US Trade Deficit Lowest Since 2020
2025-12-11 13:36
By
Joana Taborda
1 min. read
The US recorded a trade deficit of $52.8 billion in September 2025, the lowest since June 2020, compared to a $59.3 billion gap in August and forecasts of $63.3 billion.
Exports jumped 3% to $289.3 billion, the second-highest level on record, led by nonmonetary gold, pharmaceutical preparations and financial services while a decline was seen in sales of computers, travel and transport.
Meanwhile, imports rose at a slower 0.6% to $342.1 billion, led by a surge in pharmaceutical preparations and an increase in nonmonetary gold, computer accessories, transport and financial services while purchases declined for computers, crude oil, electric apparatus and travel.
In September, the largest trade deficit was recorded with Ireland ($-18.2 billion), followed by Mexico ($-17.8 billion) and the EU ($-17.8 billion).
The gap with China narrowed to $11.4 billion while the one with Vietnam was little changed at $14.4 billion.
The deficit with Canada was $4.9 billion.