2026 Tariff Impact on Gear
Trade tariffs on hockey equipment manufactured in Asia and imported into North American markets have had a direct and measurable impact on retail pricing in 2026. Understanding how tariffs translate into price increases helps players and families make smarter purchasing decisions.
What You Need to Know
The overwhelming majority of hockey equipment — including gear from every major North American brand — is manufactured in China, Taiwan, Vietnam, and Pakistan and imported. Tariff adjustments applied to sporting goods imports add directly to the landed cost that manufacturers pay to bring inventory into North America. Those cost increases are partially absorbed by manufacturer and retailer margins, and partially passed through to retail pricing. In 2026, the net effect on consumer pricing is estimated at 8–15% across most equipment categories, with sticks and skates showing the largest absolute dollar increases.
The tariff impact is not uniform across price tiers. Budget gear has seen the steepest percentage price increases because thinner margins leave less room to absorb cost before passing it on. Premium gear brands with higher margins have been able to buffer a larger share of the cost increase, which has actually narrowed the price gap between budget and premium categories slightly — making the premium value proposition modestly more competitive than in pre-tariff pricing environments.
Key Takeaways:
- Tariffs on Asian-manufactured imports have added an estimated 8–15% to hockey equipment landed costs
- Sticks and skates are the most affected categories due to manufacturing complexity and import volume
- Budget gear has seen the steepest percentage price increases due to thinner absorption margins
- The price gap between budget and premium has narrowed slightly — strengthening the premium value case
Tariffs are a market reality that isn't going away — understanding how they affect pricing by category helps you buy smarter and time your purchases to minimize the impact.