Britain’s distillers have been handed an unexpected fillip after Donald Trump announced the removal of all US tariffs and restrictions on whisky imports, a concession the president attributed directly to the influence of King Charles and Queen Camilla’s four-day state visit to America.
The decision, revealed on Trump’s Truth Social platform shortly after the royal couple departed for the UK, brings to an end a punishing 10 per cent levy that the Scotch Whisky Association estimates has been costing the industry roughly £4m a week, some £150m over the past year, at a time when distillers were already bracing for a further 25 per cent charge on single malts due to return this spring.
For an industry that counts the United States as its largest export market, with shipments worth close to £1bn annually, the timing could scarcely have been more welcome. Trump told reporters in Washington that the King and Queen “got me to do something that nobody else was able to do, without hardly even asking”, adding that he had moved “in honour” of his royal guests.
Buckingham Palace responded with characteristic understatement. A spokesperson said the King had conveyed his “sincere gratitude” to the president and would be “raising a dram to the President’s thoughtfulness”.
The decision also unlocks renewed commercial co-operation between Scotland and the Commonwealth of Kentucky, two regions historically intertwined through the trade in used bourbon barrels. The Scotch industry imports roughly £200m-worth of these casks from Kentucky each year, using them to mature its single malts and blends. Trump noted the linkage explicitly, describing both as “very important industries” in their respective territories.
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