Home breadcru News breadcru Logistics breadcru US tariffs leave air freight demand muted in Q3 2025

US tariffs leave air freight demand muted in Q3 2025

11 Sep '25
2 min read
US tariffs leave air freight demand muted in Q3 2025
Pic: Shutterstock

Insights

  • Global trade in Q3 2025 remains disrupted, with US tariffs impacting air freight and exposing overcapacity.
  • Short-term demand spikes have faded, revealing weak consumer spending amid rising inflation.
  • Capacity imbalances continue as passenger network recovery and freighter shifts distort rates.
  • While India's manufacturing surges, Asia feels the strain of US trade policy.
Disruption and volatility remain dominant themes in the third quarter (Q3) of 2025, continuing the trends seen earlier this year. The global trade environment is now marked by ongoing instability, with little surprise left in what has become a new normal, as per a recent report by Ti.

As with Q2, the US remains disruptor in chief well into Q3, though there are signs that it is done handing out tariffs for the time being. Its last salvo, the majority of which came into force in July and August, have ripped through the air freight market via global trade flows and reinforced a common thread: capacity is outstripping demand.

It was inevitable that shippers would front load to beat tariff deadlines, and that once they had done so demand would quickly revert to muted levels. Short-lived spikes have passed, leaving a dampened peak-season in their wake. The fragility of consumer spending has been exposed too, with inflation rising and spending on discretionary goods falling, according to Ti’s latest Air Freight Tracker report.

Meanwhile across markets, capacity swings have been decisive. The rebound in passenger networks expanded belly-hold lift, while freighter redeployment between the Pacific and Europe distorted rate behaviour. In Q4, carriers will have to trim schedules without over correcting as oversupply problems are more than likely to persist.

India’s manufacturing has reached levels not seen in almost two decades and offers a counterbalance to China’s slowdown. It remains to be seen how much the tariffs introduced in August will impact this; as it stands much of Asia is constrained by US trade policy. Europe on the other hand is showing flickers of manufacturing growth, although consumer spending is starting to lag. It is the same story in the US.

ALCHEMPro News Desk (RR)

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