Data extracted in May 2025

Planned article update: August 2025

Highlights

In Q1 2025 EU exports increased by 8.6%, while imports rose by 4.1% due to acceleration in trade with the United States.

In Q1 2025 the EU balance recorded a surplus of €55 billion, up €30 billion compared with Q4 2024, fueled by strongly increased exports to the United States.

This article provides a picture of the international trade in goods of the European Union (EU) since 2019, using quarterly data. It analyses the type of goods exchanged with countries outside the EU, focusing on its main partners. For total trade these are China, the United States, the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Türkiye. For imports of energy products these are the United States, the United Kingdom, Norway and Russia.

This article shows the latest developments in quarterly seasonally adjusted data. Articles with a long term analysis are available in the online publication International trade in goods - a statistical picture.

The latest developments in Q1 2025

The threat of a trade war between the United States and the EU caused imports and especially exports to increase strongly in the first quarter of 2025 compared with the previous quarter (see Figure 1 and 2). EU imports rose by 4.1% and exports rose by 8.6%. Consequently, the EU trade balance in goods rose to a surplus of €55 billion in the first quarter of 2025, the highest since the first quarter of 2021.

Figure 1
Figure 2

Figure 3 shows the change in imports and exports by product group in the first quarter of 2025 compared with the previous quarter. When ranking exports by value, the largest increase was found in chemicals and related products (€35.3 billion, 24.4%). This was in large part due to increased exports of chemicals and related products to the United States. Imports increased most for machinery and vehicles (€7.7 billion, 3.8%) and other manufactured goods (€6.1 billion, 4.1%).

Figure 3

Figure 4 shows the trade balance by product group. In the first quarter of 2025, the combined surpluses for chemicals and related products, machinery & vehicles, food & drink, and other goods were higher than the combined deficits for energy, raw materials and other manufactured goods. The largest increase was for chemicals whose surplus grew from €59.9 billion in the last quarter of 2024 to €91.9 billion in the first quarter of 2025.

Combined vertical stacked bar chart and line chart showing EU trade balance by product group in euro billions seasonally adjusted data. Each quarter from Q1 2020 to Q1 2025 has seven stacks representing product groups and a line representing the total.
Figure 4: EU trade balance by product group, Q1 2020 to Q1 2025
Source: Eurostat (ext_st_eu27_2020sitc)


Extra-EU trade by partners

The trade balances in the first quarter of 2025, of the 6 main trade partners of the EU are shown in Figure 5. Compared with the previous quarter the surplus with the United States increased strongly as exports soared in anticipation of trade tariffs imposed by the United States. Machinery and vehicles and chemicals and related products contributed most to this surplus. There was a large deficit with China resulting from deficits in machinery and vehicles and other manufactured goods. These same two product groups caused surpluses with the United Kingdom and Switzerland. The EU's deficit with Norway was caused mainly by imports of energy products.

Combined vertical stacked bar chart and line chart showing EU trade balance by product group in euro billions seasonally adjusted data. Each country has seven stacks representing product groups and a line representing the total.
Figure 5: EU - trade balance by product group for main partners, Q1 2025
Source: Eurostat (ext_st_eu27_2020sitc)


Extra-EU imports of energy products

In the first quarter of 2020, Russia was by far the largest origin for EU imports of energy, its share being 27.4% (see Figure 6). Russia's invasion of Ukraine changed this trade set-up profoundly with Russia's share falling to 5.0% in the first quarter of 2025. In the first quarter of 2025 the shares of the United States, Norway, the United Kingdom, Saudi Arabia, Algeria and Kazakhstan had all surpassed that of Russia.

Figure 6


Source data for tables and graphs

Data sources

EU data is taken from Eurostat's COMEXT database. COMEXT is the reference database for international trade in goods. It provides access not only to both recent and historical data from the EU Member States but also to statistics of a significant number of non-EU countries. International trade aggregated and detailed statistics disseminated via the Eurostat website are compiled from COMEXT data according to a monthly process.

Data are collected by the competent national authorities of the EU Member States and compiled according to a harmonised methodology established by EU regulations before transmission to Eurostat. For extra-EU trade, the statistical information is mainly provided by the traders on the basis of customs declarations.

EU data are compiled according to EU guidelines and may, therefore, differ from national data published by the EU Member States. Statistics on extra-EU trade are calculated as the sum of trade of each of the 27 EU Member States with countries outside the EU. In other words, the EU is considered as a single trading entity and trade flows are measured into and out of the area, but not within it.

The United Kingdom is considered as an extra-EU partner country for the EU for the whole period covered by this article. However, the United Kingdom was still part of the internal market until the end of the transitory period (31 December 2020), meaning that data on trade with the United Kingdom were still based on statistical concepts applicable to trade between the EU Member States. Consequently, while imports from any other extra-EU trade partner are grouped by country of origin, the United Kingdom data reflected the country of consignment.

Product classification

Products are defined according to the fourth revision of the standard international trade classification (SITC). The main categories are

  • food, drinks and tobacco (Sections 0 and 1 - including live animals)
  • raw materials (Sections 2 and 4)
  • energy products (Section 3)
  • chemicals and related products (Section 5 - including pharmaceuticals and plastics)
  • machinery and transport equipment (Section 7)
  • other manufactured goods (Sections 6 and 8)
  • other goods (Section 9)

Methodology

According to the EU concepts and definitions, extra-EU trade statistics (trade between EU Member States and non-EU countries) do not record exchanges involving goods in transit, placed in a customs warehouse or given temporary admission (for trade fairs, temporary exhibitions, tests, etc.). This is known as 'special trade'. The partner is the country of final destination of the goods for exports and the country of origin for imports.

Unit of measure

Trade values are expressed in millions or billions (1 000 millions) of euros. They correspond to the statistical value, i.e. to the amount which would be invoiced in the event of sale or purchase at the national border of the reporting country. It is called a FOB value (free on board) for exports and a CIF value (cost, insurance, freight) for imports.

Context

Trade is an important indicator of Europe's prosperity and place in the world. The bloc is deeply integrated into global markets both for the products it sources and the exports it sells. The EU trade policy is one of the main pillars of the EU's relations with the rest of the world.

Because the 27 EU Member States share a single market and a single external border, they also have a single trade policy. EU Member States speak and negotiate collectively, both in the World Trade Organisation, where the rules of international trade are agreed and enforced, and with individual trading partners. This common policy enables them to speak with one voice in trade negotiations, maximising their impact in such negotiations. This is even more important in a globalised world in which economies tend to cluster together in regional groups.

The openness of the EU's trade regime has meant that the EU is the biggest player on the global trading scene and remains a good region to do business with. Thanks to the ease of modern transport and communications, it is now easier to produce, buy and sell goods around the world which gives European companies of every size the potential to trade outside Europe.

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