It was to be expected that new tariff monitoring and intelligence solutions would be introduced in response to President Trump’s actions concerning reciprocal tariffs with long standing trading partners. Here are launch announcements and as new announcements develop, this post will be continuously updated.
Fiscal Note – Policy and regulatory intelligence provider, FiscalNote, has released personalized tariff impact reports within its tariff tracker tool, which was introduced earlier this year. This new capability enables organizations to quickly understand how emerging tariffs affect their specific import and export activity.
Project44 – Project44, a high-velocity supply chain platform provider, makes available a page with up-to-date overviews of “recent tariff changes and their impact on global trade.” It tracks only tariffs that have had concrete dates announced. On September 25, 2025, they announced the launch of Tariff Analytics, a solution that provides complete tariff visibility by linking customer product catalogs to real-time rates across all U.S. tariff types.
Beroe – Procurement decision intelligence provider, Beroe, launched new tariff management solutions on August 19, 2025. The Tariff Monitoring solution provides current tariff data by product category across 190 countries, with the accompanying Tariff Impact Analysis solution that quantifies the cost implications of existing or proposed tariffs. The Sourcing Location Optimizer identifies optimal sourcing locations across 15 key economies and is connected to Beroe’s Supplier Discovery.
Coupa – Coupa announced its Tariff Impact Planning (TIP) app, which is part of Coupa’s Supply Chain Solutions suite in August. It is designed to help businesses navigate global trade and tariff policies and ensure profitability amidst widespread uncertainty.
Deposco – Announced June 24, Deposco’s Tariff Tracker leverages real-time market intelligence from the company’s Bright Suite platform. Utilizing market signals, it draws insights from its comprehensive dataset that includes $50 billion in total Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) and over 400 million shipments.
interos.ai – On June 17, risk intelligence provider interos.ai announced the launch of itariffs, a new feature that is built into the interos.ai Resilience dashboard, enabling procurement, finance and risk teams to have “instant insight into their organization’s tariff exposure across multiple tiers of suppliers.”
Sourcemap – Sourcemap launched its n-Tier Tariff Mapping Solution on June 4, which provides verified chain of custody data for raw materials and sub-components. Co-developed with companies from various sectors, such as electronics, solar, appliances, and automotive, this solution helps companies manage Rules of Origin-based tariffs.
Leah – On June 3, 2025, ContractPodAI announced its Leah Tariff Agent to proactively navigate the complexities of evolving global tariffs and trade regulations. In early 2026, ContractPodAI rebranded as Leah. The Leah Agentic AI Platform delivers deep domain intelligence across legal, procurement, and finance. The Tariff Management solution allows companies to stay ahead of global tariff disruptions.
Utah State University students – Tarifflo, a new AI-powered app launched by Utah State University students in May, allows users to select a product and see all executive orders, non-tariff measures, and tariff rates. It is “programmed to track and log tariff data spanning the last decade to help companies see possible trends.”
S&P Global – In May, new tariff indicators were added to the S&P Global PMI (Purchasing Managers’ Index) Comment Trackers. “These trackers allow us to assess the direct impact of changes in global tariffs on businesses, by monitoring comments related to metrics such as exports, input prices, selling charges and business confidence.”
Kinaxis Tariff Response – Real-time supply chain orchestration provider, Kinaxis, launched Kinaxis Tariff Response, which is able to go live in as few as 21 days. Built on the company’s AI-powered Maestro platform, the solution “combines tariff-specific inputs, sourcing logic, pricing levers, and demand modeling so companies can assess margin risk, test strategies, and evaluate trade-offs in seconds, not days or weeks.”
Exiger – Exiger, an AI powered supply chain risk provider, announced its end-to-end tariff solution on May 5. Tariff Intelligence is a command center “for triage to forecast and triage tariff impacts at all levels of the supply chain.” Customers get “granularity into which routes, suppliers, and components trigger higher tariffs,” which enables targeted strategies. Users can “map their tariff exposure down to the raw material and part-level.”
TADA Cognitive Solutions – TADA, an AI-based supply chain technology provider, unveiled its Intelligent Tariff Management solution on May 6, which is built on its AI-Enabled Digital Twin to help enterprises “turn tariff volatility into a competitive advantage.” The solution delivers “real-time visibility, predictive insight, and data-driven guidance that protects margins and streamlines global supply chain operations.”
Aera Technology – Decision intelligence provider, Aera Technology, released a new tariff mitigation solution on April 30 that “enables companies to leverage advanced simulation and modeling to assess tariff impacts, deploy short-term mitigation strategies, and plan for longer term resilience and risk management.”
Optilogic – Supply chain design software innovator, Optilogic, unveiled the real time Lumina Tariff Optimizer on April 15 to help companies reoptimize supply chains to reduce the effects of tariffs. Customers can access Lumina Tariff Optimizer in the Cosmic Frog supply chain design solution or via Cosmic Frog for Excel apps.
Marsh McLennan – On April 30, March McLennan, a risk strategy professional services firm, launched a tariff simulator enhancement to its AI-powered supply chain platform Sentrisk, which “enables clients to quickly assess their exposure to various trade scenarios and make strategic decisions to manage supply chain risks.”
OpsVeda – Operational intelligence solution provider, OpsVeda, announced the launch of TariffSight in April, which “allows enterprises to tackle the urgency in compliance, sourcing, inventory, and supplier/customer negotiations, while continuously optimizing operations in response to shifting trade regulations.”
Free Tariff Trackers
Here are free (open to the general public) tools.
Supply Chain Dive – This publication is tracking where each tariff currently stands, “threatened or realized” and is updating content as new developments occur. In the table provided, you can filter by sector or country for the most impactful ones.
Reed Smith – At this site, Reed Smith’s International Trade and National Security team “tracks the latest threatened and implemented U.S. tariffs, as well as counter-tariffs from other countries around the world,” with commentary by Reed Smith lawyers.
Brookings Tariff Tracker – This tariff tracker provides easy-to-access information on new tariffs implemented by the U.S. and by other countries in retaliation, as well as information on the trade deals Trump has finalized.
Principal – Principal has published a timeline that tracks the key moments, in terms of impact, of tariffs. They will be updating this continuously, with additional resources to help readers find the information they need.
WTO – IMF Tariff Tracker – This Tariff Tracker has just gone live (as of May 27) and records initial levels and changes in applied duties, along with their implementation dates, at the bilateral and product levels.
Park Street – As developments in ongoing trade disputes continue, Park Street’s continuously updated timeline provides detail on potential beverage alcohol tariffs and other tariffs affecting the industry.
Numerator Tariff Risk Index – Newly launched, this index “is calculated from a blend of five variables (import reliance, tariff exposure, category buyer purchase power, U.S. consumer sentiment, and price sensitivity) that collectively indicate the likelihood of tariffs to impact a given category in context to the market.”
Flexport Tariff Simulator – On June 2, Flexport launched its new tariff simulator, which allows businesses to “estimate tariff and landed cost scenarios based on key shipment details, including: Harmonized Tariff Schedule (HTS) code; Shipment value; Entry date; Country of origin; and Product-specific details such as material composition.” Check the new tool out, which is available to the general public, at tariffs.flexport.com.
European Commission – The European Commission’s new surveillance tool helps protect the EU against sudden and disruptive surges in imports and prevent harmful trade diversion, which occurs when goods in large number are redirected into the EU.
Atlantic Council – This think tank is monitoring the evolution of tariffs since the beginning of the second Trump administration. The Tariff calendar allows you to click on a date to see the announcement or policy. (Atlantic Council is independently rated right-center on bias scale.)
Yahoo Trump tariffs live updates – Continuous real-time/near real-time news on key developments breaking.
CNET’s Tariff Price Tracker – Thomas Kika watches 11 Key products daily and charts the average price of the products over the course of 2025. CNET tracks electronic devices and digital items that they covers in depth, “like iPhones and affordable 4K TVs — along with a typical bag of coffee.”
Financial Times Trump Tariff Tracker – The Financial Times provides “global perspectives on the nuances of Donald Trump’s trade war,” where writers and data analysts are reporting developing news and offering in-depth analysis and insightful commentary.
Image by Markus Winkler from Pixabay
Originally published in May 2025. Updates have been added as new solutions have been announced.

