain, the head of trade policy at the British Chambers of Commerce, said he expected the UK to “double down” and use the latest twist to secure a better long-term deal.
He said the US-UK deal struck in May was “never really about the 10% tariff but the carve-outs” that included a 10% tariff on cars—lower than for some other countries—retention of the existing 0% tariff on the UK pharma industry, and a promise of a reduction in the 25% steel tariffs, which has yet to materialize.
David Henig, the director of the UK Trade Policy Project at the European Centre for International Political Economy, said, "The nature of dealing with this US administration is no deal can be expected to last, so all governments will be working out what to do next, or what the deal actually is.”
Under the 1974 Trade Act, the new 15% tariffs can be applied for only 150 days, or until 23 August, when Trump will need Congressional approval to extend.
“What if Congress doesn’t approve? Could Trump turn around and say, "I'm now going to impose 14% tariffs for the next 150 days," Bain said.
Trump may also look to impose tariffs under section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act, which authorizes levies in the event of foreign countries being “discriminatory” or "unreasonable," Bain said.
Lange’s international trade committee, which holds the key to the EU parliamentary process on ratification of the US tariff deal, will meet on Monday to discuss the next moves.
Additionally, the parliament’s international partnerships committee had been due to vote on it on 24 February, followed by a final vote by the full parliament in March 2026.