China Trade
2025 Chinese Trade Surplus Hits $1 Trillion as of November
As of November 2025, China's annual trade surplus has surpassed $1 trillion for the first time and is only expected to grow further in December. While the nation's exports to the United States subsided due to the Trump Administration's tariff regime, China was successful in redirecting merchandise streams to Europe and other Asian countries – at times to their dismay. ASEAN nations saw the biggest increase in Chinese imports, followed by the EU. Neighbors feel flooded by Chinese goods and European leaders have announced potential measures to curb imports from China to protect their own industries.
China leveraged trade deals, investments in other markets in the Global South and even so-called transshipments via third countries to the U.S. to keep up its export volume. The fact that China's surging electric car market produced goods sought after in many countries also helped. Areas like semiconductors and shipbuilding further boosted exports. A yuan that China has kept weak for many years and which is at its lowest level in years is adding to the success.
As seen in data by the Chinese Customs Administration, both Chinese exports and imports grew over the years. While exports are not necessarily up in 2025 as China mostly tried to redistribute its markets, it was also a small decrease in imports that pushed the country's surplus above the $1 trillion-mark this year. Overall, China's rise in export value was steeper over the past couple of years than the rise of the value of its imported goods.
Description
This chart shows total Chinese exports, imports and trade surplus, by year.
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