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reshoring

American  
[ree-shawr-ing] / riˈʃɔr ɪŋ /

noun

  1. the practice or process of repatriating previously offshored jobs or business activities.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Unlike temporary spikes, structural-load increases from AI training clusters, EV-charging infrastructure, industrial heat pumps and manufacturing reshoring persist.

From MarketWatch • Apr. 8, 2026

His strategy started flagging those companies when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, and that accelerated with post-COVID reshoring.

From MarketWatch • Mar. 4, 2026

Industrial deals are benefiting from broad economic trends, including investment in domestic reshoring and supply-chain resilience, improvements to the power grid to support the artificial-intelligence boom, and strong defense funding and commercial aerospace demand.

From The Wall Street Journal • Feb. 18, 2026

“If the new U.S. focus can mean reshoring from China to LatAm, then it could be a big positive for the region,” Johnson says.

From Barron's • Jan. 5, 2026

The Can Manufacturers Institute, a trade group, says there hasn’t been meaningful reshoring of tin-plate production since tariffs jumped this year.

From The Wall Street Journal • Dec. 31, 2025