U.S. Smartphone Shipments Jump 30% in March Amid Tariff Fears, Apple Leads Surge
Smartphone shipments to the U.S. rose 30% in March, driven by manufacturers racing to beat anticipated import tariffs, according to Counterpoint Research. The surge reflects efforts by Apple, Samsung, and Motorola to shield profits and avoid potential price hikes that could deter demand if tariffs were enacted.
Apple Leads the Charge
Apple alone airlifted $2 billion worth of iPhones from India in March, leveraging its expanding supply chain relationships with Foxconn and Tata Electronics. The move underscores Apple’s broader strategy to diversify production away from China and tap into India as a major manufacturing hub.
“The increase in shipments in March and early April will help insulate Apple from potential immediate pricing impacts in the U.S. through mid-to-late summer,” said Gerrit Schneemann, Senior Analyst at Counterpoint Research.
Why It Matters
-
The spike in shipments was a direct response to tariffs announced by President Donald Trump on April 2, which temporarily rattled electronics supply chains.
-
Though tariffs were later suspended for 90 days, companies acted quickly to move inventory ahead of any long-term impacts.
Strategic Supply Chain Shift
-
India’s role in smartphone exports to the U.S. has sharply increased, now accounting for 26% of Q1 shipments, up from 16% last year.
-
Apple has signaled that most iPhones sold in the U.S. during Q2 will be made in India.
-
Motorola, owned by Lenovo, nearly tripled its India-based exports to the U.S., further validating the region’s growing importance.
Key Shipment Stats (March 2024):
-
📈 Apple: Sales to U.S. distributors and retailers +42%
-
📈 Samsung: Sell-in growth +4%
-
📈 Motorola: Exports to U.S. tripled
-
🌍 India’s share of U.S. smartphone imports: 26% of Q1 total
Looking Ahead
Should the tariff dispute with China continue, analysts expect Apple to rely even more heavily on India for its next-generation iPhone 17 shipments bound for the U.S. market.
The March spike highlights how geopolitics, supply chain agility, and policy uncertainty continue to shape the global smartphone industry — with India and Vietnam rapidly emerging as critical production centers in the post-China era.











