China’s trade surplus exceeds record $1 trillion

China’s trade surplus has for the first time exceeded the $1 trillion mark – a level unmatched by any other nation in the world, the country’s General Administration of Customs has announced.
Statistics for the first 11 months of 2025 released by the agency on Monday indicate that the Asian economic powerhouse was running a trade surplus totaling $1.08 trillion as of November, despite external headwinds.
Over the period, total exports reached 24.46 trillion yuan ($3.46 trillion), up 6.2% year-on-year, while imports grew 0.2% to 16.75 trillion yuan ($2.37 trillion), the agency estimated.
According to the data, last month alone, China recorded a $111.68 billion trade surplus – its third-largest ever in a single month.
Manufactured goods comprise a considerable part of the upward trend, China’s customs agency reported. Chinese exports, including vehicles, have saturated markets in Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe, and Latin America, putting pressure on traditional rivals such as Germany, Japan, and South Korea.
China’s exports to the European Union are understood to be more than twice as high as imports from the bloc in 2025. Accounting for 13% of the country’s total foreign trade, the EU has emerged as China’s second largest trading partner, with ASEAN nations topping the list.
Against a backdrop of a trade war with Washington, China’s exports to the US have, by contrast, shrunk by nearly a fifth, according to the General Administration of Customs. The US, however, was ranked as China’s third-largest trading partner at 3.69 trillion yuan January through November.











