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Nike (NKE.N) was sued on Friday by consumers who accused the athletic apparel and footwear maker of ​not refunding tariff-related costs it passed on in the ‌form of higher prices.

In a proposed class action, consumers said Nike should not be allowed to keep "significant" refunds it can expect after ​the U.S. Supreme Court in February struck down sweeping tariffs that ​President Donald Trump imposed under the International Emergency Economic ⁠Powers Act.

The Beaverton, Oregon-based company has said it paid about $1 ​billion in tariffs on imported goods as a result of ​Trump's actions. Consumers said Nike raised prices on some footwear by $5 to $10 and some apparel by $2 to $10 to offset the costs.

"Nike has made ​no legally binding commitment to return tariff-related overcharges to ​the consumers who actually paid them," the complaint said.

"Unless restrained by this ‌court, ⁠Nike stands to recover the same tariff payments twice — once from consumers through higher prices and again from the federal government through tariff refunds."

Nike did not immediately respond to requests ​for comment.

It joins ​a variety ⁠of companies including Costco (COST.O) and Ray-Ban sunglasses maker EssilorLuxottica (ESLX.PA) that have been sued by consumers ​for allegedly failing to pass on tariff refunds ​to ⁠consumers.

The Nike lawsuit was filed in the Portland, Oregon, federal court.

In a March 31 conference call, Nike said its fiscal quarter ⁠ending ​in August 2026 would likely be ​the final quarter when tariffs are a material year-over-year headwind to gross margin.


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