U.S. Goods Trade Deficit Hits $1.24T: China, Mexico and Vietnam Lead the Gap

Trade deficits rarely make headlines the way earnings reports or inflation numbers do, but the scale of the latest U.S. figures is hard to ignore. The country’s goods trade deficit reached $1.24 trillion in 2025, growing by $26 billion, or 2.1%, compared to the year before. The data paints a clear picture of where American imports are coming from and, just as importantly, where they are not being offset by exports.

China, Mexico and Vietnam Drive $577B in Combined Deficits

The deficit side of the ledger is where the real weight sits. China leads the pack with a $202 billion trade gap, followed closely by Mexico at $197 billion. Vietnam, which has grown steadily as a manufacturing hub over the past decade, rounds out the top three at $178 billion. Together, those three countries alone account for nearly half of the entire $1.24 trillion deficit.

Taiwan and Ireland follow at $147 billion and $114 billion respectively, driven largely by semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. Germany ($73B), Thailand ($72B), Japan ($64B), India ($58B), and South Korea ($56B) round out the list of the biggest contributors. You can track broader shifts in US Trade Deficit Drops $6.5 Billion to Smallest Since 2020 for a sense of where the trend was heading before 2025.

Surpluses Are Real, But Smaller: Netherlands Leads at $61B

On the other side of the ledger, the U.S. does run trade surpluses with a range of partners, just none that come close to balancing the books. The Netherlands tops the list at $61 billion, followed by the United Kingdom at $32 billion and Hong Kong at $29 billion. The UAE ($24B) and Brazil ($14B) also contribute positive balances, while Belgium ($9B), Panama ($8B), Egypt ($7B), and both the Dominican Republic and Guatemala at $5 billion each show that surplus relationships do exist. They are simply far more limited in scale. Part of this imbalance traces back to the global supply chain dynamics explored in China’s Trade Surplus Hits Record 2% of Global Trade in 2024, which shows just how dominant some trade relationships have become.

The 2025 numbers make it clear the U.S. remains deeply integrated with global manufacturing networks, particularly across Asia. Whether those changes in the years ahead will depend on trade policy, supply chain diversification, and shifts in domestic production capacity. For a more granular look at how tariff-driven realignments are affecting specific sectors, US Shrimp Prices Surge on Indian Import Tariffs offers a useful on-the-ground example of how these macro trends play out in real markets.

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