According to the American Christmas Tree Association, 83 percent of households who plan on displaying a Christmas tree in 2025 will choose an artificial one. But this year, not even holiday cheer is safe from economic tensions, as tariffs and supply chain pressures are pushing prices up.
Mac Harman, founder and CEO of Balsam Hill, an artificial Christmas tree company, explains the increase will be noticeable. “Whatever price point you might have been looking at last year, expect that to be about 10 to 15 percent more this year,” he says.
Nearly all artificial Christmas trees are imported from China. While Harman says that manufacturing costs remain steady, the price vendors pay to U.S. customs has increased, as a result of President Trump's ongoing tariffs on China.
Trump often says his

Minnesota Public Radio

FOX News Videos
People Top Story
Tom's Guide
Rolling Stone
Raw Story
NFL Carolina Panthers
New York Post