Korea’s GM Plants at Risk as U.S. Tariffs Target Key Export Models

South Korea’s automotive exports face a fresh challenge as the United States considers imposing 25% tariffs under the Trade Expansion Act (Section 232) on select foreign-made vehicles. Among those targeted are GM Korea’s best-selling models, the Trax Crossover and the Trailblazer SUV, both manufactured at GM's Bupyeong and Changwon plants and exported to North America. If imposed, the tariffs could affect up to 400,000 vehicles annually, a blow that may threaten the viability of GM’s Korean operations and shake Korea’s broader automotive industry.

The potential tariff stems from ongoing reviews of national security and industrial self-reliance under the Biden administration, aiming to boost U.S. domestic manufacturing. According to the Financial Times, GM's Korean-made models are among the few in the company's global lineup that are fully reliant on exports to the U.S. without U.S.-based assembly, making them vulnerable in this protectionist pivot. While GM has not officially confirmed export disruption plans, it has acknowledged that “various scenarios are being reviewed.”

Industry analysts warn that should the 25% tariff be implemented, GM Korea's pricing competitiveness will collapse, effectively removing the Trax and Trailblazer from the U.S. compact SUV market. The two models together accounted for nearly 20% of GM's U.S. small crossover sales in 2024, making them vital to GM’s market share and revenue. Korean labor unions and local governments are also sounding the alarm, fearing plant closures or production cuts at facilities that employ over 12,000 workers directly and indirectly.

Diplomatically, the issue may evolve into a bilateral trade dispute, as the Korean government is expected to raise concerns through official trade channels. While the Korean Ministry of Trade has yet to issue a formal statement, sources suggest Seoul will push for a tariff exemption based on its FTA status and long-standing role in GM's global supply chain. However, with global election cycles and rising economic nationalism, such negotiations are unlikely to move quickly.

The U.S. has previously used Section 232 tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, citing national security. However, experts note that targeting vehicles produced by long-term allies like South Korea could backfire, both economically and diplomatically.
Editor’s View
This isn’t just a tariff story—it’s about how Korean manufacturing, globalized supply chains, and geopolitical priorities collide. GM Korea has long been a symbol of Korea’s industrial integration into U.S. markets. If protectionism cuts that off, the damage may extend beyond economics into strategic trust between Seoul and Washington. It also raises a serious question: Can Korea afford to anchor its auto exports so heavily on a single market?

What do you think? Should South Korea diversify its automotive export strategy to reduce U.S. dependency? Or should trade diplomacy take the lead?

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