The biomanufacturing industry is at a crossroads. What once felt like a straightforward decision—offshoring for lower costs or keeping operations closer to home at a higher price—has now become a far more complex calculation. With shifting tariff policies, tighter timelines, talent shortages and supply chain risks all in play, companies are rethinking how and where they build for the future.
The good news? With the right planning, this moment of uncertainty can become an opportunity to strengthen operations, increase resilience and even gain a competitive edge.
Why the clock is ticking
Tariffs are quickly moving from policy conversations to boardroom priorities. U.S. leaders have openly discussed tariffs that could ramp up significantly over the next 12-18 months. That kind of timeline forces decision-makers to act quickly: Absorb higher costs, push forward with reshoring or look for partners who can help accelerate market access.
Some big players are already making their moves. Eli Lilly, for example, recently announced more than $27 billion in U.S. manufacturing investments across four sites. Whereas Pfizer announced that they were committed to lowering U.S. prescription drug costs and investing $70 billion domestically in exchange for protection from pharmaceutical tariffs over the next three years.
That scale of commitment shows how seriously the industry is taking the current environment and how forward-looking companies are using it as a chance to expand capabilities instead of waiting on the sidelines.
“The companies that plan now won’t just survive shifting policies—they’ll thrive in a more resilient future.”
From cost-first to capability-first
For decades, labor costs and proximity to suppliers dominated site selection decisions. Today, those factors still matter—but they’re no longer the whole picture. Tariffs and geopolitical risks have shifted the equation.
A recent analysis found that even a 25% tariff could add more than $50 billion annually to U.S. drug costs if absorbed across the system. Numbers like that show how quickly “cheapest” can turn into “most expensive.”
Instead of focusing on just labor rates, companies are weighing factors like:
- Regulatory stability – predictable environments reduce costly delays.
- Talent availability – access to skilled engineers, operators, scientists.
- Resilient logistics – reliable airports, utilities, transport hubs.
- Risk management – reduced exposure to sudden disruptions or disasters.
Consider this: A company producing high-volume, mature medicines may benefit from moving production closer to home, gaining predictability and faster delivery. Meanwhile, a startup with niche therapies may still lean on contract partners for flexibility and speed.