AUSTIN, Texas -- President Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs have the attention of Texans.

Whether you're filling up the tank, or tipping back a cold one, the prices of some of your favorite Texas products could soon be going up. 

"A 10 percent raw material increase, it affects all of us," said Hops & Grain Brewery owner Josh Hare.  

Texas craft brewers like Hare said the 10 percent tariff on imported aluminum will increase the cost of cans. 

"While [the costs] sound miniscule in the terms of a six-pack, you know when we're incurring $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 additional costs, that impacts the way that we look to expand, look to grow, look to hire new staff," Hare said. 

Additionally, a 25 percent tariff on foreign steel will affect the price of kegs and the tanks needed to brew beer. 

When you want to pick up that six pack, those higher steel prices could also hike the cost of hitting the road. Texas Oil and Gas Association President Todd Staples said oil companies rely on steel for pipeline projects and new refineries.

"Your construction costs, the costs of your materials, is a big factor," Staples said. 

That means higher steel prices could lead to paying more at the pump. 

"The consumers ultimately pay the freight on anything government does," Staples said. 

But President Trump maintains these tariffs are here to save American manufacturing jobs, and the workers who produce American steel and aluminum are on board. 

Still, President Trump's new economic advisor, Larry Kudlow is said to have called tariffs "prosperity-killers" and will likely try to convince the president to overturn them.