Canada's 25% counter-tariff on US leather footwear hit in March 2025. American-made boots got significantly more expensive. Canadian-made boots did not. Here's how to navigate it.
In March 2025, Canada imposed a 25% counter-tariff on most US goods in response to American tariffs on Canadian products. Leather footwear was included — HS code 6403.51.90 covers leather-soled western boots. The tariff applied to goods manufactured in the United States and entering Canada.
The reaction in the western boot community was immediate. A thread in r/NicksHandmadeBoots accumulated 124 comments in March 2025 as buyers scrambled to understand the impact on handcrafted American work boots. Twisted X — a mid-tier Texas brand popular in Canadian ranch supply stores — reportedly set up an internal "tariff war room" to manage their Canadian distribution pricing.
The Yale Budget Lab projected leather goods prices to remain elevated approximately 22% for one to two years even after tariff resolution, due to supply chain adjustments and leather commodity repricing. That's separate from the tariff itself — it's the structural cost increase that follows any significant trade disruption.
The tariff applies specifically to boots manufactured in the United States. Not all boots sold by American brands are US-made — this is the crucial distinction most people miss.
| Brand | Made Where | Tariff Impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Justin | USA (Fort Worth, TX) | +25% | Most classic Justin boots are US-made. Some fashion lines imported from elsewhere — check labels. |
| Lucchese | USA (El Paso, TX) | +25% | High-end handcrafted line fully US-made. Significant price jump at the top tier. |
| Nicks Handmade Boots | USA (Spokane, WA) | +25% | Popular work-boot crossover brand. Tariff drove the 124-comment Reddit thread. |
| Ariat | Mixed (USA + Mexico + other) | Varies | Ariat manufactures in multiple countries. Mexico-made pairs may qualify under CUSMA — ask retailer for origin certificate. |
| Dan Post | USA + Mexico + other | Varies | Comfort-focused mid-range line. Origin varies by model — verify before ordering. |
| Tony Lama | USA + Mexico | Varies | Heritage US brand, but considerable production has shifted. Origin matters. |
| Twisted X | Primarily China/Mexico | Low / None | Not primarily US-manufactured, so less direct tariff exposure. Separate Asian-made tariff layer may apply. |
| Boulet | Canada (Saint-Hyacinthe, QC) | No tariff | Fully Canadian-made. Zero tariff exposure. Now meaningfully price-competitive vs. US brands. |
| Canada West | Canada (Winnipeg, MB) | No tariff | Canadian-made work and western boots. No exposure. |
| Alberta Boot Company | Canada (Calgary, AB) | No tariff | Custom and semi-custom. Expensive, but now the closest to US handcrafted options at a comparable price point. |
Mexico is a major western boot manufacturing hub — Léon, Guanajuato produces millions of pairs annually for US brands. Boots made in Mexico and imported into Canada may qualify for CUSMA (formerly NAFTA) preferential treatment — meaning no tariff — but only with proper origin certification.
The problem: most retail staff can't tell you whether a specific model has a valid CUSMA certificate of origin. When buying US-brand boots from a Canadian retailer, ask directly whether they're CUSMA-origin certified. If they can't confirm, assume the full tariff rate applies to whatever price they're charging you.
The math hits harder than it looks because tariffs compound with the exchange rate. Before March 2025, a $400 USD American-made boot cost roughly $540 CAD at the prevailing exchange rate. After the 25% tariff, the same boot lands at $675 CAD — and that's before retailer markup and shipping.
| Boot Price (USD) | Pre-Tariff CAD (≈1.35) | Post-Tariff CAD (+25%) | Added Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| $150 USD (budget) | ~$203 CAD | ~$253 CAD | +$50 CAD |
| $300 USD (mid-range) | ~$405 CAD | ~$506 CAD | +$101 CAD |
| $400 USD (quality tier) | ~$540 CAD | ~$675 CAD | +$135 CAD |
| $600 USD (premium) | ~$810 CAD | ~$1,013 CAD | +$203 CAD |
The Yale Budget Lab leather pricing estimate (approximately +22% structural increase) suggests even if tariffs are removed, the underlying cost of leather hasn't reset. Hides, tanneries, and supply chain costs adjusted upward and don't automatically snap back.
Before 2025, the honest argument for buying Boulet or Canada West was quality and craftsmanship — not price. A comparable Canadian boot cost about the same as a comparable US boot once you accounted for the exchange rate. The tariff changed that equation.
Boulet (Saint-Hyacinthe, QC) produces Goodyear-welted western and work boots in the $300–$450 CAD range. They're sold at Heritage Western and Boot stores in Alberta, at major western retailers in BC, and through select dealers nationally. Before tariffs, a comparable US boot like a better Ariat or Dan Post model ran $380–$500 CAD imported. Post-tariff, Boulet is now clearly cheaper for comparable quality.
Canada West (Winnipeg, MB) has been making Canadian work boots since 1906. Their western and work-western line runs $200–$380 CAD. They're the workhorse option — not as fashion-focused as Boulet's more styled lines, but resoleable, durable, and genuinely Canadian-made. A full overview is on the Canadian brands guide.
Alberta Boot Company (Calgary, AB) makes custom and semi-custom boots starting around $500 CAD. For buyers who wanted a US handcrafted option like Nicks or Wesco but are now facing $800–$1,000+ CAD post-tariff pricing, Alberta Boot is a real alternative at a similar or lower price point.
Boulet, Canada West, and Alberta Boot Company. No tariff math needed, full warranty support in Canada, returns and repairs handled domestically. For most buyers looking at $300–$500 CAD, this is the easiest call right now.
Some Canadian western retailers bought large inventory before tariffs hit and held pricing through 2025. If you're buying in-store, ask when the inventory was imported — older stock may be priced at pre-tariff rates. Herbert's Boots in Edmonton, Wei's Western Wear in Kamloops, and Lammle's in Calgary are known western-specialist retailers who have navigated this better than the big box chains.
Ariat, Dan Post, and some Tony Lama models manufactured in Mexico may qualify for CUSMA tariff exemption. Confirm origin certification with the retailer before purchasing. This works but requires homework.
Direct-from-US ordering on US-made boots. The tariff, exchange rate, and CBSA processing fees combine to push landed costs well above Canadian retail prices. Our cross-border shopping guide has the full breakdown of when cross-border orders still make sense and when they don't.
Canada-US trade policy has moved repeatedly since March 2025. The 25% counter-tariff was imposed, partially paused during negotiation periods, then reinstated in some categories. The situation as of early 2026 remains in flux.
Before making a purchase decision based on tariff math, check the current list at Canada.ca. Leather footwear (HS 6403.xx) has been on the counter-tariff list but the rate and scope have changed. What hasn't changed: Canadian-made boots have zero tariff exposure regardless of Canada-US trade tensions.
The structural leather price increase — estimated at approximately 22% (Yale Budget Lab, 2025) — is separate from tariff policy and more durable. Even if tariffs are resolved, the underlying cost of quality leather goods has shifted upward and shows no sign of reverting quickly.