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Port Tracker Forecasts Decline in U.S. Retail Imports During First Half of 2026

Port Tracker Forecasts Decline in U.S. Retail Imports During First Half of 2026

NRF and Hackett issue outlook for 2026 imports

The National Retail Federation and maritime consultant Hackett Associates released a new Global Port Tracker report projecting that U.S.-bound retail container imports will fall on an annual basis during the first half of 2026. The report, published earlier today, highlights expected declines in container volumes at major U.S. gateway ports.

Ports included in the Port Tracker survey

The report bases its numbers on a set of major U.S. ports. Those ports are listed below

  • Los Angeles/Long Beach
  • Oakland
  • Tacoma
  • Seattle
  • Houston
  • New York/New Jersey
  • Hampton Roads
  • Charleston
  • Savannah
  • Miami
  • Jacksonville
  • Port Everglades (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)

What the container figures represent

The report’s authors note that the data count containers entering the United States and do not measure the monetary value of the goods inside them. Because the figures reflect unit volumes rather than value, they serve as an approximate gauge of retailers’ expectations and inventory activity rather than a direct measure of retail sales or employment.

NRF Vice President for Supply Chain and Customs Policy Jonathan Gold said that the ongoing legal and congressional debates over tariffs are visibly affecting import volumes. He stressed the need for stable, predictable trade rules to give businesses and consumers certainty, arguing that tariffs effectively function as a tax on U.S. companies that is passed on to shoppers through higher prices.

The report also highlights a pending Supreme Court ruling on the legality of the White House’s use of IEEPA authority to impose tariffs, saying a decision could arrive at any time. It warns that, if the Court rules against the administration, the White House might attempt alternative measures to advance tariffs, creating further uncertainty.

December data and Port Tracker projections for 2026

For December, the most recent month with available data, the surveyed ports (with data missing from Houston and Charleston) handled 1.99 million Twenty-Foot Equivalent Units (TEU). That total was down 1.7% from November but up 6.6% versus December a year earlier.

Port Tracker’s forward-looking tallies indicate that if projections hold, the first half of 2026 would total roughly 12.27 million TEU, a 2% drop year over year, and total imports for all of 2026 would be down about 2.3% compared with 2025. The report explains that projected year-over-year increases in May and June primarily reflect an unusually large decline in those months in 2025, when imports fell after the White House announced its so-called "Liberation Day" tariffs.

Hackett’s analysis of trade shifts and supply chain stress

Ben Hackett, founder of Hackett Associates, wrote that the use of tariffs as a coercive tool is reshaping international trade relationships and placing new strains on established supply chains. He cited examples such as Canada growing trade and investment ties with the European Union and China, and the EU’s move to conclude a trade agreement with India, as indicators of that shift.

Hackett added that efforts to build supply chain resilience grew after the pandemic, but uncertainty about where to create redundant capacity can raise costs. He said shippers may see lower freight rates in coming years, noting that carriers that recently reported strong profits are now facing negative returns, as disclosed by companies including Maersk and ONE.

Hackett warned that the outlook for carrier profits could weaken further as voyages through the Suez Canal resume and a large orderbook of new vessels is delivered, which together will release additional capacity. He said lower rates would help shippers but also underscore a market dealing with excess capacity amid limited economic growth.

Implications for retailers and consumers

The report’s findings and the commentary from industry officials underscore the interplay between trade policy, shipping market dynamics and retail supply chains. The combination of tariff uncertainty, potential legal changes, and shifting global trade patterns could complicate business planning and have downstream effects on inventory, pricing and consumer affordability.

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