White House Officials are expecting a trade deal with the UK to be finalised in as little as three weeks.
Britain’s rapid deal with the US would come after President Donald Trump pens agreements with Japan, India, and South Korea in an attempt to isolate China.
But a source who spoke to the Telegraph assured that a ‘great’ trade deal with London was expected in ‘two weeks’ or ‘maybe three’.
It comes a day after Vice President JD Vance declared that Trump was ‘working very hard’ to strike a trade deal with Britain, noting that the president really loves the UK’.
Trump imposed sweeping tariffs on imports to the US earlier this month, rocking the world economy and sending stock prices tumbling, sparking fears of a global recession.
Britain was spared the most punitive treatment in Trump’s initial tariff announcement, due to the two sides enjoying a largely balanced trade relationship.
Still, British imports in the US now incur a 10 per cent charge while its steel and car sectors incur a rate of 25 per cent.
But the UK government has been hopeful of a deal to exempt the UK from Trump’s tariffs, with Vance saying he was optimistic that both sides could come to a mutually beneficial agreement.
Keir Starmer and Donald Trump pictured together in the White House on February 27
Britain is in a good position for a rapid trade deal with the US, according to White House officials. It comes after JD Vance said Trump was keen to strike an agreement with the UK
‘We’re certainly working very hard with Keir Starmer’s government’ on a trade deal, Vance told the website UnHerd.
‘The President really loves the United Kingdom. He loved the Queen. He admires and loves the King. It is a very important relationship. And he’s a businessman and has a number of important business relationships in [Britain]. But I think it’s much deeper than that.
‘There’s a real cultural affinity. And, of course, fundamentally, America is an Anglo country.
‘I think there’s a good chance that, yes, we’ll come to a great agreement that’s in the best interest of both countries.’
Chancellor Rachel Reeves will aim to continue negotiations for an economic deal with the US later this month when she travels to Washington to attend the International Monetary Fund’s spring meetings with other finance ministers.
She warned earlier this week that the US tariffs will have a ‘profound’ impact, saying she is ‘under no illusion about the difficulties that lie ahead’.
But in an article for the Observer she also said that the UK would argue for a ‘more balanced global economic and trading system’ that ‘recognises the benefits of free trade’.
Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a visit to meet British Steel workers in Appleby Village Hall near Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, Saturday April 12, 2025
British and American officials have been locked in talks for weeks that initially focused on boosting cooperation on artificial intelligence and tech but could also expand to include food and other goods.
It comes as the trade war between the US and China has continued to intensify, with Trump accusing Beijing of trying to ‘screw’ America.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has been touring south east Asia this week, making the case for free trade in the region and presenting Beijing as a source of ‘stability and certainty.’
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Trump’s ‘great’ trade deal with Britain could be sealed ‘in a matter of weeks’