The power to regulate interstate commerce is Congress's constitutional authority (Article I) to control trade between states, a power the national government lacked under the Articles of Confederation and gained with ratification of the Constitution in APUSH Topic 3.9.
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress could not control trade between the states. Each state set its own trade rules, taxed goods crossing its borders, and basically acted like its own little country economically. The national government couldn't fix any of it because the Articles gave it no commerce power (and no taxing power either).
The Constitution changed that. Article I gives Congress the explicit authority to regulate commerce "among the several states," what we now call the Commerce Clause. This was one of the headline upgrades the Constitutional Convention delivered. The CED frames it through KC-3.2.II.C.ii, where delegates created a "limited but dynamic central government" through negotiation and compromise. The commerce power is a perfect example of that phrase. It's limited (the government only gets listed, enumerated powers) but dynamic (those powers actually let the government act, unlike under the Articles).
This term lives in Topic 3.9 (The Constitution) in Unit 3 and directly supports learning objective APUSH 3.9.A, which asks you to explain continuities and changes in the structure and function of government after ratification. The commerce power is one of the cleanest "changes" you can cite. Before the Constitution, Congress couldn't regulate interstate trade or levy taxes; after, it could do both. That before-and-after contrast is exactly the kind of evidence the exam wants when it asks why the Articles failed and what the Constitution fixed. It also feeds the Politics and Power theme, since the fight over how much economic authority the central government should have starts here and never really ends in U.S. history.
Keep studying APUSH Unit 3
Article I (Unit 3)
The commerce power physically lives in Article I, which lists Congress's enumerated powers. If you can name where the power comes from, your FRQ evidence gets sharper. "Article I gave Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce" beats a vague "the Constitution made the government stronger."
Anti-federalists (Unit 3)
Every new federal power was a reason for Anti-federalists to worry. A Congress that could control trade and collect taxes looked, to them, like the distant overbearing government they had just fought a revolution against. Their pushback is why the Bill of Rights got attached to ratification.
Alexander Hamilton (Unit 3)
Hamilton's whole financial program assumed a national government with real economic muscle. The commerce and taxing powers were the foundation his tariffs, debt plan, and national bank were built on. No Commerce Clause, no Hamiltonian economy.
Marbury v. Madison (Unit 4)
Writing federal power into the Constitution was step one; deciding who interprets that power was step two. Marbury established judicial review, and later Marshall Court rulings used it to read the commerce power broadly, expanding federal authority over the economy well past 1800.
This term shows up most often in multiple-choice and SAQ questions comparing the Articles of Confederation to the Constitution. Typical stems ask which constitutional feature "most directly responded to the Articles' inability to tax or regulate interstate commerce" or which feature represents a continuity versus a change in governmental structure. The 2017 SAQ on the Articles-to-Constitution transition rewards exactly this move. Your job is usually to do one of two things. First, name the commerce power as a specific change that fixed a specific Articles weakness. Second, pair it with a continuity (like a representative legislature existing under both systems) to show you understand APUSH 3.9.A's continuity-and-change framing. Don't just say "the Constitution was stronger." Say what power was added and what problem it solved.
These two get bundled together because the Articles lacked both and the Constitution granted both. But they're separate powers fixing separate problems. The taxing power solved the revenue crisis (Congress had to beg states for money). The commerce power solved the trade chaos (states taxing and blocking each other's goods). On an MCQ that asks which power addressed interstate trade disputes specifically, the answer is commerce regulation, not taxation.
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress had no power to regulate trade between states, so states set conflicting trade policies and taxed each other's goods.
The Constitution granted Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce in Article I, fixing one of the Articles' most-cited weaknesses.
The commerce power is textbook evidence for APUSH 3.9.A, which asks you to explain changes (and continuities) in government structure after ratification.
It reflects KC-3.2.II.C.ii's idea of a "limited but dynamic" central government, since the power is enumerated and bounded but gives the federal government real economic authority.
Don't confuse it with the taxing power; both were new under the Constitution, but the commerce power specifically targeted trade disputes between states.
The commerce power keeps mattering after Unit 3, becoming the constitutional basis for expanding federal economic authority in later periods.
It's Congress's power to control trade between states, granted in Article I of the Constitution. It matters in APUSH because the national government lacked this power under the Articles of Confederation, and gaining it is a key change tested in Topic 3.9.
No, not between states. Congress under the Articles couldn't regulate interstate commerce or levy taxes, so it had to request funds from the states and watch them fight economic battles with each other. That weakness is a major reason delegates met at the Constitutional Convention in 1787.
No. They're two distinct powers the Constitution gave Congress. Taxing fixed the national government's revenue problem, while the commerce power fixed the problem of states taxing and restricting each other's trade. APUSH multiple-choice questions often test whether you can tell them apart.
Anti-federalists feared any expansion of central authority, and economic powers like commerce regulation and taxation looked like the tools of the distant government they'd just escaped. Their resistance helped force the addition of the Bill of Rights as the price of ratification.
Yes. It appears in MCQs and SAQs comparing the Articles of Confederation to the Constitution, including the 2017 SAQ on that transition. You're expected to name it as a specific change in federal power, not just say the new government was "stronger."
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.
Review units, study guides, and course resources.
Check this vocabulary in multiple-choice context.
Apply key concepts in written AP responses.
Estimate the exam score you are working toward.
Review the highest-yield facts before practice.
Put the full course together before test day.