Nintendo sues the US government over tariffs — Japanese videogame giant seeks 200 billion refund with interest
The lawsuit targets duties that forced Switch 2 accessory price hikes and delayed preorders last year.
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Nintendo of America filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Government on March 6 in the U.S. Court of International Trade, seeking a refund of tariffs it paid under President Donald Trump's executive orders since February 2025, according to a complaint obtained by Aftermath. The company, represented by Venable LLP, argues that those tariffs were unlawfully imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act of 1977 (IEEPA) and seeks the return of the collected duties "with interest," along with attorney fees and the reprocessing of its import entries.
The Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA-based tariffs on February 20, ruling that the act did not grant the president authority to impose them. The court also ordered U.S. Customs and Border Protection to refund the duties it had collected. In a separate filing on the same day Nintendo filed its complaint, however, CBP stated it was "not able to comply" with that order.
Nintendo is among more than 1,000 companies that have filed suit, joining FedEx, Costco, and Revlon in seeking refunds. The 14-page complaint (case no. 1:26-cv-1540) states that tariffs have resulted in the collection of more than $200 billion in import taxes on imports from nearly all countries since February 2025. Nintendo told Aftermath it had filed the complaint but had "nothing else to share."
Nintendo's lawyers name the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the Department of Homeland Security, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, Customs and Border Protection, and the Department of Commerce as defendants. A notable element of the complaint is its use of the government's own prior concessions: in the earlier V.O.S. Selections v. Trump litigation, the government argued that "if tariffs imposed on plaintiffs during these appeals are ultimately held unlawful, then the government will issue refunds to plaintiffs, including any post-judgment interest that accrues." Nintendo's lawyers cite this directly, arguing that the position already binds the government.
The complaint covers 10 executive orders in total, stretching from the initial February 1, 2025, tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China through to a 40% tariff on Brazilian goods and a 25% tariff on India tied to its purchases of Russian oil, both issued in mid-2025. China-specific duties escalated rapidly over the period: starting at 10%, rising to 20%, then to 84%, peaking at 125%, and then reduced to 34% in May 2025.
Nintendo manufactures its consoles and accessories primarily in Vietnam and China, putting it squarely in the crossfire when sweeping tariffs were announced in April 2025. The company delayed Switch 2 preorders from April 9 to April 24 to assess the potential cost impact, and ultimately raised prices on accessories rather than the console itself.
Joy-Con 2 controllers went from $90 to $95 per pair ahead of the June 5 launch, and the Pro Controller rose from $79.99 to $84.99. By August 2025, Nintendo also raised prices across the original Switch family in the U.S., with the OLED model climbing from $349.99 to $399.99 and the standard Switch from $299.99 to $339.99, following a 20% tariff imposed on goods from Vietnam.
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Trump has since proposed a 15% global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, and more than two dozen states filed suit over that measure as of March 6. Nintendo's complaint covers the IEEPA duties specifically, meaning the company's exposure to future tariffs on its production in Vietnam and China remains an open question, with Nintendo itself having warned last year that Switch 2 pricing "may be subject to change" depending on market conditions.
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Notton Here's how I expect this to go:Reply
1. Nintendo USA Sues
2. A US government psycho will threaten to ban and register nintendo as a supply chain risk
3. Nintendo USA withdraws lawsuit
4. Nintendo USA gets forcefully sold off to some US billionaire anyways -
Zaranthos Nintendo USA sues the US government that's trying to protect the US market where Nintendo itself garners over a third of its revenue. Almost every other country in the world imposes some type of duty, tariff, or VAT on goods and services. Prior to 2025 the US had some of the lowest tariffs and trade barriers in the world but paid some of the highest (often 2-3x) in the world with almost no countries having actual "free trade". Many other countries also imposed trade barriers to block US products entirely from their markets. These are just facts. Now the lawyers will collect a lot of this money (lol).Reply -
Phaaze88 THIS is the kind of money corpos should be threatened with, not the slap on the wrist, calculated risk, learned nothing, millions.Reply -
PCWarrior Wait—200 billion? The article must have meant 200 million, not billion. Setting that aside, I can understand why Nintendo might pursue damages for the delayed launch and the reduced competitiveness caused by the price increase. But how exactly can they demand the return of the collected duties? If they raised prices to offset the tariff costs then those costs were passed on to consumers. And MSRP is almost always listed before taxes or duties anyway, just like VAT in Europe or sales tax in the US. So I don't think that Nintendo absorbed any meaningful portion of the tariff burden. If anyone is entitled to a refund, it would be the customers who actually paid those inflated prices, not Nintendo. Unless Nintendo plans to take the refunded duties and then reimburse consumers (which seems extremely unlikely), their claim doesn’t hold much water.Reply -
thestryker Reply
The headline is flat out wrong, but the article states it correctly. The 200 billion is roughly the total amount of tariffs collected in entirety.PCWarrior said:Wait—200 billion?
Nintendo paid them, and they were ruled to have been illegal.PCWarrior said:But how exactly can they demand the return of the collected duties?
Unfortunately this doesn't matter at all because they're still the ones who paid them. That's how tariffs work which is why anyone who understood this pointed out they're effectively a universal tax on buyers. Sure company costs go up, but they're going to largely pass that onto consumers. However the companies are still the ones who paid them so if they're ruled to be illegal, which they were, the companies are the ones who are going to be demanding refunds.PCWarrior said:So I don't think that Nintendo absorbed any meaningful portion of the tariff burden.